1,110 research outputs found
Compositional modulation and ordering in semiconductors
Journal ArticleThe science of materials as a specific discipline is a relatively modern development. Within this rather modern field, the study of semiconductor materials is an even more recent development. Modern textbooks on materials science focus primarily on the properties of metals and second on the properties of ceramics, reflecting the commercial importance of these materials 50 years ago when the transistor was demonstrated using germanium
Correcting for Distortions due to Ionization in the STAR TPC
Physics goals of the STAR Experiment at RHIC in recent (and future) years
drive the need to operate the STAR TPC at ever higher luminosities, leading to
increased ionization levels in the TPC gas. The resulting ionic space charge
introduces field distortions in the detector which impact tracking performance.
Further complications arise from ionic charge leakage into the main TPC volume
from the high gain anode region. STAR has implemented corrections for these
distortions based on measures of luminosity, which we present here.
Additionally, we highlight a novel approach to applying the corrections on an
event-by-event basis applicable in conditions of rapidly varying ionization
sources.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, proceedings of the Workshop on Tracking in High
Multiplicity Environments (TIME 05) in Zurich, Switzerland, submitted to
Nucl. Instr. and Meth.
SMASHing the LMC: A Tidally-induced Warp in the Outer LMC and a Large-scale Reddening Map
We present a study of the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the Large
Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using ~2.2 million red clump (RC) stars selected from
the Survey of the MAgellanic Stellar History. To correct for line-of-sight dust
extinction, the intrinsic RC color and magnitude and their radial dependence
are carefully measured by using internal nearly dust-free regions. These are
then used to construct an accurate 2D reddening map (165 square degrees with
~10 arcmin resolution) of the LMC disk and the 3D spatial distribution of RC
stars. An inclined disk model is fit to the 2D distance map yielding a best-fit
inclination angle i = 25.86(+0.73,-1.39) degrees with random errors of +\-0.19
degrees and line-of-nodes position angle theta = 149.23(+6.43,-8.35) degrees
with random errors of +/-0.49 degrees. These angles vary with galactic radius,
indicating that the LMC disk is warped and twisted likely due to the repeated
tidal interactions with the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). For the first time,
our data reveal a significant warp in the southwestern part of the outer disk
starting at rho ~ 7 degrees that departs from the defined LMC plane up to ~4
kpc toward the SMC, suggesting that it originated from a strong interaction
with the SMC. In addition, the inner disk encompassing the off-centered bar
appears to be tilted up to 5-15 degrees relative to the rest of the LMC disk.
These findings on the outer warp and the tilted bar are consistent with the
predictions from the Besla et al. simulation of a recent direct collision with
the SMC.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, published in Ap
Stellar parameters for the First Release of the MaStar Library: An Empirical Approach
We report the stellar atmospheric parameters for 7503 spectra contained in
the first release of the MaNGA stellar library (MaStar) in SDSS DR15. The first
release of MaStar contains 8646 spectra measured from 3321 unique stars, each
covering the wavelength range 3622 \AA\ to 10354 \AA\ with a resolving power of
1800. In this work, we first determined the basic stellar parameters:
effective temperature (), surface gravity (), and
metallicity (), which best fit the data using an empirical
interpolator based on the Medium-resolution Isaac Newton Telescope library of
empirical spectra (MILES), as implemented by the University of Lyon
Spectroscopic analysis Software (Koleva et al. 2008, ULySS) package. While we
analyzed all 8646 spectra from the first release of MaStar, since MaStar has a
wider parameter-space coverage than MILES, not all of these fits are robust. In
addition, not all parameter regions covered by MILES yield robust results,
likely due to the non-uniform coverage of the parameter space by MILES. We
tested the robustness of the method using the MILES spectra itself and
identified a proxy based on the local density of the training set. With this
proxy, we identified 7503 MaStar spectra with robust fitting results. They
cover the range from 3179K to 20,517K in effective temperature (),
from 0.40 to 5.0 in surface gravity (), and from 2.49 to 0.73 in
metallicity ().Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure
Stellar population models based on the SDSS-IV MaStar library of stellar spectra. I. Intermediate-age/old models
We use the first release of the SDSS/MaStar stellar library comprising ~9000,
high S/N spectra, to calculate integrated spectra of stellar population models.
The models extend over the wavelength range 0.36-1.03 micron and share the same
spectral resolution (R~1800) and flux calibration as the SDSS-IV/MaNGA galaxy
data. The parameter space covered by the stellar spectra collected thus far
allows the calculation of models with ages and chemical composition in the
range t>200 Myr, -2 <=[Z/H]<= + 0.35, which will be extended as MaStar
proceeds. Notably, the models include spectra for dwarf Main Sequence stars
close to the core H-burning limit, as well as spectra for cold, metal-rich
giants. Both stellar types are crucial for modelling lambda>0.7 micron
absorption spectra. Moreover, a better parameter coverage at low metallicity
allows the calculation of models as young as 500 Myr and the full account of
the Blue Horizontal Branch phase of old populations. We present models adopting
two independent sets of stellar parameters (T_eff, logg, [Z/H]). In a novel
approach, their reliability is tested 'on the fly' using the stellar population
models themselves. We perform tests with Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds
globular clusters, finding that the new models recover their ages and
metallicities remarkably well, with systematics as low as a few per cent for
homogeneous calibration sets. We also fit a MaNGA galaxy spectrum, finding
residuals of the order of a few per cent comparable to the state-of-art models,
but now over a wider wavelength range.Comment: 37 pages, 31 figures, MNRAS in press, models available at
http://www.icg.port.ac.uk/masta
The STAR Time Projection Chamber: A Unique Tool for Studying High Multiplicity Events at RHIC
The STAR Time Projection Chamber (TPC) is used to record collisions at the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The TPC is the central element in a
suite of detectors that surrounds the interaction vertex. The TPC provides
complete coverage around the beam-line, and provides complete tracking for
charged particles within +- 1.8 units of pseudo-rapidity of the center-of-mass
frame. Charged particles with momenta greater than 100 MeV/c are recorded.
Multiplicities in excess of 3,000 tracks per event are routinely reconstructed
in the software. The TPC measures 4 m in diameter by 4.2 m long, making it the
largest TPC in the world.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figure
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Lightning as a space-weather hazard: UK thunderstorm activity modulated by the passage of the heliospheric current sheet
Lightning flash rates, RL, are modulated by corotating interaction regions (CIRs) and the polarity of the heliospheric magnetic field (HMF) in near-Earth space. As the HMF polarity reverses at the heliospheric current sheet (HCS), typically within a CIR, these phenomena are likely related. In this study, RL is found to be significantly enhanced at the HCS and at 27 days prior/after. The strength of the enhancement depends on the polarity of the HMF reversal at the HCS. Near-Earth solar and galactic energetic particle fluxes are also ordered by HMF polarity, though the variations qualitatively differ from RL, with the main increase occurring prior to the HCS crossing. Thus, the CIR effect on lightning is either the result of compression/amplification of the HMF (and its subsequent interaction with the terrestrial system) or that energetic particle preconditioning of the Earth system prior to the HMF polarity change is central to solar wind lightning coupling mechanism
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