5,423 research outputs found
Monolithic MHz-frame rate digital SiPM-IC with sub-100 ps precision and 70m pixel pitch
This paper presents the design and characterization of a monolithic
integrated circuit (IC) including digital silicon photomultipliers (dSiPMs)
arranged in a 3232 pixel matrix at 70m pitch. The IC provides
per-quadrant time stamping and hit-map readout, and is fabricated in a standard
150-nm CMOS technology. Each dSiPM pixel consists of four single-photon
avalanche diodes (SPADs) sharing a quenching and subsequent processing
circuitry and has a fill factor of 30. A sub-100ps precision, 12-bit
time-to-digital converter (TDC) provides timestamps per quadrant with an
acquisition rate of 3MHz. Together with the hit map, the total sustained
data throughput of the IC amounts to 4Gbps. Measurements obtained in a dark,
temperature-stable environment as well as by using a pulsed laser environment
show the full dSiPM-IC functionality. The dark-count rate (DCR) as function of
the overvoltage and temperature, the TDC resolution, differential and integral
nonlinearity (DNL/INL) as well as the propagation-delay variations across the
matrix are presented. With aid of additional peripheral test structures, the
main building blocks are characterized and key parameters are presented.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, 1 tabl
Spin dependence of the masses of heavy baryons
It is argued from the systematics of spin-depen\-dent forces between quarks
that two proposed baryon states, named and ,
do not exist.Comment: 6 pages, plainte
Early ultraviolet emission in the Type Ia supernova LSQ12gdj: No evidence for ongoing shock interaction
We present photospheric-phase observations of LSQ12gdj, a slowly-declining,
UV-bright Type Ia supernova. Classified well before maximum light, LSQ12gdj has
extinction-corrected absolute magnitude , and pre-maximum
spectroscopic evolution similar to SN 1991T and the super-Chandrasekhar-mass SN
2007if. We use ultraviolet photometry from Swift, ground-based optical
photometry, and corrections from a near-infrared photometric template to
construct the bolometric (1600-23800 \AA) light curve out to 45 days past
-band maximum light. We estimate that LSQ12gdj produced
of Ni, with an ejected mass near or slightly above the
Chandrasekhar mass. As much as 27% of the flux at the earliest observed phases,
and 17% at maximum light, is emitted bluewards of 3300 \AA. The absence of
excess luminosity at late times, the cutoff of the spectral energy distribution
bluewards of 3000 \AA, and the absence of narrow line emission and strong Na I
D absorption all argue against a significant contribution from ongoing shock
interaction. However, up to 10% of LSQ12gdj's luminosity near maximum light
could be produced by the release of trapped radiation, including kinetic energy
thermalized during a brief interaction with a compact, hydrogen-poor envelope
(radius cm) shortly after explosion; such an envelope arises
generically in double-degenerate merger scenarios.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted to MNRAS; v2 accepted version. Spectra
available on WISEReP (http://www.weizmann.ac.il/astrophysics/wiserep/).
Natural-system photometry and bolometric light curve available as online
tables in MNRAS versio
Measuring the Photon Helicity in Radiative B Decays
We propose a way of measuring the photon polarization in radiative B decays
into K resonance states decaying to K\pi\pi, which can test the Standard Model
and probe new physics. The photon polarization is shown to be measured by the
up-down asymmetry of the photon direction relative to the K\pi\pi decay plane
in the K resonance rest frame. The integrated asymmetry in K_1(1400)\to
K\pi\pi, calculated to be 0.34\pm 0.05 in the Standard Model, is measurable at
currently operating B factories.Comment: 4 pages, final version to appear in Physical Review Letter
A Hierarchical NeuroBayes-based Algorithm for Full Reconstruction of B Mesons at B Factories
We describe a new B-meson full reconstruction algorithm designed for the
Belle experiment at the B-factory KEKB, an asymmetric e+e- collider that
collected a data sample of 771.6 x 10^6 BBbar pairs during its running time. To
maximize the number of reconstructed B decay channels, it utilizes a
hierarchical reconstruction procedure and probabilistic calculus instead of
classical selection cuts. The multivariate analysis package NeuroBayes was used
extensively to hold the balance between highest possible efficiency, robustness
and acceptable consumption of CPU time.
In total, 1104 exclusive decay channels were reconstructed, employing 71
neural networks altogether. Overall, we correctly reconstruct one B+/- or B0
candidate in 0.28% or 0.18% of the BBbar events, respectively. Compared to the
cut-based classical reconstruction algorithm used at the Belle experiment, this
is an improvement in efficiency by roughly a factor of 2, depending on the
analysis considered.
The new framework also features the ability to choose the desired purity or
efficiency of the fully reconstructed sample freely. If the same purity as for
the classical full reconstruction code is desired ~25%, the efficiency is still
larger by nearly a factor of 2. If, on the other hand, the efficiency is chosen
at a similar level as the classical full reconstruction, the purity rises from
~25% to nearly 90%
Evidence of Environmental Dependencies of Type Ia Supernovae from the Nearby Supernova Factory indicated by Local H{\alpha}
(Abridged) We study the host galaxy regions in close proximity to Type Ia
supernovae (SNe Ia) to analyze relations between the properties of SN Ia events
and environments most similar to where their progenitors formed. We focus on
local H\alpha\ emission as an indicator of young environments. The Nearby
Supernova Factory has obtained flux-calibrated spectral timeseries for SNe Ia
using integral field spectroscopy, allowing the simultaneous measurement of the
SN and its immediate vicinity. For 89 SNe Ia we measure H\alpha\ emission
tracing ongoing star formation within a 1 kpc radius around each SN. This
constitutes the first direct study of the local environment for a large sample
of SNe Ia also having accurate luminosity, color and stretch measurements. We
find that SNe Ia with local H\alpha\ emission are redder by 0.036+/-0.017 mag,
and that the previously-noted correlation between stretch and host mass is
entirely driven by the SNe Ia coming from passive regions. Most importantly,
the mean standardized brightness for SNe Ia with local H\alpha\ emission is
0.094+/-0.031 mag fainter than for those without. This offset arises from a
bimodal structure in the Hubble residuals, that also explains the
previously-known host-mass bias. We combine this bimodality with the cosmic
star-formation rate to predict changes with redshift in the mean SN Ia
brightness and the host-mass bias. This change is confirmed using high-redshift
SNe Ia from the literature. These environmental dependences point to remaining
systematic errors in SNe Ia standardization. The observed brightness offset is
predicted to cause a significant bias in measurements of the dark energy
equation of state. Recognition of these effects offers new opportunities to
improve SNe Ia as cosmological probes - e.g. SNe Ia having local H\alpha\
emission are more homogeneous, having a brightness dispersion of 0.105+/-0.012
mag.Comment: accepted for publication in Section 3. Cosmology of A&A (The official
date of acceptance is 30/08/2013
Measuring cosmic bulk flows with Type Ia Supernovae from the Nearby Supernova Factory
Context. Our Local Group of galaxies appears to be moving relative to the
cosmic microwave background with the source of the peculiar motion still
uncertain. While in the past this has been studied mostly using galaxies as
distance indicators, the weight of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) has increased
recently with the continuously improving statistics of available low-redshift
supernovae.
Aims. We measured the bulk flow in the nearby universe ()
using 117 SNe Ia observed by the Nearby Supernova Factory, as well as the
Union2 compilation of SN Ia data already in the literature.
Methods. The bulk flow velocity was determined from SN data binned in
redshift shells by including a coherent motion (dipole) in a cosmological fit.
Additionally, a method of spatially smoothing the Hubble residuals was used to
verify the results of the dipole fit. To constrain the location and mass of a
potential mass concentration (e.g., the Shapley supercluster) responsible for
the peculiar motion, we fit a Hubble law modified by adding an additional mass
concentration.
Results. The analysis shows a bulk flow that is consistent with the direction
of the CMB dipole up to , thereby doubling the volume over which
conventional distance measures are sensitive to a bulk flow. We see no
significant turnover behind the center of the Shapley supercluster. A simple
attractor model in the proximity of the Shapley supercluster is only marginally
consistent with our data, suggesting the need for another, more distant source.
In the redshift shell , we constrain the bulk flow velocity to
(68% confidence level) for the direction of the CMB
dipole, in contradiction to recent claims of the existence of a large-amplitude
dark flow.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, added corrigendum
(http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2015A%26A...578C...1F
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