1,786 research outputs found
Naturalness and the Neutrino Matrix
The observed pattern of neutrino mass splittings and mixing angles indicates
that their family structure is significantly different from that of the charged
fermions. We investigate the implications of these data for the fermion mass
matrices in grand unified theories with a type-I seesaw mechanism. We show
that, with simple assumptions, naturalness leads to a strongly hierarchical
Majorana mass matrix for heavy right-handed neutrinos and a partially cascade
form for the Dirac neutrino matrix. We consider various model building
scenarios which could alter this conclusion, and discuss their consequences for
the construction of a natural model. We find that including partially lopsided
matrices can aid us in generating a satisfying model.Comment: Discussion about neutrinoless double beta decay expanded; typos
corrected; references added and update
X-ray image reconstruction from a diffraction pattern alone
A solution to the inversion problem of scattering would offer aberration-free
diffraction-limited 3D images without the resolution and depth-of-field
limitations of lens-based tomographic systems. Powerful algorithms are
increasingly being used to act as lenses to form such images. Current image
reconstruction methods, however, require the knowledge of the shape of the
object and the low spatial frequencies unavoidably lost in experiments.
Diffractive imaging has thus previously been used to increase the resolution of
images obtained by other means. We demonstrate experimentally here a new
inversion method, which reconstructs the image of the object without the need
for any such prior knowledge.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, improved figures and captions, changed titl
IDENTIFICATION OF THE GEOLOGIC ORIGINS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL ARTIFACTS: AN AUTOMATED METHOD OF Na and Mn NEUTRON ACTIVATION ANALYSIS
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66345/1/j.1475-4754.1967.tb00618.x.pd
An assessment of the resolution limitation due to radiation-damage in x-ray diffraction microscopy
X-ray diffraction microscopy (XDM) is a new form of x-ray imaging that is
being practiced at several third-generation synchrotron-radiation x-ray
facilities. Although only five years have elapsed since the technique was first
introduced, it has made rapid progress in demonstrating high-resolution
threedimensional imaging and promises few-nm resolution with much larger
samples than can be imaged in the transmission electron microscope. Both life-
and materials-science applications of XDM are intended, and it is expected that
the principal limitation to resolution will be radiation damage for life
science and the coherent power of available x-ray sources for material science.
In this paper we address the question of the role of radiation damage. We use a
statistical analysis based on the so-called "dose fractionation theorem" of
Hegerl and Hoppe to calculate the dose needed to make an image of a lifescience
sample by XDM with a given resolution. We conclude that the needed dose scales
with the inverse fourth power of the resolution and present experimental
evidence to support this finding. To determine the maximum tolerable dose we
have assembled a number of data taken from the literature plus some
measurements of our own which cover ranges of resolution that are not well
covered by reports in the literature. The tentative conclusion of this study is
that XDM should be able to image frozen-hydrated protein samples at a
resolution of about 10 nm with "Rose-criterion" image quality.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
The Mosses of Southwestern Iowa
The territory of southwestern Iowa in this report includes Harrison, Shelby, Audubon, Guthrie, Pottawatamie, Cass, Adair, Mills, Montgomery, Adams, Union, Fremont, Page, Taylor and Ringgold counties. Four of these border the Missouri state line and four are along the Missouri river. About half the region is prairie, unmodified by erosion or the deposition of loess in hills. The mosses were collected on the wooded banks of streams or in cultivated land. The collections were made mostly by Dr. Conard during 1930-1933. They are obviously incomplete. In some counties only one stop was made for collecting, in others the work was done more thoroughly
Coherent X-ray Diffractive Imaging; applications and limitations
The inversion of a diffraction pattern offers aberration-free
diffraction-limited 3D images without the resolution and depth-of-field
limitations of lens-based tomographic systems, the only limitation being
radiation damage. We review our experimental results, discuss the fundamental
limits of this technique and future plans.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
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