218 research outputs found
Review of double beta experiments
This paper is the first part of the manuscript written in April 2012 for my
academic Accreditation to supervise research. It offers a review of the double
beta experimental techniques. My purpose is to detail, for each technique, the
different origins of background, how they can be identified, and how they can
be reduced. Advantages and limitations are discussed. This review is organized
as follows. First, the question of the possible Majorana nature for the
neutrino is presented and the physic of neutrinoless double beta decay is
summarized. Then I begin by presenting the tracko-calo NEMO-3 and SuperNEMO
experiments. I've worked on these two experiments since 15 years. So it was
natural to start with them with a relatively more exhaustive description. I
will then present the germanium technique. I will then review the bolometer
technique. I will describe in detail the recent progress in scintillating
bolometers because I think that it is one of the most promising techniques.
Finally I will review the large liquid scintillator detectors and Xenon TPC.
The last chapter offers a summary of the different techniques and projects.Comment: 100 pages; Manuscript for Accreditation to supervise research (Univ.
Paris-Sud 11), May 201
The quantum vacuum as the origin of the speed of light
We show that the vacuum permeability and permittivity may originate from the
magnetization and the polarization of continuously appearing and disappearing
fermion pairs. We then show that if we simply model the propagation of the
photon in vacuum as a series of transient captures within these ephemeral
pairs, we can derive a finite photon velocity. Requiring that this velocity is
equal to the speed of light constrains our model of vacuum. Within this
approach, the propagation of a photon is a statistical process at scales much
larger than the Planck scale. Therefore we expect its time of flight to
fluctuate. We propose an experimental test of this prediction.Comment: 6 pages, Accepted for publication in European Physical Journal D.
arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1111.1847,
arXiv:1106.399
Corpuscular description of the speed of light in a homogeneous medium
We are used to describe the detection of light in terms of particles and its
propagation from the source to the detection, by waves. For instance, the
slowing down of light in a transparent medium is always explained within the
electromagnetic wave framework. We propose to approach that phenomenon through
a purely corpuscular description. We find expression for the refractive indices
which differ slightly from the usual Maxwell wave approach. We thus compare
these expressions against experimental refractive indices and we show that both
reproduce well the data. We show also how this corpuscular framework gives a
very natural interpretation to the self focusing Kerr effect. Finally an
experimental expectation of fluctuation of the speed of light is presented.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure
Reshaped teachers’ careers? New patterns and the fragmentation of the teaching profession in England
In this paper, we examine how evolutions related to the fragmentation of labour markets, the flexibilisation of work and employment conditions, and the multiplication of teacher training models and teachers’ roles in schools, are contributing to reshaping teachers’ careers. Drawing on interviews with teachers and senior leaders from 8 schools in London, our analyses highlight six career patterns and their embeddedness in the changing institutional environment of labour markets for teachers. Our results help renew the dialogue between research on teachers’ professional lives and on teachers’ labour markets. They have wider implications for knowledge on the fragmentation of the teaching profession, beyond the London case
Self-consistent gyrokinetic modelling of turbulent and neoclassical tungsten transport in toroidally rotating plasmas
The effect of toroidal rotation on both turbulent and neoclassical transport
of tungsten (W) in tokamaks is investigated using the flux-driven, global,
nonlinear 5D gyrokinetic code GYSELA. Nonlinear simulations are carried out
with different levels of momentum injection that drive W to the supersonic
regime, while the toroidal velocity of the main ions remains in the subsonic
regime. The numerical simulations demonstrate that toroidal rotation induces
centrifugal forces that cause W to accumulate in the outboard region,
generating an in-out poloidal asymmetry. This asymmetry enhances neoclassical
inward convection, which can lead to central accumulation of W in cases of
strong plasma rotation. The core accumulation of W is mainly driven by inward
neoclassical convection. However, as momentum injection continues,
roto-diffusion, proportional to the radial gradient of the toroidal velocity,
becomes significant and generate outward turbulent flux in the case of ion
temperature gradient (ITG) turbulence. Overall, the numerical results from
nonlinear GYSELA simulations are in qualitative agreement with the theoretical
predictions for impurity transport, as well as experimental observations.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, to be publishe
On the relationship between residual zonal flows and bump-on tail saturated instabilities
A connection is established between two classical problems: the non linear saturation of a bump-on tail instability in collisionless regime, and the decay of a zonal flow towards a finite amplitude residual. Reasons for this connection are given and commented
Transport barrier onset and edge turbulence shortfall in fusion plasmas
Turbulent plasmas notably self-organize to higher energy states upon
application of additional free energy sources or modification of edge operating
conditions. Mechanisms whereby such bifurcations occur have been actively
debated for decades. Enhanced confinement occurs at the plasma edge, where a
shortfall of predicted turbulence intensity has been puzzling scientists for
decades. We show, from the primitive kinetic equations that both problems are
connected and that interplay of confined plasma turbulence with its material
boundaries is essential to curing the shortfall of predicted turbulence and to
triggering spontaneous transport barrier onset at the plasma edge. Both
problems determine access to improved confinement and are central to fusion
research. A comprehensive discussion of the underlying mechanisms is proposed.
These results, highly relevant to the quest for magnetic fusion may also be
generic to many problems in fluids and plasmas where turbulence self-advection
is active
PoPe (Projection on Proper elements) for code control: verification, numerical convergence and reduced models. Application to plasma turbulence simulations
The Projection on Proper elements (PoPe) is a novel method of code control dedicated to 1) checking the correct implementation of models, 2) determining the convergence of numerical methods and 3) characterizing the residual errors of any given solution at very low cost. The basic idea is to establish a bijection between a simulation and a set of equations that generate it. Recovering equations is direct and relies on a statistical measure of the weight of the various operators. This method can be used in any dimensions and any regime, including chaotic ones. This method also provides a procedure to design reduced models and quantify the ratio costs to benefits. PoPe is applied to a kinetic and a fluid code of plasma turbulence
A 5D gyrokinetic full-f global semi-lagrangian code for flux-driven ion turbulence simulations
International audienceThis paper addresses non-linear gyrokinetic simulations of ion temperature gradient (ITG) turbulence in tokamak plasmas. The electrostatic Gysela code is one of the few international 5D gyrokinetic codes able to perform global, full-f and flux-driven simulations. Its has also the numerical originality of being based on a semi-Lagrangian (SL) method. This reference paper for the Gysela code presents a complete description of its multi-ion species version including: (i) numerical scheme, (ii) high level of parallelism up to 500k cores and (iii) conservation law properties
Synergetic effects of collisions, turbulence and sawtooth crashes on impurity transport
This paper investigates the interplay of neoclassical, turbulent and MHD processes, which are simultaneously at play when contributing to impurity transport. It is shown that these contributions are not additive, as assumed sometimes. The interaction between turbulence and neoclassical effects leads to less effective thermal screening, i.e. lowers the outward flux due to temperature gradient. This behavior is attributed to poloidal asymmetries of the flow driven by turbulence. Moreover sawtooth crashes play an important role to determine fluxes across the q = 1 surface. It is found that the density profile of a heavy impurity differs significantly in sawtoothing plasmas from the one predicted by neoclassical theory when neglecting MHD events. Sawtooth crashes impede impurity accumulation, but also weaken the impurity outflux due to the temperature gradient when the latter is dominant
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