314 research outputs found
Coplanar emission near the LHC energy range (observed with XREC in the stratosphere)
The alignment of very high energy secondary cosmic rays was observed at both stratospheric and mountain altitudes by several X-ray emulsion chamber experiments. Extensive simulation with CORSIKA demonstrates that such phenomena can be explained by fluctuations with standard physics. However, in the case of two events observed in the stratosphere, specific features contradicts such explanation. According to the properties of those events with a minimal cascading, we explore the hints of new physics which could explain the alignment in terms of relativistic strings and diquark breaking. One description of the consequent coplanar emission expected in colliders is proposed
Classifying shape of internal pores within AlSi10Mg alloy manufactured by laser powder bed fusion using 3D X-ray micro computed tomography : influence of processing parameters and heat treatment
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support provided by the EPSRC (grant EP/R021694/1). The authors also wish to thank Rosie Bird at the University of Aberdeen for assisting with Avizo.Peer reviewedPostprin
Diffractive Contribution to the Elasticity and the Nucleonic Flux in the Atmosphere
We calculate the average elasticity considering non-diffractive and single
diffractive interactions and perform an analysis of the cosmic-ray flux by
means of an analytical solution for the nucleonic diffusion equation. We show
that the diffractive contribution is important for the adequate description of
the nucleonic and hadronic fluxes in the atmosphere.Comment: 10 pages, latex, 2 figures (uuencoded PostScript
High energy hadrons in EAS at mountain altitude
An extensive simulation has been carried out to estimate the physical
interpretation of dynamical factors such as , in terms of high
energy interaction features, concentrated in the present analysis on the
average transverse momentum. It appears that the large enhancement observed for
versus primary energy, suggesting in earliest analysis a significant
rise of with energy, is only the result of the limited resolution of the
detectors and remains in agreement with a wide range of models used in
simulations.Comment: 13 pages, 6 PostScript figures, LaTeX Subm. to JPhys
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