11,627 research outputs found
Recent Results and Perspectives at CDF and D0
Over the course of the past years the experimental measurements performed by
the two large collaborations, CDF and D{\O}, at the
Fermilab Tevatron Collider have fueled advances in our understanding of
physics at the energy frontier. At the present time the accelerator complex and
the two detectors are undergoing substantial improvements. In this paper, we
provide a discussion of some recent results which in turn provides a framework
within which we can look to future prospects.Comment: 22 pages, including 14 figures. Latex, crckapb.st
VAS demonstration: (VISSR Atmospheric Sounder) description
The VAS Demonstration (VISSR Atmospheric Sounder) is a project designed to evaluate the VAS instrument as a remote sensor of the Earth's atmosphere and surface. This report describes the instrument and ground processing system, the instrument performance, the valiation as a temperature and moisture profiler compared with ground truth and other satellites, and assesses its performance as a valuable meteorological tool. The report also addresses the availability of data for scientific research
Sensor performance analysis
The theory is described and the equations required to design are developed and the performance of electro-optical sensor systems that operate from the visible through the thermal infrared spectral regions are analyzed. Methods to compute essential optical and detector parameters, signal-to-noise ratio, MTF, and figures of merit such as NE delta rho and NE delta T are developed. A set of atmospheric tables are provided to determine scene radiance in the visible spectral region. The Planck function is used to determine radiance in the infrared. The equations developed were incorporated in a spreadsheet so that a wide variety of sensor studies can be rapidly and efficiently conducted
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Fine Grid Asteroseismology Of G117-B15A And R548
We now have a good measurement of the cooling rate of G117-B15A. In the near future, we will have equally well determined cooling rates for other pulsating white dwarfs, including R548. The ability to measure their cooling rates offers us a unique way to study weakly interacting particles that would contribute to their cooling. Working toward that goal, we perform a careful asteroseismological analysis of G117-B15A and R548. We study them side by side because they have similar observed properties. We carry out a systematic, fine grid search for best-fit models to the observed period spectra of those stars. We freely vary four parameters: the effective temperature, the stellar mass, the helium layer mass, and the hydrogen layer mass. We identify and quantify a number of uncertainties associated with our models. Based on the results of that analysis and fits to the periods observed in R548 and G117-B15A, we clearly define the regions of the four-dimensional parameter space occupied by the best-fit models.NSF AST 05-07639Astronom
Constraining the Surface Inhomogeneity and Settling Times of Metals on Accreting White Dwarfs
Due to the short settling times of metals in DA white dwarf atmospheres, any
white dwarfs with photospheric metals must be actively accreting. It is
therefore natural to expect that the metals may not be deposited uniformly on
the surface of the star. We present calculations showing how the temperature
variations associated with white dwarf pulsations lead to an observable
diagnostic of the surface metal distribution, and we show what constraints
current data sets are able to provide. We also investigate the effect that
time-variable accretion has on the metal abundances of different species, and
we show how this can lead to constraints on the gravitational settling times.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal Letters, updated reference
Physics with the Main Injector
The Main Injector is a new rapid cycling accelerator at Fermilab which is a source of protons to be used in antiproton production to enhance the luminosity of the Tevatron Collider and to provide extracted beams for use in a range of fixed target experiments. We discuss the current status of the accelerator and the physics which it enables. The physics ranges broadly over the standard model and beyond, from the search for neutrino mass to collider physics at the highest energy available today
Driving in ZZ Ceti stars - Problem solved?
There is a fairly tight correlation between the pulsation periods and
effective temperatures of ZZ Ceti stars (cooler stars have longer periods).
This seems to fit the theoretical picture, where driving occurs in the partial
ionization zone, which lies deeper and deeper within the star as it cools. It
is reasonable to assume that the pulsation periods should be related to the
thermal timescale in the region where driving occurs. As that region sinks
further down below the surface, that thermal timescale increases. Assuming this
connection, the pulsation periods could provide an additional way to determine
effective temperatures, independent of spectroscopy. We explore this idea and
find that in practice, things are not so simple.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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