1,472 research outputs found
Extended sources in the XMM-Newton slew survey
The low background, good spatial resolution and great sensitivity of the
EPIC-pn camera on XMM-Newton give useful limits for the detection of extended
sources even during the short exposures made during slewing maneouvers. In this
paper we attempt to illustrate the potential of the XMM-Newton slew survey as a
tool for analysing flux-limited samples of clusters of galaxies and other
sources of spatially extended X-ray emission.Comment: 2 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray
Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 200
The XMM-Newton Slew Survey: towards the XMMSL1 catalogue
The XMM-Newton satellite is the most sensitive X-ray observatory flown to
date due to the great collecting area of its mirrors coupled with the high
quantum efficiency of the EPIC detectors. It performs slewing manoeuvers
between observation targets tracking almost circular orbits through the
ecliptic poles due to the Sun constraint. Slews are made with the EPIC cameras
open and the other instruments closed, operating with the observing mode set to
the one of the previous pointed observation and the medium filter in place.
Slew observations from the EPIC-pn camera in FF, eFF and LW modes provide
data, resulting in a maximum of 15 seconds of on-source time. These data can be
used to give a uniform survey of the X-ray sky, at great sensitivity in the
hard band compared with other X-ray all-sky surveys.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray
Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 200
High-resolution stimulated Raman spectroscopy and analysis of v2 and v3 bands of 13C2H4 using the D2h top data system
HRMS 2015, Dijon, France, August 24-28, 2015Peer Reviewe
Low level rf system for the European Spallation Source's Bilbao linac
Design and some performance results of the pulsed digital low level radio frequency (LLRF) for the radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) systems of Rutherford Appleton Laboratory-front end test stand and the future European Spallation Source Bilbao linac are presented. For rf field regulation, the design is based on direct rf-to-baseband conversion using an analog in-phase quadrature (IQ) demodulator, high-speed sampling of the I/Q components, baseband signal processing in a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), conversion to analog, and IQ modulation. This concept leads to a simple and versatile LLRF system which can be used for a large variety of rf frequencies and virtually any LLRF application including cw, ramping, and pulsed. In order to improve the accuracy of the probe voltage measurement, errors associated with the use of analog IQ demodulators have been identified and corrected by FPGA algorithms and proper setting of the feedback loop parameters. Furthermore, a baseband-equivalent model for the rf plant is developed in MATLAB-Simulink to study the RFQ transient response under beam loading in the presence of phase and delay errors. The effect of the unwanted resonant modes on the feedback loop stability and the LLRF considerations to avoid such instabilities are discussed and compared to some other machines such as the ILC and the European free electron laser. The practical results obtained from tests with a mock-up cavity and an RFQ cold model verify that amplitude and phase stabilities down to a fraction of one percent and one degree and phase margins larger than ±50° can be achieved with this method preserving the linearity and bandwidth of the feedback loops. © 2011 American Physical Society.Peer Reviewe
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