43 research outputs found
Tiling groupoids and Bratteli diagrams
Let T be an aperiodic and repetitive tiling of R^d with finite local
complexity. Let O be its tiling space with canonical transversal X. The tiling
equivalence relation R_X is the set of pairs of tilings in X which are
translates of each others, with a certain (etale) topology. In this paper R_X
is reconstructed as a generalized "tail equivalence" on a Bratteli diagram,
with its standard AF-relation as a subequivalence relation.
Using a generalization of the Anderson-Putnam complex, O is identified with
the inverse limit of a sequence of finite CW-complexes. A Bratteli diagram B is
built from this sequence, and its set of infinite paths dB is homeomorphic to
X. The diagram B is endowed with a horizontal structure: additional edges that
encode the adjacencies of patches in T. This allows to define an etale
equivalence relation R_B on dB which is homeomorphic to R_X, and contains the
AF-relation of "tail equivalence".Comment: 34 pages, 4 figure
\'Etale groupoids and Steinberg algebras, a concise introduction
We give a concise introduction to (discrete) algebras arising from \'etale
groupoids, (aka Steinberg algebras) and describe their close relationship with
groupoid C*-algebras. Their connection to partial group rings via inverse
semigroups also explored
The 200 MeV Bremsstrahlung Tagged Photon Beam at LNS-Sendai(I. Nuclear Physics)
We describe the 200-MeV bremsstrahlung photon tagging system, which was installed in the experimental Hall-1 at the Laboratory of Nuclear Science, Tohoku University. This system produces tagged photons from high duty electron beams supplied by Stretcher Booster Ring. The tagged photon energies are over a range from 20% to 80% of the incident electron energy. We carried out commissioning to examine the performance of the tagged photon beams produced by the 198 MeV electron beam. We demonstrated that the tagged photons can be employed for photonuclear reaction experiments with a momentum resolution Δp/p~1% at the tagged photon intensity I≤5×10^6