1,323 research outputs found
A 128K-bit CCD buffer memory system
A prototype system was implemented to demonstrate that CCD's can be applied advantageously to the problem of low power digital storage and particularly to the problem of interfacing widely varying data rates. 8K-bit CCD shift register memories were used to construct a feasibility model 128K-bit buffer memory system. Peak power dissipation during a data transfer is less than 7 W., while idle power is approximately 5.4 W. The system features automatic data input synchronization with the recirculating CCD memory block start address. Descriptions are provided of both the buffer memory system and a custom tester that was used to exercise the memory. The testing procedures and testing results are discussed. Suggestions are provided for further development with regards to the utilization of advanced versions of CCD memory devices to both simplified and expanded memory system applications
Baryon phase-space density in heavy-ion collisions
The baryon phase-space density at mid-rapidity from central heavy-ion
collisions is estimated from proton spectra with interferometry and deuteron
coalescence measurements. It is found that the mid-rapidity phase-space density
of baryons is significantly lower at the SPS than the AGS, while those of total
particles (pion + baryon) are comparable. Thermal and chemical equilibrium
model calculations tend to over-estimate the phase-space densities at both
energies.Comment: 5 pages, 2 tables, no figure. RevTeX style. Accepted for publication
in Phys. Rev. C Rapid Communicatio
The leaching of natural colloids from forest surface soils and their role for the P transfer
Soil nanoparticles (d<100nm) and colloids (d<1µm) exert a decisive control on the mobilisation of strongly sorbing compounds such as phosphorus (P). We investigated the nanoparticles and colloids present in forest soil leachates examining their role for the P fixation and for the vertical P transfer in forest soils.
Mesocosm experiments with three German forest soils (upper 20 cm) were conducted. The mesocosms were irrigated with artificial rain for 22 months and the nanoparticles and colloids were characterised in the soil leachates with special attention to P.
The field flow fractionation (FFF) technique coupled online to UV- and DLS- detectors and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) or to an organic carbon detector (OCD) enabled a size resolved characterization and quantification of the nanoparticulate and colloidal fractions and their elemental composition (P, Corg, Fe, A, Si, Ca. Mn). To visualise and better characterise the particles present in the leachates, transmission electron microscopy with energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (TEM-EDX) measurements were performed.
The translocated particles exhibited sizes up to 350 nm. Using FFF we separated the colloids in three size fractions i) 3-20 nm ii) 20-70 nm and iii) 70-350 nm. The particle fractions showed different chemical compositions. However their composition and characteristics were similar between the three forest sites and comparable to the natural nanoparticles and colloids from soils (“water dispersible colloids”) and streams described in literature.
Up to 90% (on average ~45 %) of the leached P was associated with the nanoparticles and colloids. Our qualitative and quantitative analysis of the soil leachates showed that nanoparticles and colloids are crucial vectors controlling the P fluxes in forest ecosystems and could be a significant, but as yet still poorly quantified P loss factor
Incorporating Radial Flow in the Lattice Gas Model for Nuclear Disassembly
We consider extensions of the lattice gas model to incorporate radial flow.
Experimental data are used to set the magnitude of radial flow. This flow is
then included in the Lattice Gas Model in a microcanonical formalism. For
magnitudes of flow seen in experiments, the main effect of the flow on
observables is a shift along the axis.Comment: Version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C, Rapid Communicatio
A unified description for nuclear equation of state and fragmentation in heavy ion collisions
We propose a model that provides a unified description of nuclear equation of
state and fragmentations. The equation of state is evaluated in Bragg-Williams
as well as in Bethe-Peierls approximations and compared with that in the mean
field theory with Skyrme interactions. The model shows a liquid-gas type phase
transition. The nuclear fragment distributions are studied for different
densities at finite temperatures. Power law behavior for fragments is observed
at critical point. The study of fragment distribution and the second moment
shows that the thermal critical point coincides with the percolation
point at the critical density. High temperature behavior of the model shows
characteristics of chemical equilibrium.Comment: 20 pages in RevTex, 11 figures (uuencoded ps files), to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Accurate calibration of test mass displacement in the LIGO interferometers
We describe three fundamentally different methods we have applied to
calibrate the test mass displacement actuators to search for systematic errors
in the calibration of the LIGO gravitational-wave detectors. The actuation
frequencies tested range from 90 Hz to 1 kHz and the actuation amplitudes range
from 1e-6 m to 1e-18 m. For each of the four test mass actuators measured, the
weighted mean coefficient over all frequencies for each technique deviates from
the average actuation coefficient for all three techniques by less than 4%.
This result indicates that systematic errors in the calibration of the
responses of the LIGO detectors to differential length variations are within
the stated uncertainties.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, submitted on 31 October 2009 to Classical and
Quantum Gravity for the proceedings of 8th Edoardo Amaldi Conference on
Gravitational Wave
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Bringing the Fuzzy Front End into Focus
Technology planning is relatively straightforward for well-established research and development (R and D) areas--those areas in which an organization has a history, the competitors are well understood, and the organization clearly knows where it is going with that technology. What we are calling the fuzzy front-end in this paper is that condition in which these factors are not well understood--such as for new corporate thrusts or emerging areas where the applications are embryonic. While strategic business planning exercises are generally good at identifying technology areas that are key to future success, they often lack substance in answering questions like: (1) Where are we now with respect to these key technologies? ... with respect to our competitors? (2) Where do we want or need to be? ... by when? (3) What is the best way to get there? In response to its own needs in answering such questions, Sandia National Laboratories is developing and implementing several planning tools. These tools include knowledge mapping (or visualization), PROSPERITY GAMES and technology roadmapping--all three of which are the subject of this paper. Knowledge mapping utilizes computer-based tools to help answer Question 1 by graphically representing the knowledge landscape that we populate as compared with other corporate and government entities. The knowledge landscape explored in this way can be based on any one of a number of information sets such as citation or patent databases. PROSPERITY GAMES are high-level interactive simulations, similar to seminar war games, which help address Question 2 by allowing us to explore consequences of various optional goals and strategies with all of the relevant stakeholders in a risk-free environment. Technology roadmapping is a strategic planning process that helps answer Question 3 by collaboratively identifying product and process performance targets and obstacles, and the technology alternatives available to reach those targets
Discovery and Follow-up of Rotating Radio Transients with the Green Bank and LOFAR Telescopes
We have discovered 21 Rotating Radio Transients (RRATs) in data from the
Green Bank Telescope (GBT) 350-MHz Drift-scan and the Green Bank North
Celestial Cap pulsar surveys using a new candidate sifting algorithm. RRATs are
pulsars with sporadic emission that are detected through their bright single
pulses rather than Fourier domain searches. We have developed {\tt RRATtrap}, a
single-pulse sifting algorithm that can be integrated into pulsar survey data
analysis pipelines in order to find RRATs and Fast Radio Bursts. We have
conducted follow-up observations of our newly discovered sources at several
radio frequencies using the GBT and Low Frequency Array (LOFAR), yielding
improved positions and measurements of their periods, dispersion measures, and
burst rates, as well as phase-coherent timing solutions for four of them. The
new RRATs have dispersion measures (DMs) ranging from 15 to 97 pc cm,
periods of 240 ms to 3.4 s, and estimated burst rates of 20 to 400 pulses
hr at 350 MHz. We use this new sample of RRATs to perform statistical
comparisons between RRATs and canonical pulsars in order to shed light on the
relationship between the two populations. We find that the DM and spatial
distributions of the RRATs agree with those of the pulsars found in the same
survey. We find evidence that slower pulsars (i.e. ms) are
preferentially more likely to emit bright single pulses than are faster pulsars
( ms), although this conclusion is tentative. Our results are consistent
with the proposed link between RRATs, transient pulsars, and canonical pulsars
as sources in various parts of the pulse activity spectrum.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables, published in Ap
Continuum corrections to the level density and its dependence on excitation energy, n-p asymmetry, and deformation
In the independent-particle model, the nuclear level density is determined
from the neutron and proton single-particle level densities. The
single-particle level density for the positive-energy continuum levels is
important at high excitation energies for stable nuclei and at all excitation
energies for nuclei near the drip lines. This single-particle level density is
subdivided into compound-nucleus and gas components. Two methods were
considered for this subdivision. First in the subtraction method, the
single-particle level density is determined from the scattering phase shifts.
In the Gamov method, only the narrow Gamov states or resonances are included.
The level densities calculated with these two methods are similar, both can be
approximated by the backshifted Fermi-gas expression with level-density
parameters that are dependent on A, but with very little dependence on the
neutron or proton richness of the nucleus. However, a small decrease in the
level-density parameter was predicted for some nuclei very close to the drip
lines. The largest difference between the calculations using the two methods
was the deformation dependence on the level density. The Gamov method predicts
a very strong peaking of the level density at sphericity for high excitation
energies. This leads to a suppression of deformed configurations and,
consequently, the fission rate predicted by the statistical model is reduced in
the Gamov method.Comment: 18 pages 24 figure
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