8,154 research outputs found
Optimization of a charge-state analyzer for ECRIS beams
A detailed experimental and simulation study of the extraction of a 24 keV
He-ion beam from an ECR ion source and the subsequent beam transport through an
analyzing magnet is presented. We find that such a slow ion beam is very
sensitive to space-charge forces, but also that the neutralization of the
beam's space charge by secondary electrons is virtually complete for beam
currents up to at least 0.5 mA. The beam emittance directly behind the
extraction system is 65 pi mm mrad and is determined by the fact that the ion
beam is extracted in the strong magnetic fringe field of the ion source. The
relatively large emittance of the beam and its non-paraxiality lead, in
combination with a relatively small magnet gap, to significant beam losses and
a five-fold increase of the effective beam emittance during its transport
through the analyzing magnet. The calculated beam profile and phase-space
distributions in the image plane of the analyzing magnet agree well with
measurements. The kinematic and magnet aberrations have been studied using the
calculated second-order transfer map of the analyzing magnet, with which we can
reproduce the phase-space distributions of the ion beam behind the analyzing
magnet. Using the transfer map and trajectory calculations we have worked out
an aberration compensation scheme based on the addition of compensating
hexapole components to the main dipole field by modifying the shape of the
poles. The simulations predict that by compensating the kinematic and geometric
aberrations in this way and enlarging the pole gap the overall beam transport
efficiency can be increased from 16 to 45%
On the size and shape of excluded volume polymers confined between parallel plates
A number of recent experiments have provided detailed observations of the
configurations of long DNA strands under nano-to-micrometer sized confinement.
We therefore revisit the problem of an excluded volume polymer chain confined
between two parallel plates with varying plate separation. We show that the
non-monotonic behavior of the overall size of the chain as a function of
plate-separation, seen in computer simulations and reproduced by earlier
theories, can already be predicted on the basis of scaling arguments. However,
the behavior of the size in a plane parallel to the plates, a quantity observed
in recent experiments, is predicted to be monotonic, in contrast to the
experimental findings. We analyze this problem in depth with a mean-field
approach that maps the confined polymer onto an anisotropic Gaussian chain,
which allows the size of the polymer to be determined separately in the
confined and unconfined directions. The theory allows the analytical
construction of a smooth cross-over between the small plate-separation de
Gennes regime and the large plate-separation Flory regime. The results show
good agreement with Langevin dynamics simulations, and confirm the scaling
predictions.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Seasonal adjustment of daily data with CAMPLET
In the last decade large data sets have become available, both in terms of the number of time series and with higher frequencies (weekly, daily and even higher). All series may suffer from seasonality, which hides other important fluctuations. Therefore time series are typically seasonally adjusted. However, standard seasonal adjustment methods cannot handle series with higher than monthly frequencies. Recently, Abeln et al. (2019) presented CAMPLET, a new seasonal adjustment method, which does not produce revisions when new observations become available. The aim of this paper is to show the attractiveness of CAMPLET for seasonal adjustment of daily time series. We apply CAMPLET to daily data on the gas system in the Netherlands
Axiomatic Characterization of the Mean Function on Trees
A mean of a sequence Ï = (x1, x2, . . . , xk) of elements of a finite metric space (X, d) is an element x for which is minimum. The function Mean whose domain is the set of all finite sequences on X and is defined by Mean(Ï) = { x | x is a mean of Ï } is called the mean function on X. In this paper the mean function on finite trees is characterized axiomatically
Ultraviolet Signposts of Resonant Dynamics in the Starburst-Ringed Sab Galaxy, M94 (NGC 4736)
M94 (NGC 4736) is investigated using images from the Ultraviolet Imaging
Telescope (FUV-band), Hubble Space Telescope (NUV-band), Kitt Peak 0.9-m
telescope (H-alpha, R, and I bands), and Palomar 5-m telescope (B-band), along
with spectra from the International Ultraviolet Explorer and Lick 1-m
telescopes. The wide-field UIT image shows FUV emission from (a) an elongated
nucleus, (b) a diffuse inner disk, where H-alpha is observed in absorption, (c)
a bright inner ring of H II regions at the perimeter of the inner disk (R = 48
arcsec. = 1.1 kpc), and (d) two 500-pc size knots of hot stars exterior to the
ring on diametrically opposite sides of the nucleus (R= 130 arcsec. = 2.9 kpc).
The HST/FOC image resolves the NUV emission from the nuclear region into a
bright core and a faint 20 arcsec. long ``mini-bar'' at a position angle of 30
deg. Optical and IUE spectroscopy of the nucleus and diffuse inner disk
indicates an approximately 10^7 or 10^8 yr-old stellar population from
low-level starbirth activity blended with some LINER activity. Analysis of the
H-alpha, FUV, NUV, B, R, and I-band emission along with other observed tracers
of stars and gas in M94 indicates that most of the star formation is being
orchestrated via ring-bar dynamics involving the nuclear mini-bar, inner ring,
oval disk, and outer ring. The inner starburst ring and bi-symmetric knots at
intermediate radius, in particular, argue for bar-mediated resonances as the
primary drivers of evolution in M94 at the present epoch. Similar processes may
be governing the evolution of the ``core-dominated'' galaxies that have been
observed at high redshift. The gravitationally-lensed ``Pretzel Galaxy''
(0024+1654) at a redshift of approximately 1.5 provides an important precedent
in this regard.Comment: revised figure 1 (corrected coordinate labels on declination axis);
19 pages of text + 19 figures (jpg files); accepted for publication in A
Monitoring ethnic minorities in the Netherlands
Item does not contain fulltextThe article first summarises the history of ethnic minority policy in the Netherlands and the development of the âethnic minorityâ and âallochthonousâ categories, which are peculiar in comparative perspective in emphasising socio-economic disadvantage as a constitutive dimension of minority status and in setting the minority question within the broader Dutch political principle of âpillarisationâ. The article then examines the use of statistics in public policy, in a context where the national census has been discontinued since 1971, focusing more specifically on the case of education, where major statistical efforts have been devoted to identifying patterns of disadvantage and integration. Finally, the article briefly examines current debates on the situation of ethnic minorities in the Netherlands in the context of growing questioning of established Dutch models of minority policy.13 p
Dark matter within high surface brightness spiral galaxies
We present results from a detailed dynamical analysis of five high surface
brightness, late type spirals, studied with the aim to quantify the
luminous-to-dark matter ratio inside their optical radii. The galaxies' stellar
light distribution and gas kinematics have been observed and compared to
hydrodynamic gas simulations, which predict the 2D gas dynamics arising in
response to empirical gravitational potentials, which are combinations of
differing stellar disk and dark halo contributions. The gravitational potential
of the stellar disk was derived from near-infrared photometry, color-corrected
to constant (M/L); the dark halo was modelled by an isothermal sphere with a
core. Hydrodynamic gas simulations were performed for each galaxy for a
sequence of five different mass fractions of the stellar disk and for a wide
range of spiral pattern speeds. These two parameters mainly determine the
modelled gas distribution and kinematics. The agreement between the
non-axisymmetric part of the simulated and observed gas kinematics permitted us
to conclude that the galaxies with the highest rotation velocities tend to
possess near-maximal stellar disks. In less massive galaxies, with v_max<200
km/s, the mass of the dark halo at least equals the stellar mass within 2-3
R_disk. The simulated gas morphology provides a powerful tool to determine the
dominant spiral pattern speed. The corotation radius for all galaxies was found
to be constant at R_corotation ~ 3 R_disk and encloses the strong part of the
stellar spiral in all cases.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures; to appear in the Astrophysical Journal, Vol.
586, March 200
Increased Performance of Thin-film GaAs Solar Cells with Improved Rear Interface Reflectivity
The highest efficiencies in single-junction solar cells are obtained with devices based on GaAs. As this material is reaching the limit in material quality, the optimization of the design of the cell becomes more important. In this study we implement a patterning technique to the bottom contact layer of thin-film GaAs solar cells that increases the reflectance of photons to the active layers. Both shallow junction and deep junction devices were evaluated, and for deep junction cells, both the short circuit current and the open circuit voltage increase with the reflectance. The radiative saturation current density also decreases, indicating increased photon recycling. Detailed model simulations are performed to further evaluate the mechanisms leading to the improved performance of the deep junction design. Based on the same model, the possibilities for further improvements utilizing the deep junction are also identified
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