581 research outputs found
Automated Telemetric Irrigation Controller
An electronic, microprocessor-based controller was developed
and tested for automating surface irrigation systems. Communication
between the central controller and individual satellite field stations
is by tone telemetry over a single 3-conductor wire. The reliable Dual
Tone Multiple Frequency or Touch Tone system is the same as that used in
telephone communications. The system is designed to actuate momentarily
energized pilot valves commonly used in automated surface irrigation
systems. Because of its low power requirement, the control system can
be battery-powered. It is being field tested in three different, automated
surface systems
Shift in critical temperature for random spatial permutations with cycle weights
We examine a phase transition in a model of random spatial permutations which
originates in a study of the interacting Bose gas. Permutations are weighted
according to point positions; the low-temperature onset of the appearance of
arbitrarily long cycles is connected to the phase transition of Bose-Einstein
condensates. In our simplified model, point positions are held fixed on the
fully occupied cubic lattice and interactions are expressed as Ewens-type
weights on cycle lengths of permutations. The critical temperature of the
transition to long cycles depends on an interaction-strength parameter
. For weak interactions, the shift in critical temperature is expected
to be linear in with constant of linearity . Using Markov chain
Monte Carlo methods and finite-size scaling, we find .
This finding matches a similar analytical result of Ueltschi and Betz. We also
examine the mean longest cycle length as a fraction of the number of sites in
long cycles, recovering an earlier result of Shepp and Lloyd for non-spatial
permutations.Comment: v2 incorporated reviewer comments. v3 removed two extraneous figures
which appeared at the end of the PDF
Towards 5D Grand Unification without SUSY Flavor Problem
We consider the renormalization group approach to the SUSY flavor problem in
the supersymmetric SU(5) model with one extra dimension. In higher dimensional
SUSY gauge theories, it has been recently shown that power corrections due to
the Kaluza-Klein states of gauge fields run the soft masses generated at the
orbifold fixed point to flavor conserving values in the infra-red limit. In
models with GUT breaking at the brane where the GUT scale can be larger than
the compactification scale, we show that the addition of a bulk Higgs
multiplet, which is necessary for the successful unification, is compatible
with the flavor universality achieved at the compactification scale.Comment: JHEP style file of 35 pages with 3 figures, Version to appear in JHE
Survey of nucleon electromagnetic form factors
A dressed-quark core contribution to nucleon electromagnetic form factors is
calculated. It is defined by the solution of a Poincare' covariant Faddeev
equation in which dressed-quarks provide the elementary degree of freedom and
correlations between them are expressed via diquarks. The nucleon-photon vertex
involves a single parameter; i.e., a diquark charge radius. It is argued to be
commensurate with the pion's charge radius. A comprehensive analysis and
explanation of the form factors is built upon this foundation. A particular
feature of the study is a separation of form factor contributions into those
from different diagram types and correlation sectors, and subsequently a
flavour separation for each of these. Amongst the extensive body of results
that one could highlight are: r_1^{n,u}>r_1^{n,d}, owing to the presence of
axial-vector quark-quark correlations; and for both the neutron and proton the
ratio of Sachs electric and magnetic form factors possesses a zero.Comment: 43 pages, 17 figures, 12 tables, 5 appendice
Proximity effect at superconducting Sn-Bi2Se3 interface
We have investigated the conductance spectra of Sn-Bi2Se3 interface junctions
down to 250 mK and in different magnetic fields. A number of conductance
anomalies were observed below the superconducting transition temperature of Sn,
including a small gap different from that of Sn, and a zero-bias conductance
peak growing up at lower temperatures. We discussed the possible origins of the
smaller gap and the zero-bias conductance peak. These phenomena support that a
proximity-effect-induced chiral superconducting phase is formed at the
interface between the superconducting Sn and the strong spin-orbit coupling
material Bi2Se3.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Heavy Quarks and Heavy Quarkonia as Tests of Thermalization
We present here a brief summary of new results on heavy quarks and heavy
quarkonia from the PHENIX experiment as presented at the "Quark Gluon Plasma
Thermalization" Workshop in Vienna, Austria in August 2005, directly following
the International Quark Matter Conference in Hungary.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Quark Gluon Plasma Thermalization Workshop
(Vienna August 2005) Proceeding
Centrality Dependence of the High p_T Charged Hadron Suppression in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV
PHENIX has measured the centrality dependence of charged hadron p_T spectra
from central Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=130 GeV. The truncated mean p_T
decreases with centrality for p_T > 2 GeV/c, indicating an apparent reduction
of the contribution from hard scattering to high p_T hadron production. For
central collisions the yield at high p_T is shown to be suppressed compared to
binary nucleon-nucleon collision scaling of p+p data. This suppression is
monotonically increasing with centrality, but most of the change occurs below
30% centrality, i.e. for collisions with less than about 140 participating
nucleons. The observed p_T and centrality dependence is consistent with the
particle production predicted by models including hard scattering and
subsequent energy loss of the scattered partons in the dense matter created in
the collisions.Comment: 7 pages text, LaTeX, 6 figures, 2 tables, 307 authors, resubmitted to
Phys. Lett. B. Revised to address referee concerns. Plain text data tables
for the points plotted in figures for this and previous PHENIX publications
are publicly available at
http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/phenix/WWW/run/phenix/papers.htm
Single Electrons from Heavy Flavor Decays in p+p Collisions at sqrt(s) = 200 GeV
The invariant differential cross section for inclusive electron production in
p+p collisions at sqrt(s) = 200 GeV has been measured by the PHENIX experiment
at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider over the transverse momentum range $0.4
<= p_T <= 5.0 GeV/c at midrapidity (eta <= 0.35). The contribution to the
inclusive electron spectrum from semileptonic decays of hadrons carrying heavy
flavor, i.e. charm quarks or, at high p_T, bottom quarks, is determined via
three independent methods. The resulting electron spectrum from heavy flavor
decays is compared to recent leading and next-to-leading order perturbative QCD
calculations. The total cross section of charm quark-antiquark pair production
is determined as sigma_(c c^bar) = 0.92 +/- 0.15 (stat.) +- 0.54 (sys.) mb.Comment: 329 authors, 6 pages text, 3 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett.
Plain text data tables for the points plotted in figures for this and
previous PHENIX publications are (or will be) publicly available at
http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/papers.htm
The PHENIX Experiment at RHIC
The physics emphases of the PHENIX collaboration and the design and current
status of the PHENIX detector are discussed. The plan of the collaboration for
making the most effective use of the available luminosity in the first years of
RHIC operation is also presented.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. Further details of the PHENIX physics program
available at http://www.rhic.bnl.gov/phenix
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