86 research outputs found
High-Intensity and High-Brightness Source of Moderated Positrons Using a Brilliant gamma Beam
Presently large efforts are conducted towards the development of highly
brilliant gamma beams via Compton back scattering of photons from a
high-brilliance electron beam, either on the basis of a normal-conducting
electron linac or a (superconducting) Energy Recovery Linac (ERL). Particularly
ERL's provide an extremely brilliant electron beam, thus enabling to generate
highest-quality gamma beams. A 2.5 MeV gamma beam with an envisaged intensity
of 10^15 s^-1, as ultimately envisaged for an ERL-based gamma-beam facility,
narrow band width (10^-3), and extremely low emittance (10^-4 mm^2 mrad^2)
offers the possibility to produce a high-intensity bright polarized positron
beam. Pair production in a face-on irradiated W converter foil (200 micron
thick, 10 mm long) would lead to the emission of 2 x 10^13 (fast) positrons per
second, which is four orders of magnitude higher compared to strong radioactive
^22Na sources conventionally used in the laboratory.Using a stack of converter
foils and subsequent positron moderation, a high-intensity low-energy beam of
moderated positrons can be produced. Two different source setups are presented:
a high-brightness positron beam with a diameter as low as 0.2 mm, and a
high-intensity beam of 3 x 10^11 moderated positrons per second. Hence,
profiting from an improved moderation efficiency, the envisaged positron
intensity would exceed that of present high-intensity positron sources by a
factor of 100.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
The Ecological Importance of Unregulated Tributaries to Macroinvertebrate Diversity and Community Composition in a Regulated River
In regulated rivers, dams alter longitudinal gradients in flow regimes, geomorphology, water quality and temperature with associated impacts on aquatic biota. Unregulated tributaries can increase biodiversity in regulated environments by contributing colonists to the main channel and creating transitional habitats at a stream junction. We assessed whether unregulated tributaries influence macroinvertebrate communities in two mainstem rivers during summer low-flows. Three tributary junctions of upland cobble-gravel bed streams were surveyed in an unregulated and a regulated river in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California, USA. We found distinct physical habitat conditions and increased macroinvertebrate abundance and diversity in unregulated tributaries on the regulated river, but macroinvertebrate diversity did not increase downstream of tributary junctions as predicted. On the unregulated river, macroinvertebrate diversity was similar in upstream, downstream and unregulated tributary sites. Our findings highlight that unregulated tributaries support high macroinvertebrate diversity and heterogeneous communities compared to the mainstem sites in a regulated river, and thus likely support ecological processes, such as spillover predation, breeding and refugia use for mobile taxa. We suggest unregulated tributaries are an integral component of river networks, serving as valuable links in the landscape for enhancing biodiversity, and should be protected in conservation and management plans
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