27,514 research outputs found

    Parametrization of the Driven Betatron Oscillation

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    An AC dipole is a magnet which produces a sinusoidally oscillating dipole field and excites coherent transverse beam motion in a synchrotron. By observing this coherent motion, the optical parameters can be directly measured at the beam position monitor locations. The driven oscillation induced by an AC dipole will generate a phase space ellipse which differs from that of the free oscillation. If not properly accounted for, this difference can lead to a misinterpretation of the actual optical parameters, for instance, of 6% or more in the cases of the Tevatron, RHIC, or LHC. The effect of an AC dipole on the linear optics parameters is identical to that of a thin lens quadrupole. By introducing a new amplitude function to describe this new phase space ellipse, the motion produced by an AC dipole becomes easier to interpret. Beam position data taken under the influence of an AC dipole, with this new interpretation in mind, can lead to more precise measurements of the normal Courant-Snyder parameters. This new parameterization of the driven motion is presented and is used to interpret data taken in the FNAL Tevatron using an AC dipole.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, and 1 tabl

    Reflection high-energy electron diffraction patterns of CrSi_2 films on (111) silicon

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    Highly oriented films of the semiconducting transition metal silicide, CrSi2, were grown on (111) silicon substrates, with the matching crystallographic faces being CrSi_2(001)/Si(111). Reflection high‐energy electron diffraction (RHEED) yielded symmetric patterns of sharp streaks. The expected streak spacings for different incident RHEED beam directions were calculated from the reciprocal net of the CrSi_2(001) face and shown to match the observed spacings. The predominant azimuthal orientation of the films was thus determined to be CrSi_2〈210〉∥Si〈110〉. This highly desirable heteroepitaxial relationship may be described with a common unit mesh of 51 Å^2 and a mismatch of −0.3%. RHEED also revealed the presence of limited film regions of a competing azimuthal orientation, CrSi_2〈110〉∥Si〈110〉. A new common unit mesh for this competing orientation is suggested; it possesses an area of 612 Å^2 and a mismatch of −1.2%

    Generating high-order optical and spin harmonics from ferromagnetic monolayers

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    High-order harmonic generation (HHG) in solids has entered a new phase of intensive research, with envisioned band-structure mapping on an ultrashort time scale. This partly benefits from a flurry of new HHG materials discovered, but so far has missed an important group. HHG in magnetic materials should have profound impact on future magnetic storage technology advances. Here we introduce and demonstrate HHG in ferromagnetic monolayers. We find that HHG carries spin information and sensitively depends on the relativistic spin-orbit coupling; and if they are dispersed into the crystal momentum k{\bf k} space, harmonics originating from real transitions can be k{\bf k}-resolved and carry the band structure information. Geometrically, the HHG signal is sensitive to spatial orientations of monolayers. Different from the optical counterpart, the spin HHG, though probably weak, only appears at even orders, a consequence of SU(2) symmetry. Our findings open an unexplored frontier -- magneto-high-order harmonic generation.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure

    Magnetic spin moment reduction in photoexcited ferromagnets through exchange interaction quenching: Beyond the rigid band approximation

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    The exchange interaction among electrons is one of the most fundamental quantum mechanical interactions in nature and underlies any magnetic phenomena from ferromagnetic ordering to magnetic storage. The current technology is built upon a thermal or magnetic field, but a frontier is emerging to directly control magnetism using ultrashort laser pulses. However, little is known about the fate of the exchange interaction. Here we report unambiguously that photoexcitation is capable of quenching the exchange interaction in all three 3d3d ferromagnetic metals. The entire process starts with a small number of photoexcited electrons which build up a new and self-destructive potential that collapses the system into a new state with a reduced exchange splitting. The spin moment reduction follows a Bloch-like law as Mz(ΔE)=Mz(0)(1ΔE/ΔE0)1βM_z(\Delta E)=M_z(0)(1-{\Delta E}/{\Delta E_0})^{\frac{1}{\beta}}, where ΔE\Delta E is the absorbed photon energy and β\beta is a scaling exponent. A good agreement is found between the experimental and our theoretical results. Our findings may have a broader implication for dynamic electron correlation effects in laser-excited iron-based superconductors, iron borate, rare-earth orthoferrites, hematites and rare-earth transition metal alloys.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, one supplementary material fil

    The Performance of CRTNT Fluorescence Light Detector for Sub-EeV Cosmic Ray Observation

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    Cosmic Ray Tau Neutrino Telescopes (CRTNT) using for sub-EeV cosmic ray measurement is discussed. Performances of a stereoscope configuration with a tower of those telescopes plus two side-triggers are studied. This is done by using a detailed detector simulation driven by Corsika. Detector aperture as a function of shower energy above 10^17 eV is calculated. Event rate of about 20k per year for the second knee measurement is estimated. Event rate for cross calibration with detectors working on higher energy range is also estimated. Different configurations of the detectors are tried for optimization.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to HEP & N
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