98 research outputs found
Operations plans and sensitivities of the IceCube Upgrade Camera System
The IceCube Upgrade consists of seven new strings to be deployed in the
central region of the existing IceCube detector. The goals of the IceCube
Upgrade are two-fold: to enhance sensitivity to neutrinos in the GeV range, and
to improve the calibration of the IceCube detector as a means of reducing
systematic uncertainties due to the optical properties of the ice. Among other
calibration devices designed to study ice properties, a novel camera system
will be deployed as part of the Upgrade. The system will include three cameras,
each paired with an illumination LED, included in each of the Upgrade optical
modules. In total, 2,300 cameras will be deployed. A combination of
photographic images from transmitted and reflected light will measure optical
properties of both the bulk ice in-between strings and the local ice refrozen
in the drill hole. In this contribution, we present the operations plans for
these two types of measurements and the sensitivities to the ice properties and
geometry of the new modules that can be achieved with the new camera system.Comment: Presented at the 38th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2023).
See arXiv:2307.13047 for all IceCube contribution
Half-Metallic Ferromagnetism in the Heusler Compound CoFeSi revealed by Resistivity, Magnetoresistance, and Anomalous Hall Effect measurements
We present electrical transport data for single-crystalline CoFeSi which
provide clear-cut evidence that this Heusler compound is truly a half-metallic
ferromagnet, i.e. it possesses perfect spin-polarization. More specifically,
the temperature dependence of is governed by electron scattering off
magnons which are thermally excited over a sizeable gap
() separating the electronic majority states at the Fermi level
from the unoccupied minority states. As a consequence, electron-magnon
scattering is only relevant at but freezes out at lower
temperatures, i.e., the spin-polarization of the electrons at the Fermi level
remains practically perfect for . The gapped magnon population
has a decisive influence on the magnetoresistance and the anomalous Hall effect
(AHE): i) The magnetoresistance changes its sign at , ii) the
anomalous Hall coefficient is strongly temperature dependent at and compatible with Berry phase related and/or side-jump electronic
deflection, whereas it is practically temperature-independent at lower
temperatures
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Spin-orbit coupling control of anisotropy, ground state and frustration in 5d2 Sr2MgOsO6
The influence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on the physical properties of the 5d2 system Sr2MgOsO6 is probed via a combination of magnetometry, specific heat measurements, elastic and inelastic neutron scattering, and density functional theory calculations. Although a significant degree of frustration is expected, we find that Sr2MgOsO6 orders in a type I antiferromagnetic structure at the remarkably high temperature of 108 K. The measurements presented allow for the first accurate quantification of the size of the magnetic moment in a 5d2 system of 0.60(2) μB –a significantly reduced moment from the expected value for such a system. Furthermore, significant anisotropy is identified via a spin excitation gap, and we confirm by first principles calculations that SOC not only provides the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, but also plays a crucial role in determining both the ground state magnetic order and the size of the local moment in this compound. Through comparison to Sr2ScOsO6, it is demonstrated that SOC-induced anisotropy has the ability to relieve frustration in 5d2 systems relative to their 5d3 counterparts, providing an explanation of the high TN found in Sr2MgOsO6
Spin-orbit coupling control of anisotropy, ground state and frustration in 5d2 Sr2MgOsO6
The influence of spin-orbit coupling (SOC) on the physical properties of the
5d2 system Sr2MgOsO6 is probed via a combination of magnetometry, specific heat
measurements, elastic and inelastic neutron scattering, and density functional
theory calculations. Although a significant degree of frustration is expected,
we find that Sr2MgOsO6 orders in a type I antiferromagnetic structure at the
remarkably high temperature of 108 K. The measurements presented allow for the
first accurate quantification of the size of the magnetic moment in a 5d2
system of 0.60(2) muB - a significantly reduced moment from the expected value
for such a system. Furthermore, significant anisotropy is identified via a spin
excitation gap, and we confirm by first principles calculations that SOC not
only provides the magnetocrystalline anisotropy, but also plays a crucial role
in determining both the ground state magnetic order and the size of the local
moment in this compound. Through comparison to Sr2ScOsO6, it is demonstrated
that SOC-induced anisotropy has the ability to relieve frustration in 5d2
systems relative to their 5d3 counterparts, providing an explanation of the
high TN found in Sr2MgOsO6.Comment: Submitted to Scientific Report
Rescuing Loading Induced Bone Formation at Senescence
The increasing incidence of osteoporosis worldwide requires anabolic treatments that are safe, effective, and, critically, inexpensive given the prevailing overburdened health care systems. While vigorous skeletal loading is anabolic and holds promise, deficits in mechanotransduction accrued with age markedly diminish the efficacy of readily complied, exercise-based strategies to combat osteoporosis in the elderly. Our approach to explore and counteract these age-related deficits was guided by cellular signaling patterns across hierarchical scales and by the insight that cell responses initiated during transient, rare events hold potential to exert high-fidelity control over temporally and spatially distant tissue adaptation. Here, we present an agent-based model of real-time Ca2+/NFAT signaling amongst bone cells that fully described periosteal bone formation induced by a wide variety of loading stimuli in young and aged animals. The model predicted age-related pathway alterations underlying the diminished bone formation at senescence, and hence identified critical deficits that were promising targets for therapy. Based upon model predictions, we implemented an in vivo intervention and show for the first time that supplementing mechanical stimuli with low-dose Cyclosporin A can completely rescue loading induced bone formation in the senescent skeleton. These pre-clinical data provide the rationale to consider this approved pharmaceutical alongside mild physical exercise as an inexpensive, yet potent therapy to augment bone mass in the elderly. Our analyses suggested that real-time cellular signaling strongly influences downstream bone adaptation to mechanical stimuli, and quantification of these otherwise inaccessible, transient events in silico yielded a novel intervention with clinical potential
Calcific aortic valve stenosis:hard disease in the heart: A biomolecular approach towards diagnosis and treatment
Calcific aortic valve stenosis (CAVS) is common in the ageing population and set to become an increasing economic and health burden. Once present, it inevitably progresses and has a poor prognosis in symptomatic patients. No medical therapies are proven to be effective in holding or reducing disease progression. Therefore, aortic valve replacement remains the only available treatment option. Improved knowledge of the mechanisms underlying disease progression has provided us with insights that CAVS is not a passive disease. Rather, CAVS is regulated by numerous mechanisms with a key role for calcification. Aortic valve calcification (AVC) is actively regulated involving cellular and humoral factors that may offer targets for diagnosis and intervention. The discovery that the vitamin K-dependent proteins are involved in the inhibition of AVC has boosted our mechanistic understanding of this process and has opened up novel avenues in disease exploration. This review discusses processes involved in CAVS progression, with an emphasis on recent insights into calcification, methods for imaging calcification activity, and potential therapeutic options
Mechanical design of the optical modules intended for IceCube-Gen2
IceCube-Gen2 is an expansion of the IceCube neutrino observatory at the South Pole that aims to increase the sensitivity to high-energy neutrinos by an order of magnitude. To this end, about 10,000 new optical modules will be installed, instrumenting a fiducial volume of about 8 km3. Two newly developed optical module types increase IceCube’s current sensitivity per module by a factor of three by integrating 16 and 18 newly developed four-inch PMTs in specially designed 12.5-inch diameter pressure vessels. Both designs use conical silicone gel pads to optically couple the PMTs to the pressure vessel to increase photon collection efficiency. The outside portion of gel pads are pre-cast onto each PMT prior to integration, while the interiors are filled and cast after the PMT assemblies are installed in the pressure vessel via a pushing mechanism. This paper presents both the mechanical design, as well as the performance of prototype modules at high pressure (70 MPa) and low temperature (−40∘C), characteristic of the environment inside the South Pole ice
The next generation neutrino telescope: IceCube-Gen2
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory, a cubic-kilometer-scale neutrino detector at the geographic South Pole, has reached a number of milestones in the field of neutrino astrophysics: the discovery of a high-energy astrophysical neutrino flux, the temporal and directional correlation of neutrinos with a flaring blazar, and a steady emission of neutrinos from the direction of an active galaxy of a Seyfert II type and the Milky Way. The next generation neutrino telescope, IceCube-Gen2, currently under development, will consist of three essential components: an array of about 10,000 optical sensors, embedded within approximately 8 cubic kilometers of ice, for detecting neutrinos with energies of TeV and above, with a sensitivity five times greater than that of IceCube; a surface array with scintillation panels and radio antennas targeting air showers; and buried radio antennas distributed over an area of more than 400 square kilometers to significantly enhance the sensitivity of detecting neutrino sources beyond EeV. This contribution describes the design and status of IceCube-Gen2 and discusses the expected sensitivity from the simulations of the optical, surface, and radio components
Sensitivity of IceCube-Gen2 to measure flavor composition of Astrophysical neutrinos
The observation of an astrophysical neutrino flux in IceCube and its detection capability to separate between the different neutrino flavors has led IceCube to constraint the flavor content of this flux. IceCube-Gen2 is the planned extension of the current IceCube detector, which will be about 8 times larger than the current instrumented volume. In this work, we study the sensitivity of IceCube-Gen2 to the astrophysical neutrino flavor composition and investigate its tau neutrino identification capabilities. We apply the IceCube analysis on a simulated IceCube-Gen2 dataset that mimics the High Energy Starting Event (HESE) classification. Reconstructions are performed using sensors that have 3 times higher quantum efficiency and isotropic angular acceptance compared to the current IceCube optical modules. We present the projected sensitivity for 10 years of data on constraining the flavor ratio of the astrophysical neutrino flux at Earth by IceCube-Gen2
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