11,633 research outputs found

    ATLAS Muon Detector Commissioning

    Full text link
    The ATLAS muon spectrometer consists of several major components: Monitored Drift Tubes (MDTs) for precision measurements in the bending plane of the muons, supplemented by Cathode Strip Chambers (CSC) in the high eta region; Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) and Thin Gap Chambers (TGCs) for trigger and second coordinate measurement in the barrel and endcap regions, respectively; an optical alignment system to track the relative positions of all chambers; and, finally, the world's largest air-core magnetic toroid system. We will describe the status and commissioning of the muon system with cosmic rays and plans for commissioning with early beams.Comment: 6 pages, 18 figures. To be published in the proceedings of DPF-2009, Detroit, MI, July 2009, eConf C09072

    Systems thinking: critical thinking skills for the 1990s and beyond

    Get PDF
    This pdf article discusses the need for teaching systems thinking and critical thinking skills. Systems thinking and systems dynamics are important for developing effective strategies to close the gap between the interdependent nature of our problems and our ability to understand them. This article calls for a clearer view of the nature of systems thinking and the education system into which it must be transferred. Educational levels: Graduate or professional

    Solutions of the motion of synchronous satellites with arbitrary eccentricity and inclination

    Get PDF
    A first order, semianalytical theory for the long term motion of resonant satellites is presented. The theory is valid for all eccentricities and inclinations and for all commensurability ratios. The method allows the inclusion of all the zonal and tesseral harmonics as well as luni solar perturbations and radiation pressure. The method is applied to a synchronous satellite including only the J sub 2 and J sub 22 harmonics. Global, long term solutions for this problem, eccentricity, argument of perigee, and inclination are obtained

    Timelike Compton scattering: exclusive photoproduction of lepton pairs

    Get PDF
    We investigate the exclusive photoproduction of a heavy timelike photon which decays into a lepton pair, gamma p -> l+ l- p. This can be seen as the analog of deeply virtual Compton scattering, and we argue that the two processes are complementary for studying generalized parton distributions in the nucleon. In an unpolarized experiment the angular distribution of the leptons readily provides access to the real part of the Compton amplitude. We estimate the possible size of this effect in kinematics where the Compton process should be dominated by quark exchange.Comment: 31 pages, 17 figure

    On baryon-antibaryon coupling to two photons

    Get PDF
    We discuss recent claims that ppˉγγp\bar{p} \to \gamma \gamma may be described by a generalized parton picture. We propose that quark-hadron duality provides a justification for the effective dominance of the "handbag" diagram assumed in recent literature, and that handbag diagrams may dominate phenomena in kinematic regions far more extensive than that might be expected from pQCD alone.Comment: 11 pages, 2 eps figures, minor modifications made, version to appear on Phys. Lett.

    Boundary critical behavior at m-axial Lifshitz points for a boundary plane parallel to the modulation axes

    Full text link
    The critical behavior of semi-infinite dd-dimensional systems with nn-component order parameter ϕ\bm{\phi} and short-range interactions is investigated at an mm-axial bulk Lifshitz point whose wave-vector instability is isotropic in an mm-dimensional subspace of Rd\mathbb{R}^d. The associated mm modulation axes are presumed to be parallel to the surface, where 0md10\le m\le d-1. An appropriate semi-infinite ϕ4|\bm{\phi}|^4 model representing the corresponding universality classes of surface critical behavior is introduced. It is shown that the usual O(n) symmetric boundary term ϕ2\propto \bm{\phi}^2 of the Hamiltonian must be supplemented by one of the form λ˚α=1m(ϕ/xα)2\mathring{\lambda} \sum_{\alpha=1}^m(\partial\bm{\phi}/\partial x_\alpha)^2 involving a dimensionless (renormalized) coupling constant λ\lambda. The implied boundary conditions are given, and the general form of the field-theoretic renormalization of the model below the upper critical dimension d(m)=4+m/2d^*(m)=4+{m}/{2} is clarified. Fixed points describing the ordinary, special, and extraordinary transitions are identified and shown to be located at a nontrivial value λ\lambda^* if ϵd(m)d>0\epsilon\equiv d^*(m)-d>0. The surface critical exponents of the ordinary transition are determined to second order in ϵ\epsilon. Extrapolations of these ϵ\epsilon expansions yield values of these exponents for d=3d=3 in good agreement with recent Monte Carlo results for the case of a uniaxial (m=1m=1) Lifshitz point. The scaling dimension of the surface energy density is shown to be given exactly by d+m(θ1)d+m (\theta-1), where θ=νl4/νl2\theta=\nu_{l4}/\nu_{l2} is the anisotropy exponent.Comment: revtex4, 31 pages with eps-files for figures, uses texdraw to generate some graphs; to appear in PRB; v2: some references and additional remarks added, labeling in figure 1 and some typos correcte
    corecore