1,122 research outputs found
Eigenoscillations of the Differentially Rotating Sun: I. 22-year, 4000-year, and quasi-biennial modes
Retrograde waves with frequencies much lower than the rotation frequency
become trapped in the solar radiative interior. The eigenfunctions of the
compressible, nonadiabatic, Rossby-like modes (-mechanism and
radiative losses taken into account) are obtained by an asymptotic method
assuming a very small latitudinal gradient of rotation, without an arbitrary
choice of other free parameters. An integral dispersion relation for the
complex eigenfrequencies is derived as a solution of the boundary value
problem. The discovered resonant cavity modes (called R-modes) are
fundamentally different from the known r-modes: their frequencies are functions
of the solar interior structure, and the reason for their existence is not
related to geometrical effects. The most unstable R-modes are those with
periods of 1--3 yr, 18--30 yr, and 1500--20000 yrs; these three separate period
ranges are known from solar and geophysical data. The growing times of those
modes which are unstable with respect to the -mechanism are and years, respectively. The amplitudes of the R-modes are
growing towards the center of the Sun. We discuss some prospects to develop the
theory of R-modes as a driver of the dynamics in the convective zone which
could explain, e.g., observed short-term fluctuations of rotation, a control of
the solar magnetic cycle, and abrupt changes of terrestrial climate in the
past.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, To appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Optical Yagi-Uda nanoantennas
Conventional antennas, which are widely employed to transmit radio and TV
signals, can be used at optical frequencies as long as they are shrunk to
nanometer-size dimensions. Optical nanoantennas made of metallic or
high-permittivity dielectric nanoparticles allow for enhancing and manipulating
light on the scale much smaller than wavelength of light. Based on this
ability, optical nanoantennas offer unique opportunities regarding key
applications such as optical communications, photovoltaics, non-classical light
emission, and sensing. From a multitude of suggested nanoantenna concepts the
Yagi-Uda nanoantenna, an optical analogue of the well-established
radio-frequency Yagi-Uda antenna, stands out by its efficient unidirectional
light emission and enhancement. Following a brief introduction to the emerging
field of optical nanoantennas, here we review recent theoretical and
experimental activities on optical Yagi-Uda nanoantennas, including their
design, fabrication, and applications. We also discuss several extensions of
the conventional Yagi-Uda antenna design for broadband and tunable operation,
for applications in nanophotonic circuits and photovoltaic devices
Performance of the ATLAS Muon Drift-Tube Chambers at High Background Rates and in Magnetic Fields
The ATLAS muon spectrometer uses drift-tube chambers for precision tracking.
The performance of these chambers in the presence of magnetic field and high
radiation fluxes is studied in this article using test-beam data recorded in
the Gamma Irradiation Facility at CERN. The measurements are compared to
detailed predictions provided by the Garfield drift-chamber simulation
programme
Performance of the ATLAS Precision Muon Chambers under LHC Operating Conditions
For the muon spectrometer of the ATLAS detector at the large hadron collider
(LHC), large drift chambers consisting of 6 to 8 layers of pressurized drift
tubes are used for precision tracking covering an active area of 5000 m2 in the
toroidal field of superconducting air core magnets. The chambers have to
provide a spatial resolution of 41 microns with Ar:CO2 (93:7) gas mixture at an
absolute pressure of 3 bar and gas gain of 2?104. The environment in which the
chambers will be operated is characterized by high neutron and background with
counting rates of up to 100 per square cm and second. The resolution and
efficiency of a chamber from the serial production for ATLAS has been
investigated in a 100 GeV muon beam at photon irradiation rates as expected
during LHC operation. A silicon strip detector telescope was used as external
reference in the beam. The spatial resolution of a chamber is degraded by 4 ?m
at the highest background rate. The detection efficiency of the drift tubes is
unchanged under irradiation. A tracking efficiency of 98% at the highest rates
has been demonstrated
Resolution and Efficiency of the ATLAS Muon Drift-Tube Chambers at High Background Rates
The resolution and efficiency of a precision drift-tube chamber for the ATLAS
muon spectrometer with final read-out electronics was tested at the Gamma
Irradiation Facility at CERN in a 100 GeV muon beam and at photon irradiation
rates of up to 990 Hz/square cm which corresponds to twice the highest
background rate expected in ATLAS. A silicon strip detector telescope was used
as external reference in the beam. The pulse-height measurement of the read-out
electronics was used to perform time-slewing corrections which lead to an
improvement of the average drift-tube resolution from 104 microns to 82 microns
without irradiation and from 128 microns to 108 microns at the maximum expected
rate. The measured drift-tube efficiency agrees with the expectation from the
dead time of the read-out electronics up to the maximum expected rate
Electro-optical switching by liquid-crystal controlled metasurfaces
We study the optical response of a metamaterial surface created by a lattice
of split-ring resonators covered with a nematic liquid crystal and demonstrate
millisecond timescale switching between electric and magnetic resonances of the
metasurface. This is achieved due to a high sensitivity of liquid-crystal
molecular reorientation to the symmetry of the metasurface as well as to the
presence of a bias electric field. Our experiments are complemented by
numerical simulations of the liquid-crystal reorientation.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Construction and Test of MDT Chambers for the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer
The Monitored Drift Tube (MDT) chambers for the muon spectrometer of the AT-
LAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) consist of 3-4 layers of
pressurized drift tubes on either side of a space frame carrying an optical
monitoring system to correct for deformations. The full-scale prototype of a
large MDT chamber has been constructed with methods suitable for large-scale
production. X-ray measurements at CERN showed a positioning accuracy of the
sense wires in the chamber of better than the required 20 ?microns (rms). The
performance of the chamber was studied in a muon beam at CERN. Chamber
production for ATLAS now has started
Construction and Test of the Precision Drift Chambers for the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer
The Monitored Drift Tube (MDT) chambers for the muon spectrometer of the
ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) consist of 3-4 layers of
pressurised drift tubes on either side of a space frame carrying an optical
deformation monitoring system. The chambers have to provide a track position
resolution of 40 microns with a single-tube resolution of at least 80 microns
and a sense wire positioning accu- racy of 20 ?microns (rms). The feasibility
was demonstrated with the full-scale prototype of one of the largest MDT
chambers with 432 drift tubes of 3.8 m length. For the ATLAS muon spectrometer,
88 chambers of this type have to be built. The first chamber has been completed
with a wire positioning accuracy of 14 microns (rms)
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