2,679 research outputs found
The Lobster Eye Imager for Astronomy Onboard the SATech-01 Satellite
The Lobster Eye Imager for Astronomy (LEIA), a pathfinder of the Wide-field
X-ray Telescope of the Einstein Probe (EP) mission, was successfully launched
onboard the SATech-01 satellite of the Chinese Academy of Sciences on 27 July
2022. In this paper, we introduce the design and on-ground test results of the
LEIA instrument. Using state-of-the-art Micro-Pore Optics (MPO), a wide
field-of-view (FoV) of 346 square degrees (18.6 degrees * 18.6 degrees) of the
X-ray imager is realized. An optical assembly composed of 36 MPO chips is used
to focus incident X-ray photons, and four large-format complementary
metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) sensors, each of 6 cm * 6 cm, are used as the
focal plane detectors. The instrument has an angular resolution of 4 - 8 arcmin
(in FWHM) for the central focal spot of the point spread function, and an
effective area of 2 - 3 cm2 at 1 keV in essentially all the directions within
the field of view. The detection passband is 0.5 - 4 keV in the soft X-rays and
the sensitivity is 2 - 3 * 10-11 erg s-1 cm-2 (about 1 mini-Crab) at 1,000
second observation. The total weight of LEIA is 56 kg and the power is 85 W.
The satellite, with a design lifetime of 2 years, operates in a Sun-synchronous
orbit of 500 km with an orbital period of 95 minutes. LEIA is paving the way
for future missions by verifying in flight the technologies of both novel
focusing imaging optics and CMOS sensors for X-ray observation, and by
optimizing the working setups of the instrumental parameters. In addition, LEIA
is able to carry out scientific observations to find new transients and to
monitor known sources in the soft X-ray band, albeit limited useful observing
time available.Comment: Accepted by RA
Higher-order multipole amplitude measurement in
Using events collected with the BESIII detector at
the BEPCII storage ring, the higher-order multipole amplitudes in the radiative
transition are measured.
A fit to the production and decay angular distributions yields
and , where the first
errors are statistical and the second systematic. Here denotes the
normalized magnetic quadrupole amplitude and the normalized electric
octupole amplitude. This measurement shows evidence for the existence of the
signal with statistical significance and is consistent with
the charm quark having no anomalous magnetic moment.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Study of and
The decays and have been
investigated with a sample of 225.2 million events collected with the
BESIII detector at the BEPCII collider. The branching fractions are
determined to be and . Distributions of the angle
between the proton or anti-neutron and the beam direction are well
described by the form , and we find
for and
for . Our branching-fraction
results suggest a large phase angle between the strong and electromagnetic
amplitudes describing the decay.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, the 2nd version, submitted to PR
An amplitude analysis of the system produced in radiative decays
An amplitude analysis of the system produced in radiative
decays is presented. In particular, a piecewise function that
describes the dynamics of the system is determined as a
function of from an analysis of the
decays collected by the BESIII detector.
The goal of this analysis is to provide a description of the scalar and tensor
components of the system while making minimal assumptions about
the properties or number of poles in the amplitude. Such a model-independent
description allows one to integrate these results with other related results
from complementary reactions in the development of phenomenological models,
which can then be used to directly fit experimental data to obtain parameters
of interest. The branching fraction of is
determined to be , where the uncertainty is
systematic only and the statistical uncertainty is negligible.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. D 19 pages, 4 figure
First observation of the M1 transition
Using a sample of 106 million \psi(3686) events collected with the BESIII
detector at the BEPCII storage ring, we have made the first measurement of the
M1 transition between the radially excited charmonium S-wave spin-triplet and
the radially excited S-wave spin-singlet states: \psi(3686)\to\gamma\eta_c(2S).
Analyses of the processes \psi(2S)\to \gamma\eta_c(2S) with \eta_c(2S)\to
\K_S^0 K\pi and K^+K^-\pi^0 gave an \eta_c(2S) signal with a statistical
significance of greater than 10 standard deviations under a wide range of
assumptions about the signal and background properties. The data are used to
obtain measurements of the \eta_c(2S) mass (M(\eta_c(2S))=3637.6\pm
2.9_\mathrm{stat}\pm 1.6_\mathrm{sys} MeV/c^2), width
(\Gamma(\eta_c(2S))=16.9\pm 6.4_\mathrm{stat}\pm 4.8_\mathrm{sys} MeV), and the
product branching fraction (\BR(\psi(3686)\to \gamma\eta_c(2S))\times
\BR(\eta_c(2S)\to K\bar K\pi) = (1.30\pm 0.20_\mathrm{stat}\pm
0.30_\mathrm{sys})\times 10^{-5}). Combining our result with a BaBar
measurement of \BR(\eta_c(2S)\to K\bar K \pi), we find the branching fraction
of the M1 transition to be \BR(\psi(3686)\to\gamma\eta_c(2S)) = (6.8\pm
1.1_\mathrm{stat}\pm 4.5_\mathrm{sys})\times 10^{-4}.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
Two-photon widths of the states and helicity analysis for \chi_{c2}\ar\gamma\gamma}
Based on a data sample of 106 M events collected with the
BESIII detector, the decays \psi^{\prime}\ar\gamma\chi_{c0, 2},\chi_{c0,
2}\ar\gamma\gamma are studied to determine the two-photon widths of the
states. The two-photon decay branching fractions are determined
to be {\cal B}(\chi_{c0}\ar\gamma\gamma) = (2.24\pm 0.19\pm 0.12\pm
0.08)\times 10^{-4} and {\cal B}(\chi_{c2}\ar\gamma\gamma) = (3.21\pm 0.18\pm
0.17\pm 0.13)\times 10^{-4}. From these, the two-photon widths are determined
to be keV,
keV, and
, where the uncertainties
are statistical, systematic, and those from the PDG {\cal
B}(\psi^{\prime}\ar\gamma\chi_{c0,2}) and errors,
respectively. The ratio of the two-photon widths for helicity and
helicity components in the decay \chi_{c2}\ar\gamma\gamma is
measured for the first time to be .Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Precision measurement of the branching fractions of J/psi -> pi+pi-pi0 and psi' -> pi+pi-pi0
We study the decays of the J/psi and psi' mesons to pi+pi-pi0 using data
samples at both resonances collected with the BES III detector in 2009. We
measure the corresponding branching fractions with unprecedented precision and
provide mass spectra and Dalitz plots. The branching fraction for J/psi ->
pi+pi-pi0 is determined to be (2.137 +- 0.004 (stat.) +0.058-0.056 (syst.)
+0.027-0.026 (norm.))*10-2, and the branching fraction for psi' -> pi+pi-pi0 is
measured as (2.14 +- 0.03 (stat.) +0.08-0.07 (syst.) +0.09-0.08 (norm.))*10-4.
The J/psi decay is found to be dominated by an intermediate rho(770) state,
whereas the psi' decay is dominated by di-pion masses around 2.2 GeV/c2,
leading to strikingly different Dalitz distributions.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
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