1,128 research outputs found
WARP: a WIMP double phase Argon detector
The WARP programme for dark matter search with a double phase argon detector
is presented. In such a detector both excitation and ionization produced by an
impinging particle are evaluated by the contemporary measurement of primary
scintillation and secondary (proportional) light signal, this latter being
produced by extracting and accelerating ionization electrons in the gas phase.
The proposed technique, verified on a 2.3 liters prototype, could be used to
efficiently discriminate nuclear recoils, induced by WIMP's interactions, and
measure their energy spectrum. An overview of the 2.3 liters results and of the
proposed 100 liters detector is shown.Comment: Proceeding for IDM200
Non-B HIV type 1 subtypes among men who have sex with men in Rome, Italy
An increase in the circulation of HIV-1 non-B subtypes has been observed in recent years in Western European countries. Due to the lack of data on the circulation of HIV-1 non-B subtypes among European HIV-1-infected men who have sex with men (MSM), a biomolecular study was conducted in Rome, Italy. HIV-1 partial pol gene sequences from 111 MSM individuals (76 drug naive and 35 drug experienced) were collected during the years 2004-2006. All these sequences were analyzed using the REGA HIV-1 Subtyping Tool, and aligned using CLUSTAL X followed by manual editing using the Bioedit software. A BLAST search for non-B subtype sequences was also performed. Twenty-six (23.4%) MSM were not Italians. Eight individuals (7.2%) were diagnosed as HIV infected before 1991, 20 (18.0%) between 1991 and 1999, and 83 (74.8%) from 2000 to 2006. Fifteen (15/111, 13.5%) individuals were infected with the non-B subtype. The percentage of infection with HIV-1 non-B subtypes was 8.2% (7/85) among Italian MSM and 30.8% (8/26) among the non-Italians (OR = 4.95 95% IC: 1.40-17.87). Individuals infected with the non-B subtype were significantly younger than those infected with the HIV-1 B subtype (28 years vs. 34 years, p = 0.003). The CRFs were more prevalent (8.1%) than pure subtypes (5.4%), which were distributed as follows: subtype C (2.6%), subtype A1 (1.7%), and subtype F1 (0.9%). Major mutations conferring resistance to antiretroviral drugs (ARV) were not found among HIV-1 non-B subtype drug-naive patients but were found in two ARV-experienced individuals. The data show that viral diversity is likely increasing in a population group that had been previously characterized by the circulation of HIV-1 subtype B. © Copyright 2009, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc
Demonstration and Comparison of Operation of Photomultiplier Tubes at Liquid Argon Temperature
Liquified noble gases are widely used as a target in direct Dark Matter
searches. Signals from scintillation in the liquid, following energy deposition
from the recoil nuclei scattered by Dark Matter particles (e.g. WIMPs), should
be recorded down to very low energies by photosensors suitably designed to
operate at cryogenic temperatures. Liquid Argon based detectors for Dark Matter
searches currently implement photo multiplier tubes for signal read-out. In the
last few years PMTs with photocathodes operating down to liquid Argon
temperatures (87 K) have been specially developed with increasing Quantum
Efficiency characteristics. The most recent of these, Hamamatsu Photonics Mod.
R11065 with peak QE up to about 35%, has been extensively tested within the R&D
program of the WArP Collaboration. During these testes the Hamamatsu PMTs
showed superb performance and allowed obtaining a light yield around 7
phel/keVee in a Liquid Argon detector with a photocathodic coverage in the 12%
range, sufficient for detection of events down to few keVee of energy
deposition. This shows that this new type of PMT is suited for experimental
applications, in particular for new direct Dark Matter searches with LAr-based
experiments
The genotypic false positive rate determined by V3 population sequencing can predict the burden of HIV-1 CXCR4-using species detected by pyrosequencing
The false-positive rate (FPR) is a percentage-score provided by Geno2Pheno-algorithm indicating the likelihood that a V3-sequence is falsely predicted as CXCR4-using. We evaluated the correlation between FPR obtained by V3 population-sequencing and the burden of CXCR4-using variants detected by V3 ultra-deep sequencing (UDPS) and Enhanced-Sensitivity Trofile assay (ESTA)
The detection of back-to-back proton pairs in Charged-Current neutrino interactions with the ArgoNeuT detector in the NuMI low energy beam line
Short range nucleon-nucleon correlations in nuclei (NN SRC) carry important
information on nuclear structure and dynamics. NN SRC have been extensively
probed through two-nucleon knock- out reactions in both pion and electron
scattering experiments. We report here on the detection of two-nucleon
knock-out events from neutrino interactions and discuss their topological
features as possibly involving NN SRC content in the target argon nuclei. The
ArgoNeuT detector in the Main Injector neutrino beam at Fermilab has recorded a
sample of 30 fully reconstructed charged current events where the leading muon
is accompanied by a pair of protons at the interaction vertex, 19 of which have
both protons above the Fermi momentum of the Ar nucleus. Out of these 19
events, four are found with the two protons in a strictly back-to-back high
momenta configuration directly observed in the final state and can be
associated to nucleon Resonance pionless mechanisms involving a pre-existing
short range correlated np pair in the nucleus. Another fraction (four events)
of the remaining 15 events have a reconstructed back-to-back configuration of a
np pair in the initial state, a signature compatible with one-body Quasi
Elastic interaction on a neutron in a SRC pair. The detection of these two
subsamples of the collected (mu- + 2p) events suggests that mechanisms directly
involving nucleon-nucleon SRC pairs in the nucleus are active and can be
efficiently explored in neutrino-argon interactions with the LAr TPC
technology
A new, very massive modular Liquid Argon Imaging Chamber to detect low energy off-axis neutrinos from the CNGS beam. (Project MODULAr)
The paper is considering an opportunity for the CERN/GranSasso (CNGS)
neutrino complex, concurrent time-wise with T2K and NOvA, to search for
theta_13 oscillations and CP violation. Compared with large water Cherenkov
(T2K) and fine grained scintillators (NOvA), the LAr-TPC offers a higher
detection efficiency and a lower backgrounds, since virtually all channels may
be unambiguously recognized. The present proposal, called MODULAr, describes a
20 kt fiducial volume LAr-TPC, following very closely the technology developed
for the ICARUS-T60o, and is focused on the following activities, for which we
seek an extended international collaboration:
(1) the neutrino beam from the CERN 400 GeV proton beam and an optimised horn
focussing, eventually with an increased intensity in the framework of the LHC
accelerator improvement program;
(2) A new experimental area LNGS-B, of at least 50000 m3 at 10 km off-axis
from the main Laboratory, eventually upgradable to larger sizes. A location is
under consideration at about 1.2 km equivalent water depth;
(3) A new LAr Imaging detector of at least 20 kt fiducial mass. Such an
increase in the volume over the current ICARUS T600 needs to be carefully
considered. It is concluded that a very large mass is best realised with a set
of many identical, independent units, each of 5 kt, "cloning" the technology of
the T600. Further phases may foresee extensions of MODULAr to meet future
physics goals.
The experiment might reasonably be operational in about 4/5 years, provided a
new hall is excavated in the vicinity of the Gran Sasso Laboratory and adequate
funding and participation are made available.Comment: Correspondig Author: C. Rubbia (E-mail: [email protected]), 33
pages, 11 figure
Muon Energy Estimate Through Multiple Scattering with the Macro Detector
Muon energy measurement represents an important issue for any experiment
addressing neutrino induced upgoing muon studies. Since the neutrino
oscillation probability depends on the neutrino energy, a measurement of the
muon energy adds an important piece of information concerning the neutrino
system. We show in this paper how the MACRO limited streamer tube system can be
operated in drift mode by using the TDC's included in the QTPs, an electronics
designed for magnetic monopole search. An improvement of the space resolution
is obtained, through an analysis of the multiple scattering of muon tracks as
they pass through our detector. This information can be used further to obtain
an estimate of the energy of muons crossing the detector. Here we present the
results of two dedicated tests, performed at CERN PS-T9 and SPS-X7 beam lines,
to provide a full check of the electronics and to exploit the feasibility of
such a multiple scattering analysis. We show that by using a neural network
approach, we are able to reconstruct the muon energy for 40 GeV. The
test beam data provide an absolute energy calibration, which allows us to apply
this method to MACRO data.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, Submitted to Nucl. Instr. & Meth.
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