3,785 research outputs found
Collider design issues based on proton-driven plasma wakefield acceleration
Recent simulations have shown that a high-energy proton bunch can excite
strong plasma wakefields and accelerate a bunch of electrons to the energy
frontier in a single stage of acceleration. It therefore paves the way towards
a compact future collider design using the proton beams from existing
high-energy proton machines, e.g. Tevatron or the LHC. This paper addresses
some key issues in designing a compact electron-positron linear collider and an
electron-proton collider based on existing CERN accelerator infrastructure
An collider based on proton-driven plasma wakefield acceleration
Recent simulations have shown that a high-energy proton bunch can excite
strong plasma wakefields and accelerate a bunch of electrons to the energy
frontier in a single stage of acceleration. This scheme could lead to a future
collider using the LHC for the proton beam and a compact electron
accelerator of length 170 m, producing electrons of energy up to 100 GeV. The
parameters of such a collider are discussed as well as conceptual layouts
within the CERN accelerator complex. The physics of plasma wakefield
acceleration will also be introduced, with the AWAKE experiment, a proof of
principle demonstration of proton-driven plasma wakefield acceleration, briefly
reviewed, as well as the physics possibilities of such an collider.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the DIS 2014
Workshop, 28 April - 2 May, Warsaw, Polan
Disease associated with equine coronavirus infection and high case fatality rate.
BackgroundEquine coronavirus (ECoV) is associated with clinical disease in adult horses. Outbreaks are associated with a low case fatality rate and a small number of animals with signs of encephalopathic disease are described.ObjectivesThe aim of this study is to describe the epidemiological and clinical features of two outbreaks of ECoV infection that were associated with an high case fatality rate.Animals14 miniature horses and 1 miniature donkey testing fecal positive for ECoV from two related disease outbreaks.MethodsRetrospective study describing the epidemiological findings, clinicopathological findings, and fecal viral load from affected horses.ResultsIn EcoV positive horses, 27% (4/15) of the animals died or were euthanized. Severe hyperammonemia (677 μmol/L, reference range ≤ 60 μmol/L) was identified in one animal with signs of encephalopathic disease that subsequently died. Fecal viral load (ECoV genome equivalents per gram of feces) was significantly higher in the nonsurvivors compared to animals that survived (P = .02).Conclusions and clinical importanceEquine coronavirus had a higher case fatality rate in this group of miniature horses than previously reported in other outbreaks of varying breeds. Hyperammonemia could contribute to signs of encephalopathic disease, and the fecal viral load might be of prognostic value in affected horses
Project PROMETHEUS: Design and Construction of a Radio Frequency Quadrupole at TAEK
The PROMETHEUS Project is ongoing for the design and development of a 4-vane
radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) together with its H+ ion source, a low energy
beam transport (LEBT) line and diagnostics section. The main goal of the
project is to achieve the acceleration of the low energy ions up to 1.5 MeV by
an RFQ (352 MHz) shorter than 2 meter. A plasma ion source is being developed
to produce a 20 keV, 1 mA H+ beam. Simulation results for ion source,
transmission and beam dynamics are presented together with analytical studies
performed with newly developed RFQ design code DEMIRCI. Simulation results
shows that a beam transmission 99% could be achieved at 1.7 m downstream
reaching an energy of 1.5 MeV. As the first phase an Aluminum RFQ prototype,
the so-called cold model, will be built for low power RF characterization. In
this contribution the status of the project, design considerations, simulation
results, the various diagnostics techniques and RFQ manufacturing issues are
discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, Proceedings of the 2nd International Beam
Instrumentation Conference 2013 (IBIC'13), 16-19 Sep 2013, WEPC02, p. 65
An ultracold low emittance electron source
Ultracold atom-based electron sources have recently been proposed as an
alternative to the conventional photo-injectors or thermionic electron guns
widely used in modern particle accelerators. The advantages of ultracold
atom-based electron sources lie in the fact that the electrons extracted from
the plasma (created from near threshold photo-ionization of ultracold atoms)
have a very low temperature, i.e. down to tens of Kelvin. Extraction of these
electrons has the potential for producing very low emittance electron bunches.
These features are crucial for the next generation of particle accelerators,
including free electron lasers, plasma-based accelerators and future linear
colliders. The source also has many potential direct applications, including
ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) and electron microscopy, due to its
intrinsically high coherence. In this paper, the basic mechanism of ultracold
electron beam production is discussed and our new research facility for an
ultracold, low emittance electron source is introduced. This source is based on
a novel alternating current Magneto-Optical Trap (the AC-MOT). Detailed
simulations for a proposed extraction system have shown that for a 1 pC bunch
charge, a beam emittance of 0.35 mm mrad is obtainable, with a bunch length of
3 mm and energy spread 1 %.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Journal of Instrumentation in
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Influence of steps on the tilting and adsorption dynamics of ordered Pn films on vicinal Ag(111) surfaces
Here we present a structural study of pentacene (Pn) thin films on vicinal
Ag(111) surfaces by He atom diffraction measurements and density functional
theory (DFT) calculations supplemented with van der Waals (vdW) interactions.
Our He atom diffraction results suggest initial adsorption at the step edges
evidenced by initial slow specular reflection intensity decay rate as a
function of Pn deposition time. In parallel with the experimental findings, our
DFT+vdW calculations predict the step edges as the most stable adsorption site
on the surface. An isolated molecule adsorbs as tilted on the step edge with a
binding energy of 1.4 eV. In addition, a complete monolayer (ML) with
pentacenes flat on the terraces and tilted only at the step edges is found to
be more stable than one with all lying flat or tilted molecules, which in turn
influences multilayers. Hence our results suggest that step edges can trap Pn
molecules and act as nucleation sites for the growth of ordered thin films with
a crystal structure similar to that of bulk Pn.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Counter-propagating entangled photons from a waveguide with periodic nonlinearity
The conditions required for spontaneous parametric down-conversion in a
waveguide with periodic nonlinearity in the presence of an unguided pump field
are established. Control of the periodic nonlinearity and the physical
properties of the waveguide permits the quasi-phase matching equations that
describe counter-propagating guided signal and idler beams to be satisfied. We
compare the tuning curves and spectral properties of such counter-propagating
beams to those for co-propagating beams under typical experimental conditions.
We find that the counter-propagating beams exhibit narrow bandwidth permitting
the generation of quantum states that possess discrete-frequency entanglement.
Such states may be useful for experiments in quantum optics and technologies
that benefit from frequency entanglement.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
The transverse and longitudinal beam characteristics of the phin photo-injector at Cern
International audienceThe laser driven RF photo-injectors are recent candidates for high-brightness, low-emittance electron sources. One of the main beam dynamics issues for a high brightness electron source is the optimization of beam envelope be- havior in the presence of the space charge force in order to get low emittance. Within the framework of the second Joint Research Activity PHIN of the European CARE pro- gram, a new photo-injector for CTF3 has been designed and installed by collaboration between LAL, CCLRC and CERN. Beam based measurements have been made dur- ing the commissioning runs of the PHIN 2008 and 2009 including measurements of the emittance, using multi-slit technique. The demonstration of the high charge and the stability along the long pulse train are between the goals of this photo-injector study as also being important issues for CTF3 and the CLIC drive beam. In this work the photo-injector will be described and the first beam mea- surement results will be presented and compared with the PARMELA simulations
Multi-Parameter Entanglement in Femtosecond Parametric Down-Conversion
A theory of spontaneous parametric down-conversion, which gives rise to a
quantum state that is entangled in multiple parameters, such as
three-dimensional wavevector and polarization, allows us to understand the
unusual characteristics of fourth-order quantum interference in many
experiments, including ultrafast type-II parametric down-conversion, the
specific example illustrated in this paper. The comprehensive approach provided
here permits the engineering of quantum states suitable for quantum information
schemes and new quantum technologies.Comment: to appear in Physical Review
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