37 research outputs found
Mu2e Technical Design Report
The Mu2e experiment at Fermilab will search for charged lepton flavor
violation via the coherent conversion process mu- N --> e- N with a sensitivity
approximately four orders of magnitude better than the current world's best
limits for this process. The experiment's sensitivity offers discovery
potential over a wide array of new physics models and probes mass scales well
beyond the reach of the LHC. We describe herein the preliminary design of the
proposed Mu2e experiment. This document was created in partial fulfillment of
the requirements necessary to obtain DOE CD-2 approval.Comment: compressed file, 888 pages, 621 figures, 126 tables; full resolution
available at http://mu2e.fnal.gov; corrected typo in background summary,
Table 3.
Fort Meigs plan drawing
This sketch of the plan of Fort Meigs (identified here as Camp Meigs) was created by Joseph H. Larwill (1783-1867) from a survey made on July 19, 1813. It shows Col. Dudley's Battleground, Upper and Lower Sandusky Roads, British Batteries, Indian Hill, and the Maumee River and rapids. Fort Meigs, completed in 1813 in the midst of the War of 1812, was a strategic fortification along the banks of the Maumee River in present-day Perrysburg, Ohio. The fort withstood two British sieges in 1813 and became a turning point in the war in favor of the American forces. Today, the fort is the largest reconstructed wooden-walled fort in the United States, and is an Ohio Historical Society site as well as a National Historic Landmark
Plan of Camp Meigs and Environs, 1813
This reproduction of the plan of Fort Meigs (identified as Camp Meigs) was created by Joseph H. Larwill. The survey was done on July 19, 1813. The map shows Col. Dudley's Battleground, Upper and Lower Sandusky Roads, British Batteries, Indian Hill, and the Maumee River and rapids. Fort Meigs was a strategic fortification along the banks of the Maumee River (identified as Miami River) during the War of 1812, in Perrysburg, Ohio. As of 2023, Fort Meigs is the largest reconstructed wooden-walled fort in the United States. It is also an Ohio Historical Society site as well as a National Historic Landmark
Note and Comment
The Latest Step in the Expansion of the Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution; The Right of a Trustee of a Bankrupt Partnership to Administer the Individual Estate of an Unadjudicated Partner Against His Will or Consent; Presumption in Favor of Reply Letters; A Novel Case Upon the Question of What Constitutes Former Jeopard
A high-rate fastbus silicon strip readout system
This paper describes a synchronous silicon S ~rePado ut system capable of zero deadtime readout at average trigger rates in excess of 1 MHz. The system is implemented in FASTBUS, uses pipelining techniques, and includes p6nt-Wpoint fiberoptic data links to transmit detector digital data. Semi-custom ASIC chips are used to amplify, discriminate, and logically combine track data before encoding. This paper describes the overall system, each major FASTBUS module, and the functional aspects of the ASIC chips