6,052 research outputs found
Generation of high-energy monoenergetic heavy ion beams by radiation pressure acceleration of ultra-intense laser pulses
A novel radiation pressure acceleration (RPA) regime of heavy ion beams from
laser-irradiated ultrathin foils is proposed by self-consistently taking into
account the ionization dynamics. In this regime, the laser intensity is
required to match with the large ionization energy gap when the successive
ionization of high-Z atoms passing the noble gas configurations [such as
removing an electron from the helium-like charge state to
]. While the target ions in the laser wing region are ionized
to low charge states and undergo rapid dispersions due to instabilities, a
self-organized, stable RPA of highly-charged heavy ion beam near the laser axis
is achieved. It is also found that a large supplement of electrons produced
from ionization helps preserving stable acceleration. Two-dimensional
particle-in-cell simulations show that a monoenergetic beam
with peak energy and energy spread of is obtained by
lasers at intensity .Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Fine-grained action recognition by motion saliency and mid-level patches
Effective extraction of human body parts and operated objects participating in action is the key issue of fine-grained action recognition. However, most of the existing methods require intensive manual annotation to train the detectors of these interaction components. In this paper, we represent videos by mid-level patches to avoid the manual annotation, where each patch corresponds to an action-related interaction component. In order to capture mid-level patches more exactly and rapidly, candidate motion regions are extracted by motion saliency. Firstly, the motion regions containing interaction components are segmented by a threshold adaptively calculated according to the saliency histogram of the motion saliency map. Secondly, we introduce a mid-level patch mining algorithm for interaction component detection, with object proposal generation and mid-level patch detection. The object proposal generation algorithm is used to obtain multi-granularity object proposals inspired by the idea of the Huffman algorithm. Based on these object proposals, the mid-level patch detectors are trained by K-means clustering and SVM. Finally, we build a fine-grained action recognition model using a graph structure to describe relationships between the mid-level patches. To recognize actions, the proposed model calculates the appearance and motion features of mid-level patches and the binary motion cooperation relationships between adjacent patches in the graph. Extensive experiments on the MPII cooking database demonstrate that the proposed method gains better results on fine-grained action recognition
Electron and ion acceleration from femtosecond laser-plasma peeler scheme
Using three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations, we further investigate
the electron and ion acceleration from femtosecond laser-plasma peeler scheme
which was proposed in our recent paper (Shen et al 2021 Phys. Rev. X 11
041002). In addition to the standard setup where a laser pulse impinges on an
edge of a single tape target, two new variants of the target, i.e., a parallel
tape and a cross tape target, were proposed, where strong surface plasma waves
can also be efficiently excited at the front edges of the target. By using a
tabletop 200 TW-class laser pulse, we observe generation of high-flux,
well-collimated, superponderomotive electrons. More importantly,
quasimonoenergetic proton beams can always be obtained in all the three setups,
while with the single tape case, the obtained proton beam has the highest peak
energy and narrowest spectrum
Magnetodielectric effect of Bi6Fe2Ti3O18 film under an ultra-low magnetic field
Good quality and fine grain Bi6Fe2Ti3O18 magnetic ferroelectric films with
single-phase layered perovskite structure have been successfully prepared via
metal organic decomposition (MOD) method. Results of low-temperature
magnetocapacitance measurements reveal that an ultra-low magnetic field of 10
Oe can produce a nontrivial magnetodielectric (MD) response in
zero-field-cooling condition, and the relative variation of dielectric
constants in magnetic field is positive, i.e., MD=0.05, when T<55K, but
negative with a maximum of MD=-0.14 when 55K<T<190K. The magnetodielectric
effect appears a sign change at 55K, which is due to transition from
antiferromagnetic to weak ferromagnetic; and vanishes abruptly around 190K,
which is thought to be associated with order-disorder transition of iron ion at
B site of perovskite structures. The ultra-low-field magnetodielectric
behaviour of Bi6Fe2Ti3O18 film has been discussed in the light of
quasi-two-dimension unique nature of local spin order in ferroelectric film.
Our results allow expectation on low-cost applications of detectors and
switches for extremely weak magnetic fields in a wide temperature range
55K-190K.Comment: 10 pages 4 figures, planned to submit to J. Phys.: Condensed Matte
On the Application of Gluon to Heavy Quarkonium Fragmentation Functions
We analyze the uncertainties induced by different definitions of the momentum
fraction in the application of gluon to heavy quarkonium fragmentation
function. We numerically calculate the initial fragmentation
functions by using the non-covariant definitions of with finite gluon
momentum and find that these fragmentation functions have strong dependence on
the gluon momentum . As , these fragmentation
functions approach to the fragmentation function in the light-cone definition.
Our numerical results show that large uncertainties remains while the
non-covariant definitions of are employed in the application of the
fragmentation functions. We present for the first time the polarized gluon to
fragmentation functions, which are fitted by the scheme exploited in
this work.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures;added reference for sec.
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