3,041 research outputs found
Orientable Burning Number of Graphs
In this paper, we introduce the problem of finding an orientation of a given
undirected graph that maximizes the burning number of the resulting directed
graph. We show that the problem is polynomial-time solvable on
K\H{o}nig-Egerv\'{a}ry graphs (and thus on bipartite graphs) and that an almost
optimal solution can be computed in polynomial time for perfect graphs. On the
other hand, we show that the problem is NP-hard in general and W[1]-hard
parameterized by the target burning number. The hardness results are
complemented by several fixed-parameter tractable results parameterized by
structural parameters. Our main result in this direction shows that the problem
is fixed-parameter tractable parameterized by cluster vertex deletion number
plus clique number (and thus also by vertex cover number).Comment: 17pages, 3 figures, WALCOM 202
Characterization studies of Silicon Photomultipliers and crystals matrices for a novel time of flight PET detector
This paper describes the characterization of crystal matrices and silicon
photomultiplier arrays for a novel Positron Emission Tomography (PET) detector,
namely the external plate of the EndoTOFPET-US system. The EndoTOFPET-US
collaboration aims to integrate Time-Of-Flight PET with ultrasound endoscopy in
a novel multimodal device, capable to support the development of new biomarkers
for prostate and pancreatic tumors. The detector consists in two parts: a PET
head mounted on an ultrasound probe and an external PET plate. The challenging
goal of 1 mm spatial resolution for the PET image requires a detector with
small crystal size, and therefore high channel density: 4096 LYSO crystals
individually readout by Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPM) make up the external
plate. The quality and properties of these components must be assessed before
the assembly. The dark count rate, gain, breakdown voltage and correlated noise
of the SiPMs are measured, while the LYSO crystals are evaluated in terms of
light yield and energy resolution. In order to effectively reduce the noise in
the PET image, high time resolution for the gamma detection is mandatory. The
Coincidence Time Resolution (CTR) of all the SiPMs assembled with crystals is
measured, and results show a value close to the demanding goal of 200 ps FWHM.
The light output is evaluated for every channel for a preliminary detector
calibration, showing an average of about 1800 pixels fired on the SiPM for a
511 keV interaction. Finally, the average energy resolution at 511 keV is about
13 %, enough for effective Compton rejection.Comment: 12 pages, 31 figure
Improvement of several properties of lead tungstate crystals with different doping ions
A very good radiation resistance of Lead Tungstate crystals is mandatory for their use in the high precision electromagnetic calorimeter of the CMS experiment at LHC. Since the beginning of 1996 we have organised systematic investigations of the parameters influencing the radiation hardness of this crystal. Two classes of parameters have been particularly studied, the first one related to the control of the stoichiometry and structure associated defects, the second one connected with the suppression and the charge compensation of existing defects with different kinds of doping ions. This paper reports about the second part of this study and complements a first paper where the role of the stoichiometry was already discussed. Results of tests are given on a significant statistical sample of full size crystals ( 23cm) which show a considerable improvement in the optical properties and the radiation resistance of appropriately doped crystals
Sub-10 ps time tagging of electromagnetic showers with scintillating glasses and SiPMs
The high energy physics community has recently identified an Higgs
factory as one of the next-generation collider experiments, following the
completion of the High Luminosity LHC program at CERN.The moderate radiation
levels expected at such colliders compared to hadron colliders, enable the use
of less radiation tolerant but cheaper technologies for the construction of the
particle detectors. This opportunity has triggered a renewed interest in the
development of scintillating glasses for the instrumentation of large detector
volumes such as homogeneous calorimeters. While the performance of such
scintillators remains typically inferior in terms of light yield and radiation
tolerance compared to that of many scintillating crystals, substantial progress
has been made over the recent years. In this paper we discuss the time
resolution of cerium-doped Alkali Free Fluorophosphate scintillating glasses,
read-out with silicon photo-multipliers in detecting single charged tracks and
at different positions along the longitudinal development of an electromagnetic
shower, using respectively 150~GeV pions and 100~GeV electron beams at the CERN
SPS H2 beam line. A single sensor time resolution of 14.4~ps and 5-7~ps was
measured respectively in the two cases. With such a performance the present
technology has the potential to address an emerging requirement of future
detectors at collider experiments: measuring the time-of-flight of single
charged particles as well as that of neutral particles showering inside the
calorimeter and the time development of showers
Development of an anthropomorphic breast phantom for combined PET, B-mode ultrasound and elastographic imaging
International audienceCombining the advantages of different imaging modalities leads to improved clinical results. For example, ultrasound provides good real-time structural information without any radiation and PET provides sensitive functional information. For the ongoing ClearPEM-Sonic project combining ultrasound and PET for breast imaging, we developed a dual-modality PET/Ultrasound (US) phantom. The phantom reproduces the acoustic and elastic properties of human breast tissue and allows labeling the different tissues in the phantom with different concentrations of FDG. The phantom was imaged with a whole-body PET/CT and with the Supersonic Imagine Aixplorer system. This system allows both B-mode US and shear wave elastographic imaging. US elastography is a new imaging method for displaying the tissue elasticity distribution. It was shown to be useful in breast imaging. We also tested the phantom with static elastography. A 6D magnetic positioning system allows fusing the images obtained with the two modalities. ClearPEM-Sonic is a project of the Crystal Clear Collaboration and the European Centre for Research on Medical Imaging (CERIMED)
Exploiting Cherenkov Radiation With BGO-Based Metascintillators
[EN] In time-of-flight positron emission tomography (TOF-PET), the timing capabilities of the scintillation-based detector play an important role. An approach for fast timing is using the so-called metascintillators, which combine two materials leading to the synergistic blending of their favorable characteristics. An added effect for BGO-based metascintillators is taking advantage of better transportation of Cherenkov photons through UV-transparent materials such as plastic (type EJ232). To prove this, we use an optimized Coincidence Time Resolution (CTR) setup based on electronic boards with two output signals (timing and energy) and near-ultraviolet (NUV) and vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV) silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) from Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK), along with different coupling materials. As a reference detector, we employed a 3x3x5-mm(3) LYSO:Ce,Ca crystal pixel coupled with optical grease to an NUV-HD SiPM. The evaluation is based on low-threshold rise time, energy and time of arrival of event datasets. Timing results of a BGO/EJ232 3x3x15-mm(3) metapixel show detector time resolutions (DTRs) of 159 ps for the full photopeak. We demonstrate the possibility of event discrimination using subsets with different DTR from the rise time distributions (RTDs). Finally, we present the synergistic capability of metascintillators to enhance Cherenkov photons detection when used along with VUV-sensitive SiPMs.This work was supported in part by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (4D-PET) under Grant 695536, and in part by the Brazilian Funding Agency Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq) under Grant 202378/2020-9.Latella, R.; González Martínez, AJ.; Bonifacio, DAB.; Kovylina-Zabyako, M.; Griol Barres, A.; Benlloch Baviera, JM.; Lecoq, P.... (2023). Exploiting Cherenkov Radiation With BGO-Based Metascintillators. IEEE Transactions on Radiation and Plasma Medical Sciences. 7(8):810-818. https://doi.org/10.1109/TRPMS.2023.33105818108187
The pronoun-to-agreement cycle in Iranian : Subjects do, objects don’t
There is a broad consensus within linguistics that personal pronouns may undergo grammaticalization to yield person agreement morphology. Furthermore, it is widely assumed that similar processes apply to both subject and object pronouns. In this chapter I consider the fate of a phonologically identical set of clitic pronouns in Middle West Iranian languages, which were deployed in both subject and object indexing. The modern outcomes have been rather different; while erstwhile clitic subject pronouns have spawned subject agreement morphology in some languages, these clitic pronouns have not yielded obligatory object agreement in the category of person in any Iranian language. Neither traditional grammaticalization theory, nor recent formalizations of grammaticalization within Minimalism, offer a compelling explanation for this asymmetry. I suggest it reflects a fundamental difference in the informativity of subject as opposed to object indexing with respect to the category of person, as opposed to that of gender and number
Needs, trends, and advances in scintillators for radiographic imaging and tomography
Scintillators are important materials for radiographic imaging and tomography
(RadIT), when ionizing radiations are used to reveal internal structures of
materials. Since its invention by R\"ontgen, RadIT now come in many modalities
such as absorption-based X-ray radiography, phase contrast X-ray imaging,
coherent X-ray diffractive imaging, high-energy X- and ray radiography
at above 1 MeV, X-ray computed tomography (CT), proton imaging and tomography
(IT), neutron IT, positron emission tomography (PET), high-energy electron
radiography, muon tomography, etc. Spatial, temporal resolution, sensitivity,
and radiation hardness, among others, are common metrics for RadIT performance,
which are enabled by, in addition to scintillators, advances in high-luminosity
accelerators and high-power lasers, photodetectors especially CMOS pixelated
sensor arrays, and lately data science. Medical imaging, nondestructive
testing, nuclear safety and safeguards are traditional RadIT applications.
Examples of growing or emerging applications include space, additive
manufacturing, machine vision, and virtual reality or `metaverse'. Scintillator
metrics such as light yield and decay time are correlated to RadIT metrics.
More than 160 kinds of scintillators and applications are presented during the
SCINT22 conference. New trends include inorganic and organic scintillator
heterostructures, liquid phase synthesis of perovskites and m-thick films,
use of multiphysics models and data science to guide scintillator development,
structural innovations such as photonic crystals, nanoscintillators enhanced by
the Purcell effect, novel scintillator fibers, and multilayer configurations.
Opportunities exist through optimization of RadIT with reduced radiation dose,
data-driven measurements, photon/particle counting and tracking methods
supplementing time-integrated measurements, and multimodal RadIT.Comment: 45 pages, 43 Figures, SCINT22 conference overvie
Measurement of W Polarisation at LEP
The three different helicity states of W bosons produced in the reaction e+
e- -> W+ W- -> l nu q q~ at LEP are studied using leptonic and hadronic W
decays. Data at centre-of-mass energies \sqrt s = 183-209 GeV are used to
measure the polarisation of W bosons, and its dependence on the W boson
production angle. The fraction of longitudinally polarised W bosons is measured
to be 0.218 \pm 0.027 \pm 0.016 where the first uncertainty is statistical and
the second systematic, in agreement with the Standard Model expectation
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