455 research outputs found
Spatiotemporal Response of Crystals in X-ray Bragg Diffraction
The spatiotemporal response of crystals in x-ray Bragg diffraction resulting
from excitation by an ultra-short, laterally confined x-ray pulse is studied
theoretically. The theory presents an extension of the analysis in symmetric
reflection geometry [1] to the generic case, which includes Bragg diffraction
both in reflection (Bragg) and transmission (Laue) asymmetric scattering
geometries. The spatiotemporal response is presented as a product of a
crystal-intrinsic plane wave spatiotemporal response function and an envelope
function defined by the crystal-independent transverse profile of the incident
beam and the scattering geometry. The diffracted wavefields exhibit amplitude
modulation perpendicular to the propagation direction due to both angular
dispersion and the dispersion due to Bragg's law. The characteristic measure of
the spatiotemporal response is expressed in terms of a few parameters: the
extinction length, crystal thickness, Bragg angle, asymmetry angle, and the
speed of light. Applications to self-seeding of hard x-ray free electron lasers
are discussed, with particular emphasis on the relative advantages of using
either the Bragg or Laue scattering geometries. Intensity front inclination in
asymmetric diffraction can be used to make snapshots of ultra-fast processes
with femtosecond resolution
Time dependence of Bragg forward scattering and self-seeding of hard x-ray free-electron lasers
Free-electron lasers (FELs) can now generate temporally short, high power
x-ray pulses of unprecedented brightness, even though their longitudinal
coherence is relatively poor. The longitudinal coherence can be potentially
improved by employing narrow bandwidth x-ray crystal optics, in which case one
must also understand how the crystal affects the field profile in time and
space. We frame the dynamical theory of x-ray diffraction as a set of coupled
waves in order to derive analytic expressions for the spatiotemporal response
of Bragg scattering from temporally short incident pulses. We compute the
profiles of both the reflected and forward scattered x-ray pulses, showing that
the time delay of the wave is linked to its transverse spatial shift
through the simple relationship , where
is the grazing angle of incidence to the diffracting planes. Finally,
we apply our findings to obtain an analytic description of Bragg forward
scattering relevant to monochromatically seed hard x-ray FELs.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Ultimate Precision of Adaptive Noise Estimation
We consider the estimation of noise parameters in a quantum channel, assuming the most general strategy allowed by quantum mechanics. This is based on the exploitation of unlimited entanglement and arbitrary quantum operations, so that the channel inputs may be interactively updated. In this general scenario, we draw a novel connection between quantum metrology and teleportation. In fact, for any teleportation-covariant channel (e.g., Pauli, erasure, or Gaussian channel), we find that adaptive noise estimation cannot beat the standard quantum limit, with the quantum Fisher information being determined by the channel’s Choi matrix. As an example, we establish the ultimate precision for estimating excess noise in a thermal-loss channel, which is crucial for quantum cryptography. Because our general methodology applies to any functional that is monotonic under trace-preserving maps, it can be applied to simplify other adaptive protocols, including those for quantum channel discrimination. Setting the ultimate limits for noise estimation and discrimination paves the way for exploring the boundaries of quantum sensing, imaging, and tomography
A stochastic network with mobile users in heavy traffic
We consider a stochastic network with mobile users in a heavy-traffic regime.
We derive the scaling limit of the multi-dimensional queue length process and
prove a form of spatial state space collapse. The proof exploits a recent
result by Lambert and Simatos which provides a general principle to establish
scaling limits of regenerative processes based on the convergence of their
excursions. We also prove weak convergence of the sequences of stationary joint
queue length distributions and stationary sojourn times.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in Queueing Systems, Theory
and Application
A novel Doppler backscattering (DBS) system to simultaneously monitor radio frequency plasma fluctuations and low frequency turbulence
A novel quadrature Doppler Backscattering (DBS) system has been developed and
optimized for the E-band (60-90GHz) frequency range using either O-mode or
X-mode polarization in DIII-D plasmas. In general, DBS measures the amplitude
of density fluctuations and their velocity in the lab frame. The system can
simultaneously monitor both low-frequency turbulence (f < 10MHz) and
radiofrequency plasma density fluctuations over a selectable frequency range
(20-500 MHz). Detection of high-frequency fluctuations has been demonstrated
for low harmonics of the ion cyclotron frequency (e.g., 2fci~23MHz) and
externally driven high-frequency helicon waves (f = 476MHz) using an adjustable
frequency down conversion system. Importantly, this extends the application of
DBS to a high-frequency spectral domain while maintaining important turbulence
and flow measurement capabilities. This unique system has low phase noise, good
temporal resolution (sub-millisecond) and excellent wavenumber coverage
(k_{\theta} ~ 1-20cm^{-1} and k_r ~ 20-30cm^{-1}). As a demonstration,
localized internal DIII-D plasma measurements are presented from turbulence (f
= 20MHz) as well
as fluctuations around 476MHz driven by an external high-power 476 MHz helicon
wave antenna. In the future, helicon measurements will be used to validate
GENRAY and AORSA modeling tools for prediction of helicon wave propagation,
absorption and current drive location for the newly installed helicon current
drive system on DIII-D.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figs, journal pape
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Experiments on Ion Cyclotron Damping at the Deuterium Fourth Harmonic in DIII-D
Absorption of fast Alfven waves by the energetic ions of an injected beam is evaluated in the DIII-D tokamak. Ion cyclotron resonance absorption at the fourth harmonic of the deuteron cyclotron frequency is observed with deuterium neutral beam injection (f = 60 MHz, B{sub T} = 1.9 T). Enhanced D-D neutron rates are evidence of absorption at the Doppler-shifted cyclotron resonance. Characteristics of global energy confinement provide further proof of substantial beam acceleration by the rf. In many cases, the accelerated deuterons cause temporary stabilization of the sawtooth (monster sawteeth), at relatively low rf power levels of {approximately}1 MW
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Improved tuning and matching of ion cyclotron systems
Future fusion devices will require delivery of ion cyclotron heating and current drive power during plasma changes (e.g., L-H transition, ELMs). The use of a passive circuit (``ELM dump``) to protect the RF sources during transients has been demonstrated on DIII-D, and the results are applied to the ITER ion cyclotron system in this analysis. In addition, the use of frequency shifting to compensate for plasma load changes is illustrated for a possible ITER tuning and matching system
Application of ECH to the Study of Transport in ITER Baseline Scenario-like Discharges in DIII-D
Recent DIII-D experiments in the ITER Baseline Scenario (IBS) have shown strong increases in fluctuations and correlated reduction of confinement associated with entering the electron-heating-dominated regime with strong electron cyclotron heating (ECH). The addition of 3.2 MW of 110 GHz EC power deposited at ρ~0.42 to IBS discharges with ~3 MW of neutral beam injection causes large increases in low-k and medium-k turbulent density fluctuations observed with Doppler backscatter (DBS), beam emission spectroscopy (BES) and phase-contrast imaging (PCI) diagnostics, correlated with decreases in the energy, particle, and momentum confinement times. Power balance calculations show the electron heat diffusivity χ[subscript e] increases significantly in the mid-radius region 0.4<ρ<0.8, which is roughly the same region where the DBS and BES diagnostics show the increases in turbulent density fluctuations. Confinement of angular momentum is also reduced during ECH. Studies with the TGYRO transport solver show that the model of turbulent transport embodied in the TGLF code quantitatively reproduces the measured transport in both the neutral beam (NB)-only and in the NB plus EC cases. A simple model of the decrease in toroidal rotation with EC power is set forth, which exhibits a bifurcation in the rotational state of the discharge.United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FC02-04ER54698)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FC02-08ER54966)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-AC03-09CH11466)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FG02-04ER54235)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FG0289ER53296)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FG02-08ER54999)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FG02-08ER54984)United States. Dept. of Energy (DE-FG02-04ER54461
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