7,146 research outputs found
Hadronic interactions of primary cosmic rays with the FLUKA code
The measured fluxes of secondary particles produced by the interactions of
cosmic rays with the astronomical environment represent a powerful tool to
infer some properties of primary cosmic rays. In this work we investigate the
production of secondary particles in inelastic hadronic interactions between
several cosmic rays species of projectiles and different target nuclei of the
interstellar medium. The yields of secondary particles have been calculated
with the FLUKA simulation package, that provides with very good accuracy the
energy distributions of secondary products in a large energy range. An
application to the propagation and production of secondaries in the Galaxy is
presented.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; Contribution to the 34th International Cosmic Ray
Conference, July 30 to August 6, The Hague, Netherlands; fixing a typo in the
y-axis label of Fig.
Bimagnon studies in cuprates with Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering at the O K edge. II - The doping effect in La2-xSrxCuO4
We present RIXS data at O K edge from La2-xSrxCuO4 vs. doping between x=0.10
and x=0.22 with attention to the magnetic excitations in the Mid-Infrared
region. The sampling done by RIXS is the same as in the undoped cuprates
provided the excitation is at the first pre-peak induced by doping. Note that
this excitation energy is about 1.5 eV lower than that needed to see bimagnons
in the parent compound. This approach allows the study of the upper region of
the bimagnon continuum around 450 meV within about one third of the Brilluoin
Zone around \Gamma. The results show the presence of damped bimagnons and of
higher even order spin excitations with almost constant spectral weight at all
the dopings explored here. The implications on high Tc studies are briefly
addressed
Coherent molecule formation in anharmonic potentials near confinement-induced resonances
We perform a theoretical and experimental study of a system of two ultracold
atoms with tunable interaction in an elongated trapping potential. We show that
the coupling of center-of-mass and relative motion due to an anharmonicity of
the trapping potential leads to a coherent coupling of a state of an unbound
atom pair and a molecule with a center of mass excitation. By performing the
experiment with exactly two particles we exclude three-body losses and can
therefore directly observe coherent molecule formation. We find quantitative
agreement between our theory of inelastic confinement-induced resonances and
the experimental results. This shows that the effects of center-of-mass to
relative motion coupling can have a significant impact on the physics of
quasi-1D quantum systems.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Temperature dependence of iron local magnetic moment in phase-separated superconducting chalcogenide
We have studied local magnetic moment and electronic phase separation in
superconducting KFeSe by x-ray emission and absorption
spectroscopy. Detailed temperature dependent measurements at the Fe K-edge have
revealed coexisting electronic phases and their correlation with the transport
properties. By cooling down, the local magnetic moment of Fe shows a sharp drop
across the superconducting transition temperature (T) and the coexisting
phases exchange spectral weights with the low spin state gaining intensity at
the expense of the higher spin state. After annealing the sample across the
iron-vacancy order temperature, the system does not recover the initial state
and the spectral weight anomaly at T as well as superconductivity
disappear. The results clearly underline that the coexistence of the low spin
and high spin phases and the transitions between them provide unusual magnetic
fluctuations and have a fundamental role in the superconducting mechanism of
electronically inhomogeneous KFeSe system.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Space-time properties of free motion time-of-arrival eigenstates
The properties of the time-of-arrival operator for free motion introduced by
Aharonov and Bohm and of its self-adjoint variants are studied. The domains of
applicability of the different approaches are clarified. It is shown that the
arrival time of the eigenstates is not sharply defined. However, strongly
peaked real-space (normalized) wave packets constructed with narrow Gaussian
envelopes centred on one of the eigenstates provide an arbitrarily sharp
arrival time.Comment: REVTEX, 12 pages, 4 postscript figure
The worldwide costs of marine protected areas
Declines in marine harvests, wildlife, and habitats have prompted calls at both the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development and the 2003 World Parks Congress for the establishment of a global system of marine protected areas (MPAs). MPAs that restrict fishing and other human activities conserve habitats and populations and, by exporting biomass, may sustain or increase yields of nearby fisheries. Here we provide an estimate of the costs of a global MPA network, based on a survey of the running costs of 83 MPAs worldwide. Annual running costs per unit area spanned six orders of magnitude, and were higher in MPAs that were smaller, closer to coasts, and in high-cost, developed countries. Models extrapolating these findings suggest that a global MPA network meeting the World Parks Congress target of conserving 20–30% of the world’s seas might cost between 19 billion annually to run and would probably create around one million jobs. Although substantial, gross network costs are less than current government expenditures on harmful subsidies to industrial fisheries. They also ignore potential private gains from improved fisheries and tourism and are dwarfed by likely social gains from increasing the sustainability of fisheries and securing vital ecosystem services
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