2,041 research outputs found
OPERA first events from the CNGS neutrino beam
The aim of the OPERA experiment is to search for the appearance of the tau
neutrino in the quasi pure muon neutrino beam produced at CERN (CNGS). The
detector, installed in the Gran Sasso underground laboratory 730 km away from
CERN, consists of a lead/emulsion target complemented with electronic
detectors. A report is given on the detector status (construction, data taking
and analysis) and on the first successful 2006 neutrino runs.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures Proceedings of the XLIInd Rencontres de Moriond
session, La Thuile, 10-17 March 200
Neutrino and antineutrino quasielastic interactions with nuclei
We investigate the interaction of neutrinos and antineutrinos with nuclei. We
explore in particular the role played by the multinucleon excitations which can
contaminate the quasielastic cross section. For neutrinos the multinucleon term
produces a sizable increase of the quasielastic cross section. Part of the
effect arises from tensor correlations. For antineutrinos this influence is
smaller owing to the axial-vector interference which increases the relative
importance of the terms which are not affected by these multinucleon
excitations
The OPERA global readout and GPS distribution system
talk presented at 11th Pisa meeting on advanced detectors, may '09, submitted to the proceedingsInternational audienceOPERA is an experiment dedicated to the observation of into oscillations in appearance mode using a pure beam (CNGS) produced at CERN and detected at Gran Sasso. The experiment exploits a hybrid technology with emulsions and electronics detectors~\cite{opera}. The OPERA readout is performed through a triggerless, continuously running, distributed and highly available system. Its global architecture is based on Ethernet-capable smart sensors with microprocessing and network interface directly at the front-end stage. An unique interface board is used for the full detector reading out ADC-, TDC- or Controller-boards. All the readout channels are synchronized through a GPS-locked common bidirectional clock distribution system developped on purpose in a PCI format. It offers a second line to address all channels and the off-line synchronization with the CNGS to select the events
Pion Scalar Density and Chiral Symmetry Restoration at Finite Temperature and Density
This paper is devoted to the evaluation of the pionic scalar density at
finite temperature and baryonic density. We express the latter effect in terms
of the nuclear response evaluated in the random phase approxima- tion. We
discuss the density and temperature evolution of the pionic density which
governs the quark condensate evolution. Numerical evalua- tions are performed.Comment: 13 pages, Latex File, 10 eps Figure
Effects of the Nuclear Correlations on the Neutrino-Oxygen Interactions
We perform a calculation of the absolute charged current neutrino- oxygen
events rates relevant in the atmospheric neutrino experiments. The inclusive
reaction cross-section is split into exclusive channels, which are classified
according to the number of \v{C}erenkov rings they produce. The model includes
the effects of residual interaction in a RPA scheme with both nucleon-hole and
Delta-hole excited states and the effects of (np-nh) excitations (n=2,3). Our
result is that although the flavor ratio remains almost unaffected by
the nuclear effects considered here and often neglected in the Monte-Carlo
simulations, the absolute events rates are subject to important modifications.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX2e file, 5 eps figures, part of PhD Thesis (LYCEN
T9877, in french) available at: [email protected]; submitted to European
Physical Journal
MicroTCA implementation of synchronous Ethernet-Based DAQ systems for large scale experiments
Large LAr TPCs are among the most powerful detectors to address open problems
in particle and astro-particle physics, such as CP violation in leptonic
sector, neutrino properties and their astrophysical implications, proton decay
search etc. The scale of such detector implies severe constraints on their
readout and DAQ system. In this article we describe a data acquisition scheme
for this new generation of large detectors. The main challenge is to propose a
scalable and easy to use solution able to manage a large number of channels at
the lowest cost. It is interesting to note that these constraints are very
similar to those existing in Network Telecommunication Industry. We propose to
study how emerging technologies like ATCA and TCA could be used in
neutrino experiments. We describe the design of an Advanced Mezzanine Board
(AMC) including 32 ADC channels. This board receives 32 analogical channels at
the front panel and sends the formatted data through the TCA backplane
using a Gigabit Ethernet link. The gigabit switch of the MCH is used to
centralize and to send the data to the event building computer. The core of
this card is a FPGA (ARIA-GX from ALTERA) including the whole system except the
memories. A hardware accelerator has been implemented using a NIOS II P
and a Gigabit MAC IP. Obviously, in order to be able to reconstruct the tracks
from the events a time synchronisation system is mandatory. We decided to
implement the IEEE1588 standard also called Precision Timing Protocol, another
emerging and promising technology in Telecommunication Industry. In this
article we describe a Gigabit PTP implementation using the recovered clock of
the gigabit link. By doing so the drift is directly cancelled and the PTP will
be used only to evaluate and to correct the offset.Comment: Talk presented at the 2009 Real Time Conference, Beijing, May '09,
submitted to the proceeding
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Pairing images of unhealthy and healthy foods with images of negative and positive health consequences: Impact on attitudes and food choice.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of presenting images of foods paired with images of positive and negative health consequences of their consumption on food choice and attitudes. METHOD: Participants (N = 711) were randomly allocated in a 2 × 3 factorial design (Food Type × Affective Valence) to 1 of 6 conditioning procedures that paired images of either energy-dense snack foods or fruit, with (a) images of negative health outcomes, (b) images of positive health outcomes, or (c) a no image control. The primary outcome was food choice assessed postintervention with a behavioral choice task. Secondary outcomes were implicit attitudes (assessed pre- and postintervention) and explicit attitudes (assessed postintervention). RESULTS: Presenting images of negative health outcomes led to more healthy food choices relative to control and positive image conditions, irrespective of whether they were paired with images of energy-dense snack foods or fruit. This relationship was partially mediated by changes in implicit and explicit attitudes. Images of positive health outcomes did not alter food choices. CONCLUSIONS: This study replicates and extends previous research showing that presenting images of negative health consequences increases healthy food choices. Because effects were elicited by manipulating affective valence irrespective of paired food type, these results appear more consistent with an explanation based on priming than on evaluative conditioning. (PsycINFO Database RecordThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychological Association via http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/hea000029
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