6,029 research outputs found
Specific Heat of Disordered He
Porous aerogel is a source of elastic scattering in superfluid 3He and
modifies the properties of the superfluid, suppressing the transition
temperature and order parameter. The specific heat jumps for the B-phase of
superfluid 3He in aerogel have been measured as a function of pressure and
interpreted using the homogeneous and inhomogeneous isotropic scattering
models. The specific heat jumps for other p-wave states are estimated for
comparison.Comment: Manuscript prepared for LT 2
Mixed Lorentz boosted Z^{0}'s
A novel technique is proposed to study systematic errors on jet reconstruction in W physics measurements at LEP2 with high statistical precision. The method is based on the emulation of W pair events using Mixed Lorentz Boosted Z0 events. The scope and merits of the method and its statistical accuracy are discussed in the context of the DELPHI W mass measurement in the fully hadronic channel. The numbers presented are preliminary in the sense that they do not constitute the final DELPHI systematic errors
Ultrasound attenuation and a P-B-T phase diagram of superfluid 3He in 98% aerogel
Longitudinal sound attenuation measurements in superfluid 3He in 98% aerogel
were conducted at pressures between 14 and 33 bar and in magnetic fields up to
4.44 kG. The temperature dependence of the ultrasound attenuation in the A-like
phase was determined for the entire superfluid region exploiting the field
induced meta-stable A-like phase at the highest field. In the lower field, the
A-B transition in aerogel was identified by a smooth jump in attenuation on
both cooling and warming. Based on the transitions observed on warming, a phase
diagram as a function of pressure (P), temperature (T) and magnetic field (B)
is constructed. We find that the A-B phase boundary in aerogel recedes in a
drastically different manner than in bulk in response to an increasing magnetic
field. The implications of the observed phase diagram are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figures, accepted to PR
Measuring the Magnetic Flux Density in the CMS Steel Yoke
The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is a general purpose detector, designed to
run at the highest luminosity at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Its
distinctive features include a 4 T superconducting solenoid with 6-m-diameter
by 12.5-m-length free bore, enclosed inside a 10000-ton return yoke made of
construction steel. The return yoke consists of five dodecagonal three-layered
barrel wheels and four end-cap disks at each end comprised of steel blocks up
to 620 mm thick, which serve as the absorber plates of the muon detection
system. Accurate characterization of the magnetic field everywhere in the CMS
detector is required. To measure the field in and around the steel, a system of
22 flux-loops and 82 3-D Hall sensors is installed on the return yoke blocks.
Fast discharges of the solenoid (190 s time-constant) made during the CMS
magnet surface commissioning test at the solenoid central fields of 2.64, 3.16,
3.68 and 4.01 T were used to induce voltages in the flux-loops. The voltages
are measured on-line and integrated off-line to obtain the magnetic flux in the
steel yoke close to the muon chambers at full excitations of the solenoid. The
3-D Hall sensors installed on the steel-air interfaces give supplementary
information on the components of magnetic field and permit to estimate the
remanent field in steel to be added to the magnetic flux density obtained by
the voltages integration. A TOSCA 3-D model of the CMS magnet is developed to
describe the magnetic field everywhere outside the tracking volume measured
with the field-mapping machine. The results of the measurements and
calculations are presented, compared and discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 16 references, presented at the III International
Conference on Superconductivity and Magnetism (ICSM-2012), Kumburgaz,
Istanbul, Turkey, 29 April - 4 May 201
Role of magnetic and orbital ordering at the metal-insulator transition in NdNiO3
Soft x-ray resonant scattering at the Ni L2,3 edges is used to test models of
magnetic and orbital-ordering below the metal-insulator transition in NdNiO3.
The large branching ratio of the L3 to L2 intensities of the (1/2,0,1/2)
reflection and the observed azimuthal angle and polarization dependence
originates from a non collinear magnetic structure. The absence of an orbital
signal and the non collinear magnetic structure show that the nickelates are
materials for which orbital ordering is absent at the metal-insulator
transition.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Physical Review B rapid communication, to be
publishe
Measuring the Magnetic Flux Density with Flux Loops and Hall Probes in the CMS Magnet Flux Return Yoke
The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is a general purpose detector, designed to
run at the highest luminosity at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Its
distinctive features include a 4 T superconducting solenoid with 6-m-diameter
by 12.5-m-length free bore, enclosed inside a 10,000-ton return yoke made of
construction steel. The flux return yoke consists of five dodecagonal
three-layered barrel wheels and four end-cap disks at each end comprised of
steel blocks up to 620 mm thick, which serve as the absorber plates of the muon
detection system. To measure the field in and around the steel, a system of 22
flux loops and 82 3-D Hall sensors is installed on the return yoke blocks. A
TOSCA 3-D model of the CMS magnet is developed to describe the magnetic field
everywhere outside the tracking volume that was measured with the field-mapping
machine. The voltages induced in the flux loops by the magnetic flux changing
during the CMS magnet standard ramps down are measured with six 16-bit DAQ
modules. The off-line integration of the induced voltages reconstructs the
magnetic flux density in the yoke steel blocks at the operational magnet
current of 18.164 kA. The results of the flux loop measurements during three
magnet ramps down are presented and discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 6 figures, presented at the IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium
2016 (NSS) in Strasbourg, France on November 3, 2016. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1605.0877
Flux Loop Measurements of the Magnetic Flux Density in the CMS Magnet Yoke
The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is a general purpose detector, designed to
run at the highest luminosity at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Its
distinctive features include a 4 T superconducting solenoid with 6-m-diameter
by 12.5-m-length free bore, enclosed inside a 10,000-ton return yoke made of
construction steel. The return yoke consists of five dodecagonal three-layered
barrel wheels and four end-cap disks at each end comprised of steel blocks up
to 620 mm thick, which serve as the absorber plates of the muon detection
system. To measure the field in and around the steel, a system of 22 flux loops
and 82 3-D Hall sensors is installed on the return yoke blocks. A TOSCA 3-D
model of the CMS magnet is developed to describe the magnetic field everywhere
outside the tracking volume measured with the field-mapping machine. The first
attempt is made to measure the magnetic flux density in the steel blocks of the
CMS magnet yoke using the standard magnet discharge with the current ramp down
speed of 1.5 A/s.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, presented at ISCM2016 - 5th International
Conference on Superconductivity and Magnetism on April 28, 2016 at Fethiye,
Turke
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