909 research outputs found
The liquid Argon TPC: a powerful detector for future neutrino experiments and proton decay searches
We discuss the possibility of new generation neutrino and astroparticle
physics experiments exploiting the liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber (LAr
TPC) technique, following a graded strategy that envisions applications with
increasing detector masses (from 100 ton to 100 kton). The ICARUS R&D program
has already demonstrated that the technology is mature with the test of the
T600 detector at surface. Since 2003 we have been working with the conceptual
design of a very large LAr TPC with a mass of 50-100 kton to be built by
employing a monolithic technology based on the use of industrial, large volume,
cryogenic tankers developed by the petro-chemical industry. Such a detector, if
realized, would be an ideal match for a Super Beam, Beta Beam or Neutrino
Factory, covering a broad physics program that includes the detection of
atmospheric, solar and supernova neutrinos, and searches for proton decay, in
addition to the rich accelerator neutrino physics program. A "test module" with
a mass of the order of 10 kton operated underground or at shallow depth would
represent a necessary milestone towards the realization of the 100 kton
detector, with an interesting physics program on its own. In parallel, physics
is calling for a shorter scale application of the LAr TPC technique at the
level of 100 ton mass, for low energy neutrino physics and for use as a near
station setup in future long baseline neutrino facilities. We outline here the
main physics objectives and the design of such a detector for operation in the
upcoming T2K neutrino beam. We finally present the result of a series of R&D
studies conducted with the aim of validating the design of the proposed
detectors.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures, Invited talk at High Intensity Physics HIF05,
La Biodola, Isola d'Elba (Italy), June 200
Collective excitations of a trapped degenerate Fermi gas
We evaluate the small-amplitude excitations of a spin-polarized vapour of
Fermi atoms confined inside a harmonic trap. The dispersion law
is obtained for the vapour in the
collisional regime inside a spherical trap of frequency , with
the number of radial nodes and the orbital angular momentum. The low-energy
excitations are also treated in the case of an axially symmetric harmonic
confinement. The collisionless regime is discussed with main reference to a
Landau-Boltzmann equation for the Wigner distribution function: this equation
is solved within a variational approach allowing an account for
non-linearities. A comparative discussion of the eigenmodes of oscillation for
confined Fermi and Bose vapours is presented in an Appendix.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, accepted for publication in Eur.Phys.Jour.
Kinetic energy of a trapped Fermi gas interacting with a Bose-Einstein condensate
We study a confined mixture of bosons and fermions in the regime of quantal
degeneracy, with particular attention to the effects of the interactions on the
kinetic energy of the fermionic component. We are able to explore a wide region
of system parameters by identifying two scaling variables which completely
determine its state at low temperature. These are the ratio of the
boson-fermion and boson-boson interaction strengths and the ratio of the radii
of the two clouds. We find that the effect of the interactions can be sizeable
for reasonable choices of the parameters and that its experimental study can be
used to infer the sign of the boson-fermion scattering length. The interplay
between interactions and thermal effects in the fermionic kinetic energy is
also discussed.Comment: REVTEX, 8 pages, 6 figures included. Small corrections to text and
figures, accepted for publication in EPJ
Temperature-dependent density profiles of trapped boson-fermion mixtures
We present a semiclassical three-fluid model for a Bose-condensed mixture of
interacting Bose and Fermi gases confined in harmonic traps at finite
temperature. The model is used to characterize the experimentally relevant
behaviour of the equilibrium density profile of the fermions with varying
composition and temperature across the onset of degeneracy, for coupling
strengths relevant to a mixture of
K and K atoms.Comment: 9 pages, 2 postscript figures, accepted for publication in Eur. Phys.
Jour.
Thermodynamics of Multi-Component Fermi Vapors
We study the thermodynamical properties of Fermi vapors confined in a
harmonic external potential. In the case of the ideal Fermi gas, we compare
exact density profiles with their semiclassical approximation in the conditions
of recent experiments. Then, we consider the phase-separation of a
multi-component Fermi vapor. In particular, we analyze the phase-separation as
a function of temperature, number of particles and scattering length. Finally,
we discuss the effect of rotation on the stability and thermodynamics of the
trapped vapors.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, to be published in J. Phys. B (Atom. Mol.) as a
Special Issue Articl
Inversion of synthetic geodetic data for the 1997 Colfiorito events: clues on the effects of layering, assessment of model parameter PDFs, and model selection criteria
The 1997 September-October Umbria-Marche sequence has been extensively studied in the past by analyzing
coseismic displacement data (GPS, leveling, SAR). Here we focus on synthetic data representative of the main
event of the 1997 Umbria-Marche sequence and investigate the effects of a crustal layering proper to the Colfiorito
area on surface displacements and inferred source features when inverting coseismic geodetic data without
taking into account layering. We compare bootstrapping and NA-Bayes as tools for parameter uncertainty assessment
and show how the Akaike Information Criterion can be used to select the model which is most likely
to be correct. Since SAR images offer the most complete coverage of the study area, we use synthetic line-ofsight
displacement data
Space-weighted seismic attenuation mapping of the aseismic source of Campi Flegrei 1983-84 unrest
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Scalings of domain wall energies in two dimensional Ising spin glasses
We study domain wall energies of two dimensional spin glasses. The scaling of
these energies depends on the model's distribution of quenched random
couplings, falling into three different classes. The first class is associated
with the exponent theta =-0.28, the other two classes have theta = 0, as can be
justified theoretically. In contrast to previous claims, we find that theta=0
does not indicate d=d_l but rather d <= d_l, where d_l is the lower critical
dimension.Comment: Clarifications and extra reference
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