11,349 research outputs found

    SIMDET - Version 4 A Parametric Monte Carlo for a TESLA Detector

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    A new release of the parametric detector Monte Carlo program \verb+SIMDET+ (version 4.01) is now available. We describe the principles of operation and the usage of this program to simulate the response of a detector for the TESLA linear collider. The detector components are implemented according to the TESLA Technical Design Report. All detector component responses are treated in a realistic way using a parametrisation of results from the {\em ab initio} Monte Carlo program \verb+BRAHMS+. Pattern recognition is emulated using a complete cross reference between generated particles and detector response. Also, for charged particles, the covariance matrix and dE/dxdE/dx information are made available. An idealised energy flow algorithm defines the output of the program, consisting of particles generically classified as electrons, photons, muons, charged and neutral hadrons as well as unresolved clusters. The program parameters adjustable by the user are described in detail. User hooks inside the program and the output data structure are documented.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figure

    DDF and Pohlmeyer invariants of (super)string

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    We show how the Pohlmeyer invariants of the bosonic string are expressible in terms of DDF invariants. Quantization of the DDF observables in the usual way yields a consistent quantization of the algebra of Pohlmeyer invariants. Furthermore it becomes straightforward to generalize the Pohlmeyer invariants to the superstring as well as to all backgrounds which allow a free field realization of the worldsheet theory.Comment: 17 pp, minor typos corrected, references to papers by Isaev and Borodulin added, which contain essentially the same results as reported her

    Measuring the Higgs Branching Fraction into two Photons at Future Linear \ee Colliders

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    We examine the prospects for measuring the \gaga branching fraction of a Standard Model-like Higgs boson with a mass of 120 GeV at the future TESLA linear \ee collider, assuming an integrated luminosity of 1 ab−1^{-1} and center-of-mass energies of 350 GeV and 500 GeV. The Higgs boson is produced in association with a fermion pair via the Higgsstrahlung process \ee →ZH\to ZH, with Z→Z \to \qq or \nn, or the WW fusion reaction e+e−→ΜeÎœeˉHe^+e^- \to \nu_e \bar{\nu_e} H. A relative uncertainty on BF(\hgg) of~16% can be achieved in unpolarized \ee collisions at s\sqrt{s}=~500 GeV, while for s\sqrt{s}=~350 GeV the expected precision is slightly poorer. With appropriate initial state polarizations Δ\DeltaBF(\hgg)/BF(\hgg) can be improved to 10%. If this measurement is combined with the expected error for the total Higgs width, a precision of 10% on the \gaga Higgs boson partial width appears feasible.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure

    Branching Fraction Measurements of the SM Higgs with a Mass of 160 GeV at Future Linear \ee Colliders

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    Assuming an integrated luminosity of 500 fb−1^{-1} and a center-of-mass energy of 350 GeV, we examine the prospects for measuring branching fractions of a Standard Model-like Higgs boson with a mass of 160 GeV at the future linear \ee collider TESLA when the Higgs is produced via the Higgsstrahlung mechanism, \ee \pfr HZ. We study in detail the precisions achievable for the branching fractions of the Higgs into WW∗^*, ZZ∗^* and \bb. However, the measurement of BF(H \pfr \gaga) remains a great challence. Combined with the expected error for the inclusive Higgsstrahlung production rate the uncertainty for the total width of the Higgs is estimated.Comment: 17 pages Latex, including 7 figure

    A laser gyroscope system to detect the Gravito-Magnetic effect on Earth

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    Large scale square ring laser gyros with a length of four meters on each side are approaching a sensitivity of 1x10^-11 rad/s/sqrt(Hz). This is about the regime required to measure the gravitomagnetic effect (Lense Thirring) of the Earth. For an ensemble of linearly independent gyros each measurement signal depends upon the orientation of each single axis gyro with respect to the rotational axis of the Earth. Therefore at least 3 gyros are necessary to reconstruct the complete angular orientation of the apparatus. In general, the setup consists of several laser gyroscopes (we would prefer more than 3 for sufficient redundancy), rigidly referenced to each other. Adding more gyros for one plane of observation provides a cross-check against intra-system biases and furthermore has the advantage of improving the signal to noise ratio by the square root of the number of gyros. In this paper we analyze a system of two pairs of identical gyros (twins) with a slightly different orientation with respect to the Earth axis. The twin gyro configuration has several interesting properties. The relative angle can be controlled and provides a useful null measurement. A quadruple twin system could reach a 1% sensitivity after 3:2 years of data, provided each square ring has 6 m length on a side, the system is shot noise limited and there is no source for 1/f- noise.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. 2010 Honourable mention of the Gravity Research Foundation; to be published on J. Mod. Phys.

    The influence of self-citation corrections on Egghe's g index

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    The g index was introduced by Leo Egghe as an improvement of Hirsch's index h for measuring the overall citation record of a set of articles. It better takes into account the highly skewed frequency distribution of citations than the h index. I propose to sharpen this g index by excluding the self-citations. I have worked out nine practical cases in physics and compare the h and g values with and without self-citations. As expected, the g index characterizes the data set better than the h index. The influence of the self-citations appears to be more significant for the g index than for the h index.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Scientometric

    Cluster-based communication and load balancing for simulations on dynamically adaptive grids

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    short paperThe present paper introduces a new communication and load-balancing scheme based on a clustering of the grid which we use for the efficient parallelization of simulations on dynamically adaptive grids. With a partitioning based on space-filling curves (SFCs), this yields several advantageous properties regarding the memory requirements and load balancing. However, for such an SFC- based partitioning, additional connectivity information has to be stored and updated for dynamically changing grids. In this work, we present our approach to keep this connectivity information run-length encoded (RLE) only for the interfaces shared between partitions. Using special properties of the underlying grid traversal and used communication scheme, we update this connectivity information implicitly for dynamically changing grids and can represent the connectivity information as a sparse communication graph: graph nodes (partitions) represent bulks of connected grid cells and each graph edge (RLE connectivity information) a unique relation between adjacent partitions. This directly leads to an efficient shared-memory parallelization with graph nodes assigned to computing cores and an efficient en bloc data exchange via graph edges. We further refer to such a partitioning approach with RLE meta information as a cluster-based domain decomposition and to each partition as a cluster. With the sparse communication graph in mind, we then extend the connectivity information represented by the graph edges with MPI ranks, yielding an en bloc communication for distributed-memory systems and a hybrid parallelization. For data migration, the stack-based intra-cluster communication allows a very low memory footprint for data migration and the RLE leads to efficient updates of connectivity information. Our benchmark is based on a shallow water simulation on a dynamically adaptive grid. We conducted performance studies for MPI-only and hybrid parallelizations, yielding an efficiency of over 90% on 256 cores. Furthermore, we demonstrate the applicability of cluster-based optimizations on distributed-memory systems.We like to thank the Munich Centre of Advanced Computing for for funding this project by providing computing time on the MAC Cluster. This work was partly supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) as part of the Transregional Collaborative Research Centre ”Invasive Computing” (SFB/TR 89)

    Anisotropic Electron Spin Lifetime in (In,Ga)As/GaAs (110) Quantum Wells

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    Anisotropic electron spin lifetimes in strained undoped (In,Ga)As/GaAs (110) quantum wells of different width and height are investigated by time-resolved Faraday rotation and time-resolved transmission and are compared to the (001)-orientation. From the suppression of spin precession, the ratio of in-plane to out-of-plane spin lifetimes is calculated. Whereas the ratio increases with In concentration in agreement with theory, a surprisingly high anisotropy of 480 is observed for the broadest quantum well, when expressed in terms of spin relaxation times.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, revise
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