3,197 research outputs found
Nuclear Ground-State Masses and Deformations
We tabulate the atomic mass excesses and nuclear ground-state deformations of
8979 nuclei ranging from O to . The calculations are based on the
finite-range droplet macroscopic model and the folded-Yukawa single-particle
microscopic model. Relative to our 1981 mass table the current results are
obtained with an improved macroscopic model, an improved pairing model with a
new form for the effective-interaction pairing gap, and minimization of the
ground-state energy with respect to additional shape degrees of freedom. The
values of only 9 constants are determined directly from a least-squares
adjustment to the ground-state masses of 1654 nuclei ranging from O to
106 and to 28 fission-barrier heights. The error of the mass model is
0.669~MeV for the entire region of nuclei considered, but is only 0.448~MeV for
the region above .Comment: 50 pages plus 20 PostScript figures and 160-page table obtainable by
anonymous ftp from t2.lanl.gov in directory masses, LA-UR-93-308
The RF power coupler development programme at LAL-Orsay and DESY-Hamburg for TESLA and the European X-FEL
In the context of a collaboration between LAL (Orsay) and DESY (Hamburg) a programme of development and tests of proto-type power couplers for superconducting cavities is underway in Orsay. Such couplers need to be developed for linear accelerators which require high gradient superconducting cavities, such as the European X-ray Free Electron Laser or the International Linear Collider (ILC) project. We will describe the technical demands which have to be met to build such couplers and will present pro-type designs which are intended to meet these demands, taking the ILC as an example. A description of the infra-structure necessary for the coupler development will also be given along with first high power tests results on a series of power couplers built in industry
Fission-fragment mass distributions from strongly damped shape evolution
Random walks on five-dimensional potential-energy surfaces were recently
found to yield fission-fragment mass distributions that are in remarkable
agreement with experimental data. Within the framework of the Smoluchowski
equation of motion, which is appropriate for highly dissipative evolutions, we
discuss the physical justification for that treatment and investigate the
sensitivity of the resulting mass yields to a variety of model ingredients,
including in particular the dimensionality and discretization of the shape
space and the structure of the dissipation tensor. The mass yields are found to
be relatively robust, suggesting that the simple random walk presents a useful
calculational tool. Quantitatively refined results can be obtained by including
physically plausible forms of the dissipation, which amounts to simulating the
Brownian shape motion in an anisotropic medium.Comment: 14 pages, 11 ps figure
Dynamic Lorentz force compensation with a fast piezoelectric tuner
Superconducting cavities are highly susceptible to small changes in resonance frequency due to their narrow bandwidth. At the proposed linac for the TESLA Linear Collider [1] the frequency changes resulting from mechanical deformations caused by Lorentz force detuning of the pulsed cavities will be of the order of the cavity bandwidth at the design operating gradient close to 25 MV/ m. The additional power required for field control is of the order of 10 % and will be intolerably high for the planned upgrade to 35 MV/m which appears to be feasible in the near future. While passive stiffening of the cavities is already applied to the present cavity design, the further reduction of the Lorentz force detuning constant is technically challenging. Therefore we propose an active scheme which reduces the timevarying Lorentz force detuning to much less than one cavity bandwidth. If successful, the scheme will improve the power efficiency of the TESLA linac significantly
Motion and twisting of magnetic particles ingested by alveolar macrophages in the human lung: effect of smoking and disease
BACKGROUND: Magnetic microparticles being ingested by alveolar macrophages can be used as a monitor for intracellular phagosome motions and cytoskeletal mechanical properties. These studies can be performed in the human lung after voluntary inhalation. The influence of cigarette smoking and lung diseases on cytoskeleton dependent functions was studied. METHODS: Spherical 1.3 ÎŒm diameter ferrimagnetic iron oxide particles were inhaled by 17 healthy volunteers (40 â 65 years), 15 patients with sarcoidosis (SAR), 12 patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), and 18 patients with chronic obstructive bronchitis (COB). The retained particles were magnetized and aligned in an external 100 mT magnetic field. All magnetized particles induce a weak magnetic field of the lung, which was detected by a sensitive SQUID (superconducting quantum interference device) sensor. Cytoskeletal reorganizations within macrophages and intracellular transport cause stochastic magnetic dipole rotations, which are reflected in a decay of the magnetic lung field, called relaxation. Directed phagosome motion was induced in a weak magnetic twisting field. The resistance of the cytoplasm to particle twisting was characterized by the viscosity and the stiffness (ratio between stress to strain) of the cytoskeleton. RESULTS: One week after particle inhalation and later macrophage motility (relaxation) and cytoskeletal stiffness was not influenced by cigarette smoking, neither in healthy subjects, nor in the patients. Patients with IPF showed in tendency a faster relaxation (p = 0.06). Particle twisting revealed a non-Newtonian viscosity with a pure viscous and a viscoelastic compartment. The viscous shear was dominant, and only 27% of the shear recoiled and reflected viscoelastic properties. In patients with IPF, the stiffness was reduced by 60% (p < 0.02). An analysis of the shear rate and stress dependence of particle twisting allows correlating the rheological compartments to cytoskeletal subunits, in which microtubules mediate the pure viscous (non-recoverable) shear and microfilaments mediate the viscoelastic (recoverable) behavior. The missing correlation between relaxation and particle twisting shows that both stochastic and directed phagosome motion reflect different cytoskeletal mechanisms. CONCLUSION: Faster relaxation and a soft cytoskeleton in patients with IPF indicate alterations in cytoskeleton dependent functions of alveolar macrophages, which may cause dysfunction's in the alveolar defense, like a slower migration, a retarded phagocytosis, a disturbed phagosome lysosome fusion and an impaired clearance
The TESLA accelerator module test facility
The superconducting TESLA linear accelerator will consist of about 1800 cryomodules. Before their installation in the TESLA tunnel, the acceleratorcryomodules have to be qualified after the assembly in random tests. The qualification includes the check of the general mechanical dimensions and the measurement of the cryogenic performance of all systems, in particular,the performance of the cavities. In addition, all about 21000 single cavities have to be tested before the assembly in the cryomodules at a rate of about 24 per day. The paper presents the layout of the test facility
Calculations of Branching Ratios for Radiative-Capture, One-Proton, and Two-Neutron Channels in the Fusion Reaction Bi+Zn
We discuss the possibility of the non-one-neutron emission channels in the
cold fusion reaction Zn + Bi to produce the element Z=113. For
this purpose, we calculate the evaporation-residue cross sections of
one-proton, radiative-capture, and two-neutron emissions relative to the
one-neutron emission in the reaction Zn + Bi. To estimate the
upper bounds of those quantities, we vary model parameters in the calculations,
such as the level-density parameter and the height of the fission barrier. We
conclude that the highest possibility is for the 2n reaction channel, and its
upper bounds are 2.4 and at most less than 7.9% with unrealistic parameter
values, under the actual experimental conditions of [J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. {\bf
73} (2004) 2593].Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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