1,491 research outputs found

    Level-3 Calorimetric Resolution available for the Level-1 and Level-2 CDF Triggers

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    As the Tevatron luminosity increases sophisticated selections are required to be efficient in selecting rare events among a very huge background. To cope with this problem, CDF has pushed the offline calorimeter algorithm reconstruction resolution up to Level 2 and, when possible, even up to Level 1, increasing efficiency and, at the same time, keeping under control the rates. The CDF Run II Level 2 calorimeter trigger is implemented in hardware and is based on a simple algorithm that was used in Run I. This system has worked well for Run II at low luminosity. As the Tevatron instantaneous luminosity increases, the limitation due to this simple algorithm starts to become clear: some of the most important jet and MET (Missing ET) related triggers have large growth terms in cross section at higher luminosity. In this paper, we present an upgrade of the Level 2 Calorimeter system which makes the calorimeter trigger tower information available directly to a CPU allowing more sophisticated algorithms to be implemented in software. Both Level 2 jets and MET can be made nearly equivalent to offline quality, thus significantly improving the performance and flexibility of the jet and MET related triggers. However in order to fully take advantage of the new L2 triggering capabilities having at Level 1 the same L2 MET resolution is necessary. The new Level-1 MET resolution is calculated by dedicated hardware. This paper describes the design, the hardware and software implementation and the performance of the upgraded calorimeter trigger system both at Level 2 and Level 1.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures,34th International Conference on High Energy Physics, Philadelphia, 200

    THE CONFLUENCE RATIO OF THE TRANSYLVANIAN BASIN RIVERS

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    There are many possibilities to assess the hydrological and geomorphological evolution of a territory. Among them, one remarks the confluence ratio of the rivers belonging to different catchment areas. The values of this indicator may provide information regarding the stage of evolution of the fluvial landforms in the Transylvanian Basin. Also, the values may serve for the calculation of other parameters of catchment areas like: the degree of finishing of the drainage basin for its corresponding order, the density of river segments within a catchment area etc. To calculate the confluence ratio, 35 catchment areas of different orders have been selected. The confluence ratio varies between 3.04 and 6.07. The large range of values demonstrates the existence of a heterogeneous lithology and of morphological and hydrographical contrasts from one catchment area to the other. The existence of values above 5, correlated also with observations in the field, reveals an accelerated dynamics of the geomorphological processes in those catchment areas. This dynamic is mainly supported by the high landform fragmentation due to the first order rivers. In contrast, the catchment areas that have a confluence ratio below 5 are in a more advanced stage of evolution with stable slopes, unable to initiate new first order river segments

    Charge Generation and Selective Separation at PbS Quantum Dot Metal Oxide Interfaces

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    Charge separation and transfer at the interface between layers of oleic acid capped PbS quantum dots QDs and Titanium and Indium Tin oxide TiO2 and ITO films were investigated by surface photovoltage SPV measurements. Photoluminescence PL measurements were performed in order to check for excitonic transitions and determine the QD band gaps. The QDs diameter of 4.2 nm and 5.0 nm were estimated by using the PL band gaps and the theoretical equation derived by Wang et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 87 1987 7315]. The SPV spectra of the PbS QDs TiO2 system reveal a positive charge on the PbS film surface and show three distinguished regions which demonstrate i the charge separation across QDs, ii the electron injection from QDs into TiO2 and iii the fundamental absorption in TiO2. The on set of the electron injection depends on the QD size QD band gap it shifts to lower photon energies for lower QD dimensions for higher QD band gaps . Thus, a better conduction band alignment is achieved in the latter case. In contrast to PbS QDs TiO2, the SPV spectra of the PbS QDs ITO structure reveal the negative charge on PbS surface. Moreover, the charge transfer at this interface is not observed. Instead, the SPV peculiarities in the photon energy range 1.4 3.0 eV point out to trapped holes on the ITO surface state

    p Si n SiC NANOLAYER PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL

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    Thin films of amorphous SiC were prepared by non reactive magnetron sputtering in an Ar atmosphere. A previously synthesized SiC was used as a solid state target. Deposition was carried out on a cold substrate of p Si 100 with a resistivity of 2 Ohm amp; 61655;cm. The Raman spectrum shows a dominant band at 982 cm 1, i.e. in the spectral region characteristic for SiC. The film thickness determined from atomic force microscopy measurements was about 8 40 nm, the height of the structural units of the film was 1 2 nm, while the linear dimensions were of the order of tens of nanometers. The amorphous nature of SiC grown on the Si substrate is confirmed by the presence of the diffraction rings which indicate the absence of the dominant orientation of the prepared films. A heterostructure consisting of a p type Si 100 and a layer of amorphous n type SiC was fabricated and studied. The investigation of its electrical and photoelectric properties shows that the entire space charge region is located in Si. This is in addition confirmed by the spectral dependence of the p Si n SiC photo sensitivity. The barrier height at the p Si n SiC interface estimated from dark I V characteristics is of the order of 0.9 1.0 eV. Load I V characteristics of p Si n SiC amorphous nanolayer solar cells demonstrate under standard AM1.5 illumination conditions a conversion efficiency of 7.2

    DYNAMICS OF BRÂGLEZ RIVERBED (SOMEƞAN PLATEAU)

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    Dynamics of Brñglez Riverbed (SomeƟan Plateau). The main left tributaries of SomeƟ along Surduc – Jibou sector (Brñglez, AlmaƟ and Agrij), are characterized by the presence of obvious processes of lateral and vertical erosion at the level of the riverbeds. The field observations, as well as the position of these rivers and their catchment areas in the neighborhood of the lower SomeƟ subsidence area, would easily be grounds for explaining the riverbed processes as caused by an unstable fluvial base level. More precisely, this base level would be moving downwards under the influence of subsidence movements of Tisa Plain or even because of the subsidence affecting Guruslău Basin. Starting from these more or less speculative deductions, this paper aims at checking and confirming the above-mentioned explanations or finding other causes for the dynamics of riverbed processes. In this sense, we analysed a correlation between the drainage in the catchment area and at the level of the riverbeds, on one hand, and the riverbed geomorphological processes, on the other hand. Brñglez River (in western SomeƟan Plateau) will be considered as a study case, as it provides an accelerated dynamics of riverbed processes. This situation will be compared with the one in the eastern part of the same plateau, where rivers like BorƟa, Luna or Lujerdiu do not present obvious riverbed processes despite the similar climatic and geological conditions

    Direct Integration of Micromachined Pipettes in a Flow Channel for Single DNA Molecule Study by Optical Tweezers

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    We have developed a micromachined flow cell consisting of a flow channel integrated with micropipettes. The flow cell is used in combination with an optical trap setup (optical tweezers) to study mechanical and structural properties of λ-DNA molecules. The flow cell was realized using silicon micromachining including the so-called buried channel technology to fabricate the micropipettes, the wet etching of glass to create the flow channel,\ud and the powder blasting of glass to make the fluid connections. The volume of the flow cell is 2 ”l. The pipettes have a length of 130 m, a width of 5–10 ”m, a round opening of 1 um and can be processed with different shapes. Using this flow cell we stretched single molecules (λ-DNA) showing typical force-extension curves also found with conventional techniques. These pipettes can be\ud also used for drug delivery, for injection of small gas bubbles into a liquid flow to monitor the streamlines, and for the mixing of liquids to study diffusion effects. The paper describes the design, the fabrication and testing of the flow cell

    Database Learning: Toward a Database that Becomes Smarter Every Time

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    In today's databases, previous query answers rarely benefit answering future queries. For the first time, to the best of our knowledge, we change this paradigm in an approximate query processing (AQP) context. We make the following observation: the answer to each query reveals some degree of knowledge about the answer to another query because their answers stem from the same underlying distribution that has produced the entire dataset. Exploiting and refining this knowledge should allow us to answer queries more analytically, rather than by reading enormous amounts of raw data. Also, processing more queries should continuously enhance our knowledge of the underlying distribution, and hence lead to increasingly faster response times for future queries. We call this novel idea---learning from past query answers---Database Learning. We exploit the principle of maximum entropy to produce answers, which are in expectation guaranteed to be more accurate than existing sample-based approximations. Empowered by this idea, we build a query engine on top of Spark SQL, called Verdict. We conduct extensive experiments on real-world query traces from a large customer of a major database vendor. Our results demonstrate that Verdict supports 73.7% of these queries, speeding them up by up to 23.0x for the same accuracy level compared to existing AQP systems.Comment: This manuscript is an extended report of the work published in ACM SIGMOD conference 201

    Development of a stochastic computational fluid dynamics approach for offshore wind farms

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    In this paper, a method for stochastic analysis of an offshore wind farm using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is proposed. An existing offshore wind farm is modelled using a steady-state CFD solver at several deterministic input ranges and an approximation model is trained on the CFD results. The approximation model is then used in a Monte-Carlo analysis to build joint probability distributions for values of interest within the wind farm. The results are compared with real measurements obtained from the existing wind farm to quantify the accuracy of the predictions. It is shown that this method works well for the relatively simple problem considered in this study and has potential to be used in more complex situations where an existing analytical method is either insufficient or unable to make a good prediction
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