6,250 research outputs found

    Spatial Coherence of Synchrotron Radiation

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    Theory and measurement of spatial coherence of synchrotron radiation beams are briefly reviewed. Emphasis is given to simple relationships between electron beam characteristics and far field properties of the light beam.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure

    Non-perturbative effects in the energy-energy correlation

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    The fully resummed next-to-leading-order perturbative calculation of the energy-energy correlation in e+e−e^+e^- annihilation is extended to include the leading non-perturbative power-behaved contributions computed using the ``dispersive method'' applied earlier to event shape variables. The correlation between a leading (anti)quark and a gluon produces a non-perturbative 1/Q contribution, while non-perturbative effects in the quark-antiquark correlation give rise to a smaller contribution ln⁡Q2/Q2\ln Q^2/Q^2. In the back-to-back region, the power-suppressed contributions actually decrease much more slowly, as small non-integer powers of 1/Q, as a result of the interplay with perturbative effects. The hypothesis of a universal low-energy form for the strong coupling relates the coefficients of these contributions to those measured for other observables.Comment: 41 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures, uses JHEP.cl

    The Mass Growth and Stellar Ages of Galaxies: Observations versus Simulations

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    Using observed stellar mass functions out to z=5z=5, we measure the main progenitor stellar mass growth of descendant galaxies with masses of log⁥M∗/M⊙=11.5,11.0,10.5,10.0\log{M_{*}/M_{\odot}}=11.5,11.0,10.5,10.0 at z∌0.1z\sim0.1 using an evolving cumulative number density selection. From these mass growth histories, we are able to measure the time at which half the total stellar mass of the descendant galaxy was assembled, tat_{a}, which, in order of decreasing mass corresponds to redshifts of za=1.28,0.92,0.60z_{a}=1.28, 0.92, 0.60 and 0.510.51. We compare this to the median light-weighted stellar age t∗t_{*} (z∗=2.08,1.49,0.82z_{*} = 2.08, 1.49, 0.82 and 0.370.37) of a sample of low redshift SDSS galaxies (from the literature) and find the timescales are consistent with more massive galaxies forming a higher fraction of their stars ex-situ compared to lower mass descendants. We find that both t∗t_{*} and tat_{a} strongly correlate with mass which is in contrast to what is found in the EAGLE hydrodynamical simulation which shows a flat relationship between tat_{a} and M∗M_{*}. However, the semi-analytic model of \citet{henriques2015} is consistent with the observations in both tat_{a} and t∗t_{*} with M∗M_{*}, showing the most recent semi-analytic models are better able to decouple the evolution of the baryons from the dark matter in lower-mass galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ

    Production of gauge bosons plus jets in hadronic collisions

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    A computational strategy and a collection of codes are presented for studying multiparticle final states in hard hadronic collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, talk given at ICHEP'02 (Amsterdam, 24-31 July 2002

    Coherent Diffraction Imaging of Single 95nm Nanowires

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    Photonic or electronic confinement effects in nanostructures become significant when one of their dimension is in the 5-300 nm range. Improving their development requires the ability to study their structure - shape, strain field, interdiffusion maps - using novel techniques. We have used coherent diffraction imaging to record the 3-dimensionnal scattered intensity of single silicon nanowires with a lateral size smaller than 100 nm. We show that this intensity can be used to recover the hexagonal shape of the nanowire with a 28nm resolution. The article also discusses limits of the method in terms of radiation damage.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    A unified evaluation of iterative projection algorithms for phase retrieval

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    Iterative projection algorithms are successfully being used as a substitute of lenses to recombine, numerically rather than optically, light scattered by illuminated objects. Images obtained computationally allow aberration-free diffraction-limited imaging and the possibility of using radiation for which no lenses exist. The challenge of this imaging technique is transfered from the lenses to the algorithms. We evaluate these new computational ``instruments'' developed for the phase retrieval problem, and discuss acceleration strategies.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, revte

    Compressive Phase Contrast Tomography

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    When x-rays penetrate soft matter, their phase changes more rapidly than their amplitude. In- terference effects visible with high brightness sources creates higher contrast, edge enhanced images. When the object is piecewise smooth (made of big blocks of a few components), such higher con- trast datasets have a sparse solution. We apply basis pursuit solvers to improve SNR, remove ring artifacts, reduce the number of views and radiation dose from phase contrast datasets collected at the Hard X-Ray Micro Tomography Beamline at the Advanced Light Source. We report a GPU code for the most computationally intensive task, the gridding and inverse gridding algorithm (non uniform sampled Fourier transform).Comment: 5 pages, "Image Reconstruction from Incomplete Data VI" conference 7800, SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 1-5 August 2010 San Diego, CA United State

    Exact and semiclassical approach to a class of singular integral operators arising in fluid mechanics and quantum field theory

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    A class of singular integral operators, encompassing two physically relevant cases arising in perturbative QCD and in classical fluid dynamics, is presented and analyzed. It is shown that three special values of the parameters allow for an exact eigenfunction expansion; these can be associated to Riemannian symmetric spaces of rank one with positive, negative or vanishing curvature. For all other cases an accurate semiclassical approximation is derived, based on the identification of the operators with a peculiar Schroedinger-like operator.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, amslatex, bibtex (added missing label eq.11

    Dispersive approach to power-behaved contributions in QCD hard processes

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    We consider power-behaved contributions to hard processes in QCD arising from non-perturbative effects at low scales which can be described by introducing the notion of an infrared-finite effective coupling. Our method is based on a dispersive treatment which embodies running coupling effects in all orders. The resulting power behaviour is consistent with expectations based on the operator product expansion, but our approach is more widely applicable. The dispersively-generated power contributions to different observables are given by (log-)moment integrals of a universal low-scale effective coupling, with process-dependent powers and coefficients. We analyse a wide variety of quark-dominated processes and observables, and show how the power contributions are specified in lowest order by the behaviour of one-loop Feynman diagrams containing a gluon of small virtual mass. We discuss both collinear safe observables (such as the e+e- total cross section and \tau hadronic width, DIS sum rules, e+e- event shape variables and the Drell-Yan K-factor) and collinear divergent quantities (such as DIS structure functions, e+e- fragmentation functions and the Drell-Yan cross section)
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