496 research outputs found

    Beauty photoproduction measured using decays into muons in dijet events in ep collisions at s\sqrt{s}=318 GeV

    Get PDF
    The photoproduction of beauty quarks in events with two jets and a muon has been measured with the ZEUS detector at HERA using an integrated luminosity of 110 pb1^{- 1}. The fraction of jets containing b quarks was extracted from the transverse momentum distribution of the muon relative to the closest jet. Differential cross sections for beauty production as a function of the transverse momentum and pseudorapidity of the muon, of the associated jet and of xγjetsx_{\gamma}^{jets}, the fraction of the photon's momentum participating in the hard process, are compared with MC models and QCD predictions made at next-to-leading order. The latter give a good description of the data.Comment: 32 pages, 6 tables, 7 figures Table 6 and Figure 7 revised September 200

    Search for a narrow charmed baryonic state decaying to D^*+/- p^-/+ in ep collisions at HERA

    Get PDF
    A resonance search has been made in the D^*+/- p^-/+ invariant-mass spectrum with the ZEUS detector at HERA using an integrated luminosity of 126 pb^-1. The decay channels D^*+ -> D^0 pi^+_s -> (K^- pi^+) pi^+_s and D^*+ -> D^0 pi^+_s -> (K^- pi^+ pi^+ pi^-) pi^+_s (and the corresponding antiparticle decays) were used to identify D^*+/- mesons. No resonance structure was observed in the D^*+/- p^-/+ mass spectrum from more than 60000 reconstructed D^*+/- mesons. The results are not compatible with a report of the H1 Collaboration of a charmed pentaquark, Theta^0_c.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, 1 table; minor text revisions; 2 references adde

    Search for supersymmetric particles in scenarios with a gravitino LSP and stau NLSP

    Get PDF
    Sleptons, neutralinos and charginos were searched for in the context of scenarios where the lightest supersymmetric particle is the gravitino. It was assumed that the stau is the next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle. Data collected with the DELPHI detector at a centre-of-mass energy near 189 GeV were analysed combining the methods developed in previous searches at lower energies. No evidence for the production of these supersymmetric particles was found. Hence, limits were derived at 95% confidence level.Comment: 31 pages, 14 figure

    Scaled momentum distributions for K-S(0) and Λ /̄ Λ in DIS at HERA

    Get PDF
    Scaled momentum distributions for the strange hadrons K0S and Λ/Λ¯ were measured in deep inelastic ep scattering with the ZEUS detector at HERA using an integrated luminosity of 330 pb−1. The evolution of these distributions with the photon virtuality, Q 2, was studied in the kinematic region 10 < Q 2  < 40000 GeV2 and 0.001 < x < 0.75, where x is the Bjorken scaling variable. Clear scaling violations are observed. Predictions based on different approaches to fragmentation were compared to the measurements. Leading-logarithm parton-shower Monte Carlo calculations interfaced to the Lund string fragmentation model describe the data reasonably well in the whole range measured. Next-to-leading-order QCD calculations based on fragmentation functions, FFs, extracted from e + e − data alone, fail to describe the measurements. The calculations based on FFs extracted from a global analysis including e + e −, ep and pp data give an improved description. The measurements presented in this paper have the potential to further constrain the FFs of quarks, anti-quarks and gluons yielding K0S and Λ/Λ¯ strange hadrons

    A QCD analysis of ZEUS diffractive data

    Get PDF

    Dissociation of virtual photons in events with a leading proton at HERA

    Get PDF

    Search for Resonance Decays to Lepton+jet at DESY HERA and Limits on Leptoquarks

    Get PDF
    A search for narrow-width resonances that decay into electron+jet or neutrino+jet has been performed with the ZEUS detector at the DESY ep collider HERA operating at center-of-mass energies of 300 and 318 GeV. An integrated e+p luminosity of 114.8 pb-1 and e-p luminosity of 16.7 pb-1 were used. No evidence for any resonance was found. Limits were derived on the Yukawa coupling λ as a function of the mass of a hypothetical resonance that has arbitrary decay branching ratios into eq or vq. These limits also apply to squarks predicted by R-parity-violating supersymmetry. Limits for the production of leptoquarks described by the Buchmüller-Rückl-Wyler model were also derived for masses up to 400 GeV. For λ = 0.1, leptoquark masses up to 290 GeV are excluded

    Deep inelastic scattering with leading protons or large rapidity gaps at HERA

    Get PDF

    Can large scintillators be used for solar-axion searches to test the cosmological axion-photon oscillation proposal?

    Get PDF
    Solar-axion interaction rates in NaI, CsI and Xe scintillators via the axio-electric effect were calculated. A table is presented with photoelectric and axioelectric cross sections, solar-axion fluxes, and the interaction rates from 2.0 to 10.0 keV. The results imply that annual-modulation data of large NaI and CsI arrays, and large Xe scintillation chambers, might be made sensitive enough to probe coupling to photons at levels required to explain axion-photon oscillation phenomena proposed to explain the survival of high-energy photons traveling cosmological distances. The DAMAA/LIBRA data are used to demonstrate the power of the model-independent annual modulation due to the seasonal variation in the earth sun distance.Comment: 7 pages and no figure

    Integrable microwave filter based on a photonic crystal delay line

    Full text link
    The availability of a tunable delay line with a chip-size footprint is a crucial step towards the full implementation of integrated microwave photonic signal processors. Achieving a large and tunable group delay on a millimetre-sized chip is not trivial. Slow light concepts are an appropriate solution, if propagation losses are kept acceptable. Here we use a low-loss 1.5 mm-long photonic crystal waveguide to demonstrate both notch and band-pass microwave filters that can be tuned over the 0 50-GHz spectral band. The waveguide is capable of generating a controllable delay with limited signal attenuation (total insertion loss below 10 dB when the delay is below 70 ps) and degradation. Owing to the very small footprint of the delay line, a fully integrated device is feasible, also featuring more complex and elaborate filter functions.This work was funded by the European Union under the project GOSPEL (grant 219299) and by the Valencian Government (Prometeo GVA 2008-92). We thank S. Hughes and P. Lalanne for enlightening discussion about the impact of disorder in photonic crystal waveguides.Sancho Durá, J.; Bourderionnet, J.; Lloret Soler, JA.; Combrie, S.; Gasulla Mestre, I.; Xavier, S.; Sales Maicas, S.... (2012). Integrable microwave filter based on a photonic crystal delay line. Nature Communications. 3:1-9. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2092S193Seeds, A. Microwave photonics. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 50, 877–887 (2002).Capmany, J. & Novak, D. Microwave photonics combines two worlds. Nat. Photon 1, 319–330 (2007).Yao, J. P. Microwave photonics. J. Lightwave Technol. 27, 314–335 (2009).See special technology focus on microwave photonics. Nat. Photon 5, 723–736 (2011).Capmany, J., Ortega, B. & Pastor, D. A tutorial on microwave photonic filters. J. Lightwave. Technol. 24, 201–229 (2006).Long, J. et al. A tunable microstrip bandpass filter with two independently adjustable transmission zeros. IEEE Microw. Wireless Compon. Lett. 21, 74–76 (2011).Velez, A. et al. Tunable coplanar waveguide band-stop and band-pass filters based on open split ring resonators and open complementary split ring resonators. IEEE Microw. Antennas Propag. 5, 277–281 (2011).Sekar, V., Armendariz, M. & Entesari, K. A 1.2-1.6-GHz substrate-integrated-waveguide RF MEMS tunable filter. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 59, 866–876 (2011).Rafique, M. R. et al. Miniaturized superconducting microwave filters. Supercond. Sci. Technol. 21, 075004 (2008).Velu, G. et al. A 360° BST phase shifter with moderate bias voltage at 30 GHz. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 55, 438–444 (2007).Koh, K. J. & Rebeiz, G. M. A 6-18 GHz active phase shifter. In Proceedings IEEE Microwave Symposium Digest 792–795 (2010).Capmany, J., Pastor, D. & Ortega, B. New and flexible fiber-optic delay-line filters using chirped Bragg gratings and laser arrays. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 47, 1321–1326 (1999).Minasian, R. A. Photonic signal processing of microwave signals. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 54, 832–846 (2006).Dai, Y. & Yao, J. P. Nonuniformly-spaced photonic microwave delay-line filter. Opt. Express 16, 4713–4718 (2008).Hamidi, E., Leaird, D. E. & Weiner, A. M. Tunable programmable microwave photonic filters based on an optical frequency comb. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 58, 3269–3278 (2010).Chan, E. H. W. & Minasian, R. A. Coherence-free high-resolution RF/microwave photonic bandpass filter with high skirt selectivity and high stopband attenuation. J. Lightwave Technol. 28, 1646–1651 (2010).Norberg, E. J. et al. Programmable photonic microwave filters monolithically integrated in InPinGaAsP. J. Lightwave. Technol. 29, 1611–1619 (2011).Chen, H. W. et al. Integrated microwave photonic filter on a hybrid silicon platform. IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech. 58, 3213–3219 (2010).Dong, P. et al. GHz-bandwidth optical filters based on high-order silicon ring resonators. Opt. Express 18, 23784–23789 (2010).Lloret, J. et al. Tunable complex-valued multi-tap microwave photonic filter based on single silicon-on-insulator microring resonator. Opt. Express 19, 12402–12407 (2011).Notomi, M. et al. Extremely large group-velocity dispersion of line-defect waveguides in photonic crystal slabs. Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 253902 (2001).Knight, J. C. Photonic crystal fibres. Nature 424, 847–851 (2003).Supradeepa, V. R. et al. Comb-based radiofrequency photonic filters with rapid tunability and high selectivity. Nat. Photon. 6, 186–194 (2012).Capmany, J., Ortega, B., Pastor, D. & Sales, S. Discrete-time optical processing of microwave signals. J. Lightwave Technol. 23, 702–723 (2005).Hunter, D. B. & Minasian, R. A Tunable microwave fiber-optic bandpass filters. IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 11, 874–876 (1999).Baba, T. Slow light in photonic crystals. Nat. Photon. 2, 465–473 (2008).Kuramochi, E. et al. Disorder-induced scattering loss of line-defect waveguides in photonic crystal slabs. Phys. Rev B 72, 161318 (2005).Ishikura, N., Baba, T., Kuramochi, E. & Notomi, M. Large tunable fractional delay of slow light pulse and its application to fast optical correlator. Opt. Express 19, 24102–24108 (2011).O'Faolain, L. et al. Loss engineered slow light waveguides. Opt. Express 18, 27627–27638 (2010).Baron, A., Mazoyer, S., Smigaj, W. & Lalanne, P. Attenuation Coefficient of Single-Mode Periodic Waveguides. Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 153901 (2011).Patterson, M. et al. Disorder-Induced Coherent Scattering in Slow-Light Photonic Crystal Waveguides. Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 253903 (2009).Mazoyer, S., Hugonin, J. P. & Lalanne, P. Disorder-Induced Multiple Scattering in Photonic-Crystal Waveguides. Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 063903 (2009).Combrié, S. et al. Time-delay measurement in singlemode, low-loss photonic crystal waveguides. Electron. Lett. 42, 86–87 (2006).Liang, J. et al. Wideband ultraflat slow light with large group index in a W1 photonic crystal waveguide. J. App. Phys. 110, 063103 (2011).Roy, S. Modeling the dispersion of the nonlinearity in slow mode photonic crystal waveguides. IEEE Photonics. Journal 4, 224–233 (2012).Colman, P., Combrié, S. & De Rossi, A. Control of dispersion in photonic crystal waveguides using group symmetry theory. Opt. Express 20, 13108–13114 (2012).Vy Tran, Q., Combrié, S., Colman, P. & De Rossi, A. Photonic crystal membrane waveguides with low insertion losses. Appl. Phys. Lett. 95, 061105 (2009).Bolea, M., Mora, J., Ortega, B. & Capmany, J. Highly chirped single-bandpass microwave photonic filter with reconfiguration capabilities. Opt. Express 19, 4566–4576 (2011).Binetti, P. et al. Indium phosphide integrated circuits for coherent optical links. IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 48, 279–291 (2012).Thomson, D. J. et al. High contrast 40Gbit/s optical modulation in silicon. Opt. Express 19, 11507–11516 (2011).Asghari, M. & Krishnamoorthy, A. V. Energy efficient communication. Nat. Photon. 5, 268–270 (2011).Vivien, L. et al. Zero-bias 40Gbit/s germanium waveguide photodetector on silicon. Opt. Express 20, 1096–1101 (2012).Feng, N. N. et al. 30GHz Ge electro-absorption modulator integrated with 3 μm silicon-on-insulator waveguide. Opt. Express 19, 7062–7067 (2011).Trinh, P. D., Yegnanarayanan, S., Coppinger, F. & Jalali, B. Compact multimode interference couplers in Silicon-on-insulator technology. Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics CLEO '97CThV4, 441 (Baltimore, USA, 1997).Loayssa, A., Capmany, J., Sagues, M. & Mora, J. Demonstration of incoherent microwave photonic filters with all-optical complex coefficients. IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 18, 1744–1746 (2006).Zhang, W. & Minasian, R. A. Widely tunable single-passband microwave photonic filter based on stimulated Brillouin scattering. IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 23, 1775–1777 (2011).Xue, W., Sales, S., Mork, J. & Capmany, J. Widely tunable microwave photonic notch filter based on slow and fast light effects. IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 21, 167–169 (2009).Norberg, E. J. et al. A monolithic programmable optical filter for RF signal processing. in Proceedings Microwave Photonics Conf. (Montreal, Canada, 2010).Vlasov, Y. A., O'Boyle, M., Hamann, H. F. & McNab, S. J. Active control of slow light on a chip with photonic crystal waveguides. Nature 438, 65–69 (2005).Eckhouse, V. et al. Highly efficient four wave mixing in GaInP photonic crystal waveguides. Opt. Lett. 35, 1440–1442 (2010).Sagues, M. et al. Multi-tap complex-coefficient incoherent microwave photonic filters based on optical single-sideband modulation and narrow band optical filtering. Opt. Express 16, 295–303 (2008).Huang, T. X. H., Yi, X. & Minasian, R. A. Single passband microwave photonic filter using continuous-time impulse response. Opt. Express 19, 6231–6242 (2011).Burla, M. et al. On-chip CMOS compatible reconfigurable optical delay line with separate carrier tuning for microwave photonic signal processing. Opt. Express 19, 21475–21484 (2011)
    corecore