2,567 research outputs found
The RF power coupler development programme at LAL-Orsay and DESY-Hamburg for TESLA and the European X-FEL
In the context of a collaboration between LAL (Orsay) and DESY (Hamburg) a programme of development and tests of proto-type power couplers for superconducting cavities is underway in Orsay. Such couplers need to be developed for linear accelerators which require high gradient superconducting cavities, such as the European X-ray Free Electron Laser or the International Linear Collider (ILC) project. We will describe the technical demands which have to be met to build such couplers and will present pro-type designs which are intended to meet these demands, taking the ILC as an example. A description of the infra-structure necessary for the coupler development will also be given along with first high power tests results on a series of power couplers built in industry
Probing Nucleon Strangeness with Neutrinos: Nuclear Model Dependences
The extraction of the nucleon's strangeness axial charge, Delta_s, from
inclusive, quasielastic neutral current neutrino cross sections is studied
within the framework of the plane-wave impulse approximation. We find that the
value of Delta_s can depend significantly on the choice of nuclear model used
in analyzing the quasielastic cross section. This model-dependence may be
reduced by one order of magnitude when Delta_s is extracted from the ratio of
total proton to neutron yields. We apply this analysis to the interpretation of
low-energy neutrino cross sections and arrive at a nuclear theory uncertainty
of plus/minus 0.03 on the value of Delta_s expected to be determined from the
ratio of proton and neutron yields measured by the LSND collaboration. This
error compares favorably with estimates of the SU(3)-breaking uncertainty in
the value of Delta_s extracted from inclusive, polarized deep-inelastic
structure function measurements. We also point out several general features of
the quasielastic neutral current neutrino cross section and compare them with
the analogous features in inclusive, quasielastic electron scattering.Comment: 40 pages (including 11 postscript figures), uses REVTeX and
epsfig.st
Early generation hybrids may drive range expansion of two invasive fishes DataSet
Introgressive hybridization between two invasive species has the potential to contribute to their invasion success and provide genetic resiliency to rapidly adapt to new environments. Additionally, differences in the behaviour of hybrids may lead to deleterious ecosystem effects that compound any negative impacts of the invading parental species. Invasive silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) and bighead carp (H. nobilis) exhibit introgressive hybridization which could influence their invasion ecology. In order to investigate the role hybrids may have in the invasion ecology of bigheaded carps, [CAA1] we examined the distribution, movements, and environmental cues for movement of two invasive fishes (bighead carp, silver carp) and their hybrids in the Illinois River (USA). Early generation hybrids (e.g., F1,F2, and first generation backcross individuals) composed a greater proportion of the population at the invasion front where abundances of bigheaded carp were low. A greater proportion of early hybrids passed through dams upstream towards the invasion front than did other hybrids and parental species. The movements and environmental cues for movement of late-generation backcrosses (more genetically similar to parental genotype) were not different from the parental species with which they shared the most alleles. Although the direction of the relationship between movement and environment was sometimes different for the parental species and associated advanced generation hybrids, these results indicate that management for parental species will also influence most hybrids. Although early generation hybrids are rare, our results indicate they may disperse towards low-density population zones (i.e., invasion fronts) or are produced at greater frequency in low density areas. These rare hybrids have the potential to produce a variety of unique genetic combinations which could result in more rapid adaptation of a non-native population to their invaded range potentially facilitating the establishment of invasive species
The prevalence and distribution of the amyloidogenic transthyretin (TTR) V122I allele in Africa
Transthyretin (TTR) pV142I (rs76992529-A) is one of the 113 variants in the human TTR gene associated with systemic amyloidosis. It results from a G to A transition at a CG dinucleotide in the codon for amino acid 122 of the mature protein (TTR V122I). The allele frequency is 0.0173 in African Americans
Measuring Active-Sterile Neutrino Oscillations with a Stopped Pion Neutrino Source
The question of the existence of light sterile neutrinos is of great interest
in many areas of particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology. Furthermore,
should the MiniBooNE experiment at Fermilab confirm the LSND oscillation
signal, then new measurements are required to identify the mechanism
responsible for these oscillations. Possibilities include sterile neutrinos, CP
or CPT violation, variable mass neutrinos, Lorentz violation, and extra
dimensions. In this paper, we consider an experiment at a stopped pion neutrino
source to determine if active-sterile neutrino oscillations with delta-m
greater than 0.1 eV2 can account for the signal. By exploiting stopped pi+
decay to produce a monoenergetic nu_mu source, and measuring the rate of the
neutral current reaction nu_x + 12C -> nu_x +12C* as a function of distance
from the source, we show that a convincing test for active-sterile neutrino
oscillations can be performed.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
A STRANGE MESONIC TRANSITION FORM FACTOR
The strange-quark vector current -to- meson transition form factor
is computed at one-loop order using strange meson intermediate states. A
comparison is made with a -meson dominance model estimate. We find that
one-loop contributions are comparable in magnitude to those predicted by
-meson dominance. It is possible that the one-loop contribution can make
the matrix element as large as those of the electromagnetic current mediating
vector meson radiative decays. However, due to the quadratic dependence of the
one-loop results on the hadronic form factor cut-off mass, a large uncertainty
in the estimate of the loops is unavoidable. These results indicate that
non-nucleonic strange quarks could contribute appreciably in moderate-
parity-violating electron-nucleus scattering measurements aimed at probing the
strange-quark content of the nucleon.Comment: Revtex, six figures available as hard copy upon request
On the Flavor Structure of the Constituent Quark
We discuss the dressing of constituent quarks with a pseudoscalar meson cloud
within the effective chiral quark model. SU(3) flavor symmetry breaking effects
are included explicitly. Our results are compared with those of the traditional
meson cloud approach in which pions are coupled to the nucleon. The pionic
dressing of the constituent quarks explains the experimentally observed
violation of the Gottfried Sum Rule and leads to an enhanced nonperturbative
sea of quark-antiquark pairs in the constituent quark and consequently in the
nucleon. We find 2.5 times more pions and 10-15 times more kaons in the nucleon
than in the traditional picture.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, 4 Postscript figures, to appear in J. Phys.
A Letter of Intent to Build a MiniBooNE Near Detector: BooNE
There is accumulating evidence for a difference between neutrino and
antineutrino oscillations at the eV scale. The MiniBooNE
experiment observes an unexplained excess of electron-like events at low
energies in neutrino mode, which may be due, for example, to either a neutral
current radiative interaction, sterile neutrino decay, or to neutrino
oscillations involving sterile neutrinos and which may be related to the LSND
signal. No excess of electron-like events (), however, is
observed so far at low energies in antineutrino mode. Furthermore, global 3+1
and 3+2 sterile neutrino fits to the world neutrino and antineutrino data
suggest a difference between neutrinos and antineutrinos with significant
() disappearance. In order to
test whether the low-energy excess is due to neutrino oscillations and whether
there is a difference between and disappearance, we
propose building a second MiniBooNE detector at (or moving the existing
MiniBooNE detector to) a distance of m from the Booster Neutrino
Beam (BNB) production target. With identical detectors at different distances,
most of the systematic errors will cancel when taking a ratio of events in the
two detectors, as the neutrino flux varies as to a calculable
approximation. This will allow sensitive tests of oscillations for both
and appearance and and disappearance.
Furthermore, a comparison between oscillations in neutrino mode and
antineutrino mode will allow a sensitive search for CP and CPT violation in the
lepton sector at short baseline ( eV).Comment: 43 pages, 40 figure
Tests of Lorentz violation in muon antineutrino to electron antineutrino oscillations
A recently developed Standard-Model Extension (SME) formalism for neutrino
oscillations that includes Lorentz and CPT violation is used to analyze the
sidereal time variation of the neutrino event excess measured by the Liquid
Scintillator Neutrino Detector (LSND) experiment. The LSND experiment,
performed at Los Alamos National Laboratory, observed an excess, consistent
with neutrino oscillations, of in a beam of . It
is determined that the LSND oscillation signal is consistent with no sidereal
variation. However, there are several combinations of SME coefficients that
describe the LSND data; both with and without sidereal variations. The scale of
Lorentz and CPT violation extracted from the LSND data is of order
GeV for the SME coefficients and . This solution for
Lorentz and CPT violating neutrino oscillations may be tested by other short
baseline neutrino oscillation experiments, such as the MiniBooNE experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, uses revtex4 replaced with version to
be published in Physical Review D, 11 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables, uses
revtex
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