1,710 research outputs found
Low-Energy Effective Field Theory of Lepton-Proton Bremsstrahlung
We calculate the cross section for the lepton-proton bremsstrahlung process
in effective field theory. This process corresponds
to an undetected background signal for the proposed MUSE experiment at PSI.
MUSE is designed to measure elastic scattering of low-energy electrons and
muons off a proton target in order to extract a precise value for the proton's
r.m.s. radius. We show that the commonly used {\it peaking approximation},
which is used to evaluate the {\it radiative tail} for the elastic cross
section, is not applicable for muon proton scattering at the low-energy MUSE
kinematics. We also correct a misprint in a commonly cited review article.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Through Wall Imaging Radar Antenna with a Focus on Opening New Research Avenues
This review paper is an effort to develop insight into the development in antennas for through wall imaging radar application. Review on literature on antennas for use in through wall imaging radar, fulfilling one or more requirements/specifications such as ultrawide bandwidth, stable and high gain, stable unidirectional radiation pattern, wide scanning angle, compactness ensuring portability and facilitating real-time efficient and simple imaging is presented. The review covers variants of Vivaldi, Bow tie, Horn, Spiral, Patch and Magneto-electric dipole antennas demonstrated as suitable antennas for the through wall imaging radar application. With an aim to open new research avenues for making better through wall imaging radar antenna, review on relevant compressive reflector antennas, surface integrated waveguide antennas, plasma antennas, metamaterial antennas and single frequency dynamically configurable meta-surface antennas are incorporated. The review paper brings out possibilities of designing an optimum through wall imaging radar antenna and prospects of future research on the antenna to improve radiation pattern and facilitate overall simple and efficient imaging by the through wall imaging radar
Computer aided Design and Optimization of Mineral Processing Plants by a State of the Art Simulator
Tata Research Development and Design Centre (TRDDC) has developed a state of the art mineral processing simulator called SimL8. It performs modelling, simulation and optimisation functions and provides viable strategies for enhancement of the performance of mineral processing
plants. A number of case studies on plant diagnostics, grinding,classification, flotation and pressure filtration are taken up to demonstrate the utility of modelling and simulation on SimL8 platform
Model analysis of thermal UV-cutoff effects on the chiral critical surface at finite temperature and chemical potential
We study the effects of temporal UV-cutoff on the chiral critical surface in
hot and dense QCD using a chiral effective model. Recent lattice QCD
simulations indicate that the curvature of the critical surface might change
toward the direction in which the first order phase transition becomes stronger
on increasing the number of lattice sites. To investigate this effect on the
critical surface in an effective model approach, we use the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio
model with finite Matsubara frequency summation. We find that qualitative
feature of the critical surface does not alter appreciably as we decrease the
summation number, which is unlike the case what is observed in the recent
lattice QCD studies. This may either suggest the dependence of chemical
potential on the coupling strength or due to some additional interacting terms
such as vector interactions which could play an important role at finite
density.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Impact of Field-Dependent Electronic Trapping Across Coulomb Repulsive Potentials on Low Frequency Charge Oscillations
We have performed Monte Carlo simulations to obtain the field dependence of electronic trapping across repulsive potentials in GaAs. Such repulsive centers are associated with deep level impurities having multiply charged states. Our results reveal a field‐dependent maxima in the electronic capture coefficient, and the overall shape is seen to depend on the background electron density due to the effects of screening. Based on the Monte Carlo calculations, we have examined the stability of compensated semiconductors containing such repulsive centers. Our analysis indicates a potential for low frequency charge oscillations which is in keeping with available experimental data
Flavour equilibration in quark-gluon plasma
Within the framework of a dynamical and physically transparent model developed earlier, we study the time evolution of various quark flavours in the baryon-free region in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions. We show that even under optimistic conditions, the quark-gluon system fails to achieve chemical equilibrium
Solving relativistic hydrodynamic equation in presence of magnetic field for phase transition in a neutron star
Hadronic to quark matter phase transition may occur inside neutron stars (NS)
having central densities of the order of 3-10 times normal nuclear matter
saturation density (). The transition is expected to be a two-step
process; transition from hadronic to 2-flavour matter and two-flavour to
equilibrated charge neutral three-flavour matter. In this paper we
concentrate on the first step process and solve the relativistic hydrodynamic
equations for the conversion front in presence of high magnetic field. Lorentz
force due to magnetic field is included in the energy momentum tensor by
averaging over the polar angles. We find that for an initial dipole
configuration of the magnetic field with a sufficiently high value at the
surface, velocity of the front increases considerably.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, same as published version of JPG, J. Phys. G:
Nucl. Part. Phys. 39 (2012) 09520
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