1,541 research outputs found
The GRAAL high resolution BGO calorimeter and its energy calibration and monitoring system
We describe the electromagnetic calorimeter built for the GRAAL apparatus at
the ESRF. Its monitoring system is presented in detail. Results from tests and
the performance obtained during the first GRAAL experiments are given. The
energy calibration accuracy and stability reached is a small fraction of the
intrinsic detector resolution.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Method
Experimental and numerical analysis of supersonic blade profiles developed for highly loaded impulse type steam turbine stages
The paper describes the results of a numerical and experimental research program addressing the aerodynamic investigation on the performance of blade profiles specifically developed for application in highly loaded impulse type turbine stages. The industrial requirements driving toward the adoption of highly loaded stage solutions are presented, along with an estimation of the profiles operating parameters. Two stator vanes and one rotor blade profile have been developed and extensively tested by means of flow field measurements and schlieren visualization in a transonic blow-down wind tunnel for linear cascades. Experimental results for the relevant operating conditions are presented, providing validation data for the CFD model used for blade design and evidencing that the main goals of the design optimization procedure have been achieved
Eta photoproduction off the neutron at GRAAL: Evidence for a resonant structure at W=1.67 GeV
New (preliminary) data on eta photoproduction off the neutron are presented.
These data reveal a resonant structure at W=1.67 GeV.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Published in Proceedings of Workshop on the
Physics of Excited Nucleons NSTAR2004, Grenoble, France, March 24 - 27,
pg.19
Shedding New Light on Kaon-Nucleon/Nuclei Interaction and Its Astrophysical Implications with the AMADEUS Experiment at DAFNE
The AMADEUS experiment deals with the investigation of the low-energy
kaon-nuclei hadronic interaction at the DA{\Phi}NE collider at LNF-INFN, which
is fundamental to respond longstanding questions in the non-perturbative QCD
strangeness sector. The antikaon-nucleon potential is investigated searching
for signals from possible bound kaonic clusters, which would open the
possibility for the formation of cold dense baryonic matter. The confirmation
of this scenario may imply a fundamental role of strangeness in astrophysics.
AMADEUS step 0 consisted in the reanalysis of 2004/2005 KLOE dataset,
exploiting K- absorptions in H, 4He, 9Be and 12C in the setup materials. In
this paper, together with a review on the multi-nucleon K- absorption and the
particle identification procedure, the first results on the {\Sigma}0-p channel
will be presented including a statistical analysis on the possible accomodation
of a deeply bound stateComment: 6 pages, 2 figure, 1 table, HADRON 2015 conferenc
Search for light-speed anisotropies using Compton scattering of high-energy electrons
Based on the high sensitivity of Compton scattering off ultra relativistic
electrons, the possibility of anisotropies in the speed of light is
investigated. The result discussed in this contribution is based on the
gamma-ray beam of the ESRF's GRAAL facility (Grenoble, France) and the search
for sidereal variations in the energy of the Compton-edge photons. The absence
of oscillations yields the two-sided limit of 1.6 x 10^{-14} at 95 % confidence
level on a combination of photon and electron coefficients of the minimal
Standard Model Extension (mSME). This new constraint provides an improvement
over previous bounds by one order of magnitude.Comment: Talk presented at the Fifth Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry,
University of Indiana, June 28-July 2, 201
A new limit on the light speed isotropy from the GRAAL experiment at the ESRF
When the electrons stored in the ring of the European Synchrotron Radiation
Facility (ESRF, Grenoble) scatter on a laser beam (Compton scattering in
flight) the lower energy of the scattered electron spectra, the Compton Edge
(CE), is given by the two body photon-electron relativistic kinematics and
depends on the velocity of light. A precision measurement of the position of
this CE as a function of the daily variations of the direction of the electron
beam in an absolute reference frame provides a one-way test of Relativistic
Kinematics and the isotropy of the velocity of light. The results of GRAAL-ESRF
measurements improve the previously existing one-way limits, thus showing the
efficiency of this method and the interest of further studies in this
direction.Comment: Proceed. MG12 meeting, Paris, July, 200
Limits on light-speed anisotropies from Compton scattering of high-energy electrons
The possibility of anisotropies in the speed of light relative to the
limiting speed of electrons is considered. The absence of sidereal variations
in the energy of Compton-edge photons at the ESRF's GRAAL facility constrains
such anisotropies representing the first non-threshold collision-kinematics
study of Lorentz violation. When interpreted within the minimal Standard-Model
Extension, this result yields the two-sided limit of 1.6 x 10^{-14} at 95%
confidence level on a combination of the parity-violating photon and electron
coefficients kappa_{o+} and c. This new constraint provides an improvement over
previous bounds by one order of magnitude.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Lowering the Light Speed Isotropy Limit: European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Measurements
The measurement of the Compton edge of the scattered electrons in GRAAL
facility in European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble with
respect to the Cosmic Microwave Background dipole reveals up to 10 sigma
variations larger than the statistical errors. We now show that the variations
are not due to the frequency variations of the accelerator. The nature of
Compton edge variations remains unclear, thus outlining the imperative of
dedicated studies of light speed anisotropy
Unprecedented studies of the low-energy negatively charged kaons interactions in nuclear matter by AMADEUS
The AMADEUS experiment aims to provide unique quality data of hadronic
interactions in light nuclear targets, in order to solve fundamental open
questions in the non-perturbative strangeness QCD sector, like the
controversial nature of the state, the yield of hyperon
formation below threshold, the yield and shape of multi-nucleon
absorption, processes which are intimately connected to the possible existence
of exotic antikaon multi-nucleon clusters. AMADEUS takes advantage of the
DANE collider, which provides a unique source of monochromatic
low-momentum kaons and exploits the KLOE detector as an active target, in order
to obtain excellent acceptance and resolution data for nuclear capture on
H, He, Be and C, both at-rest and in-flight. During the
second half of 2012 a successful data taking was performed with a dedicated
pure carbon target implemented in the central region of KLOE, providing a high
statistic sample of pure at-rest nuclear interactions. For the future
dedicated setups involving cryogenic gaseous targets are under preparation.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
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