1,346 research outputs found
Comment on "On the Origin of the Highest Energy Cosmic Rays"
We show that the photodisintegration of heavy cosmic ray nuclei with energies
above 10^20 eV is dominated by interactions with photons from the cosmic
microwave background radiation, rather than from infrared ones. This implies
that the observed air shower events with energies 2-3 10^20 eV cannot originate
from Fe nuclei coming from distances beyond 10 MpcComment: 1 page, 2 figure
Neutrino Bremsstrahlung Process in highly degenerate magnetized electron gas
In this article the neutrino bremsstrahlung process is considered in presence
of strong magnetic field, though the calculations for this process in absence
of magnetic field are also carried out simultaneously. The electrons involved
in this process are supposed to be highly degenerate and relativistic. The
scattering cross sections and energy loss rates for both cases, in presence and
absence of magnetic field, are calculated in the extreme-relativistic limit.
Two results are compared in the range of temperature K K and magnetic field G at a fixed density
, a typical environment during the cooling of magnetized
neutron star. The interpretation of our result is briefly discussed and the
importance of this process during the stellar evolution is speculated.Comment: 12 pages including 2 figures and 1 tabl
Can continental bogs with stand the pressure due to climate change?
Not all peatlands are alike. Theoretical and process based models suggest that ombrogenic, oligotrophic peatlands can withstand the pressures due to climate change because of the feedbacks among ecosystem production, decomposition and water storage. Although there have been many inductive explanations inferring from paleo-records, there is a lack of deductive empirical tests of the models predictions of these systems’ stability and there are few records of the changes in the net ecosystem carbon balance (NECB) of peatlands that are long enough to examine the dynamics of the NECB in relation to climate variability. Continuous measurements of all the components of the NECB and the associated general climatic and environmental conditions have been made at the Mer Bleue (MB) peatland, a large, 28 km2, 5 m deep, raised ombro-oligotrophic, shrub and Sphagnum covered bog, near Ottawa, Canada from May 1, 1998 until the present. The sixteen-year daily CO2, CH4, and DOC flux and NECB covers a wide range of variability in peatland water storage from very dry to very wet growing seasons. We used the MB data to test the extent of MB peatland’s stability and the strength of the underlying key feedback between the NECB and changes in water storage projected by the models. In 2007 we published a six-year (1999-2004) net ecosystem carbon balance (NECB) for MB of ∼22 ± 40 g C m-2 yr-1, but we have since recalculated the 1998-2004 NECB to be 32 ± 40 g C m-2 yr-1 based on a reanalyzed average NEP of 51 ± 41 g C m-2 yr-1. Over the same period the net loss of C via the CH4 and DOC fluxes were -4 ± 1 and -15 ± 3 g C m-2 yr-1. The 1998-2004 six-year MB average NECB is similar to the long-term C accumulation rate, estimated from MB peat cores, for the last 3,000 years. The post 2004 MB NEP has increased to an average of ∼96 ± 32 g C m-2 yr-1 largely to there being generally wetter growing seasons. The losses of C via DOC (18 ± 1 g C m-2 yr-1) and CH4 (7 ± 4 g C m-2 yr-1) while showing considerable year-to-year variability are not significantly different post 2004. Hence, the proportional loss of C as DOC and CH4 in the MB NECB is slightly less post-2004 than it was before 2004 though the cumulative errors preclude statistically differences. As a result the MB NECB has increased to 79 ± 29 g C m-2 yr-1 post 2004 yielding a 14 year contemporary NECB of 56 ± 36 g C m-2 yr-1, which is double the long-term accumulation rate of C. The variability in the annual NECB and growing season mean NEP for the MB bog can be explained (r2 = 0.35, p \u3c 0.01) by the variability in growing season water table depth. These results suggest the carbon balance – water table feedback is sufficient enough to create stability in continental bogs so they will withstand a considerable amount of climate change
Electrical properties of silicon-implanted furnace-annealed silicon-on-sapphire devices
The crystalline quality of s.o.s. layers can be improved near the silicon-sapphire interface by silicon implantation followed by recrystallisation. Device performance on such layers is markedly improved as to n-channel m.o.s.t. noise and leakage current, reverse diode current and lateral bipolar transistor gain. Minority-carrier lifetimes up to 50 ns are deduced
Estimates of multipolar coefficients to search for cosmic ray anisotropies with non-uniform or partial sky coverage
We study the possibility to extract the multipolar moments of an underlying
distribution from a set of cosmic rays observed with non-uniform or even
partial sky coverage. We show that if the degree is assumed to be upper bounded
by , each multipolar moment can be recovered whatever the coverage, but with
a variance increasing exponentially with the bound if the coverage is zero
somewhere. Despite this limitation, we show the possibility to test predictions
of a model without any assumption on by building an estimate of the
covariance matrix seen through the exposure function.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Laser annealing of silicon on sapphire
Silicon-implanted silicon-on-sapphire wafers have been annealed by 50-ns pulses from a Q-switched Nd : YAG laser. The samples have been analyzed by channeling and by omega-scan x-ray double diffraction. After irradiation with pulses of a fluence of about 5 J cm^–2 the crystalline quality of the silicon layer is found to be better than in the as-grown state
Pediatric stroke related to Lyme neuroborreliosis: Data from the Swiss NeuroPaediatric Stroke Registry and literature review.
Cerebrovascular complications of Lyme neuroborreliosis (LNB) are poorly documented in the paediatric population.
We performed a retrospective analysis from prospectively registered cases of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) from the Swiss NeuroPaediatric Stroke Registry (SNPSR) from 2000 to 2015. Only cases with serologically confirmed LNB were included. In addition, a literature review on paediatric stroke cases secondary to Lyme neuroborreliosis in the same time frame was performed.
4 children out of 229 children with arterial ischemic childhood stroke and serologically confirmed LNB were identified in the SNPSR giving a global incidence of 1.7%. Median age was 9.9 years. A prior history of tick bites or erythema migrans (EM) was reported in two cases. Clinical presenting signs were suggestive of acute cerebellar/brainstem dysfunction. On imaging, three children demonstrated a stroke in the distribution of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. The remaining fourth child had a "stroke-like" picture with scattered white matter lesions and a multifocal vasculitis with prominent basilar artery involvement. Lymphocytic pleocytosis as well as intrathecal synthesis of Borrelia burgdorferi antibodies were typical biological features. Acute intravenous third generation cephalosporins proved to be effective with rapid improvement in all patients. No child had recurrent stroke. Data from the literature concerning eight patients gave similar results, with prominent posterior circulation stroke, multifocal vasculitis and abnormal CSF as distinctive features.
Lyme Neuroborreliosis accounts for a small proportion of paediatric stroke even in an endemic country. The strong predilection towards posterior cerebral circulation with clinical occurrence of brainstem signs associated with meningeal symptoms and CSF lymphocytosis are suggestive features that should rapidly point to the diagnosis. This can be confirmed by appropriate serological testing in the serum and CSF. Clinicians must be aware of this rare neurological complication of Lyme disease that demands specific antibiotic treatment
A control and monitor system for the liquid argon cryogenics of the calorimeter of the ATLAS detector
In a few weeks the Large Hadron Collider which is built at CERN will deliver its first beam. ATLAS (A Toro dal Large hadron collider ApparatuS [1]) is one of the four experiments whose aim is to analyze the products of the collisions. As many of these particle detectors, ATLAS is designed with four concentric layers which are, from inside to outside: the inner detector to measure the charged particles tracks, the electromagnetic calorimeter to measure the energy deposited by both electrons and ph otons, then the hadronic calorimeter and finally the muon detector. The active part of the electromagnetic calorimeter is a bath of liquid argon [2] whose large volume (78 m(3)) has to be maintained precisely at its operating temperature (about 88 K) by t he means of nitrogen circulation. In this paper we will describe how with industry-like control systems an application has been built for the command and the monitoring of the whole cryogenics equipment
Further Considerations on the CP Asymmetry in Heavy Majorana Neutrino Decays
We work out the thermodynamic equations for the decays and scatterings of
heavy Majorana neutrinos including the constraints from unitarity. The
Boltzmann equations depend on the CP asymmetry parameter which contains both, a
self-energy and a vertex correction. At thermal equilibrium there is no net
lepton asymmetry due to the CPT theorem and the unitarity constraint. We show
explicitly that deviations from thermal equilibrium create the lepton
asymmetry.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, 1 eps figure, 1 ps figur
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