1,552 research outputs found
Fast beam-ion instability simulations in the TESLA electron damping ring and the FEL beam transfer line
The Fast Beam-Ion Instability is considered potentially harmful in electron storage rings and linear colliders with short bunch spacing and high bunch charge, as it is the case in the proposed electron damping ring and the FEL beam transfer line of the future linear collider TESLA. This instability arises from interaction between a stored bunch and an ion cloud previously created by all heading bunches during a single pass. To study this effect and to determine the required vacuum conditions, a simulation code has been developed. The results of these simulation studies are presented in this paper
Threatening incarceration for pregnant women who drink alcohol
A county in the US has declared an intention to prosecute and potentially incarcerate women who consume alcohol or drugs during pregnancy. Andrew Symon explores the legal issues at stake
Advanced manned space flight simulation and training: An investigation of simulation host computer system concepts
The findings of a preliminary investigation by Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in simulation host computer concepts is presented. It is designed to aid NASA in evaluating simulation technologies for use in spaceflight training. The focus of the investigation is on the next generation of space simulation systems that will be utilized in training personnel for Space Station Freedom operations. SwRI concludes that NASA should pursue a distributed simulation host computer system architecture for the Space Station Training Facility (SSTF) rather than a centralized mainframe based arrangement. A distributed system offers many advantages and is seen by SwRI as the only architecture that will allow NASA to achieve established functional goals and operational objectives over the life of the Space Station Freedom program. Several distributed, parallel computing systems are available today that offer real-time capabilities for time critical, man-in-the-loop simulation. These systems are flexible in terms of connectivity and configurability, and are easily scaled to meet increasing demands for more computing power
An Investigation on Cooling of CZT Co-Planar Grid Detectors
The effect of moderate cooling on CdZnTe semiconductor detectors has been
studied for the COBRA experiment. Improvements in energy resolution and low
energy threshold were observed and quantified as a function of temperature.
Leakage currents are found to contribute typically 5 keV to the widths of
photopeaks.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Nuclear Inst. and
Methods in Physics Research,
Overcoming a fast transverse instability by means of octupole-induced tune spread in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
During the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider commissioning in 2001 a fast transverse instability was observed on the ramp. In general this could be counteracted with increased chromaticity, resulting in Landau damping. However this method could not be applied around transition energy where chromaticities have to change sign. So octupoles were used near transition energy to create transverse Landau damping and avoid the transverse instability, emittance blowup, and beam loss. This paper describes the considerations that led to the present scheme, as well as experimental results
Transverse beam tail shaping in HERA-p by means of tune modulation
The HERA-B experiment utilizes an internal wire target in the halo of the stored proton beam in order to study CP violation. As operational experience shows, interaction rates tend to be extremely sensitive to tiny orbit jitter amplitudes. In order to stabilize these interaction rates, various methods have been studied to increase diffusion in the transverse proton beam tails without affecting the luminosity at the electron-proton collider experiments ZEUS and H1. Tune modulation was found to be a promising method for this task. The present status of these experiments willbe reported
Dispersion Relations in String Theory
We analyze the analytic continuation of the formally divergent one-loop
amplitude for scattering of the graviton multiplet in the Type II Superstring.
In particular we obtain explicit double and single dispersion relations,
formulas for all the successive branch cuts extending out to plus infinity, as
well as for the decay rate of a massive string state of arbitrary mass 2N into
two string states of lower mass. We compare our results with the box diagram in
a superposition of -like field theories. The stringy effects are traced
to a convergence problem in this superposition.Comment: 17 pages, COLUMBIA-YITP-UCLA/93/TEP/45 (figures fixed up
Observation of coasting beam at the HERA Proton--Ring
We present data collected with the HERA-B wire target which prove the
existence of coasting beam at the HERA proton storage ring. The coasting beam
is inherently produced by the proton machine operation and is not dominated by
target effects.Comment: 17 pages (Latex), 12 figures (Enc. Postscript
Rearrangement of cluster structure during fission processes
Results of molecular dynamics simulations of fission reactions and are presented. Dependence
of the fission barriers on isomer structure of the parent cluster is analyzed.
It is demonstrated that the energy necessary for removing homothetic groups of
atoms from the parent cluster is largely independent of the isomer form of the
parent cluster. Importance of rearrangement of the cluster structure during the
fission process is elucidated. This rearrangement may include transition to
another isomer state of the parent cluster before actual separation of the
daughter fragments begins and/or forming a "neck" between the separating
fragments
High energy Coulomb-scattered electrons for relativistic particle beam diagnostics
A new system used for monitoring energetic Coulomb-scattered electrons as the
main diagnostic for accurately aligning the electron and ion beams in the new
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) electron lenses is described in detail.
The theory of electron scattering from relativistic ions is developed and
applied to the design and implementation of the system used to achieve and
maintain the alignment. Commissioning with gold and 3He beams is then described
as well as the successful utilization of the new system during the 2015 RHIC
polarized proton run. Systematic errors of the new method are then estimated.
Finally, some possible future applications of Coulomb-scattered electrons for
beam diagnostics are briefly discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 23 figure
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