6,386 research outputs found
Analysis of the measurements of anisotropic a.c. vortex resistivity in tilted magnetic fields
Measurements of the high-frequency complex resistivity in superconductors are
a tool often used to obtain the vortex parameters, such as the vortex
viscosity, the pinning constant and the depinning frequency. In anisotropic
superconductors, the extraction of these quantities from the measurements faces
new difficulties due to the tensor nature of the electromagnetic problem. The
problem is specifically intricate when the magnetic field is tilted with
respect to the crystallographic axes. Partial solutions exist in the
free-flux-flow (no pinning) and Campbell (pinning dominated) regimes. In this
paper we develop a full tensor model for the vortex motion complex resistivity,
including flux-flow, pinning, and creep. We give explicit expressions for the
tensors involved. We obtain that, despite the complexity of the physics, some
parameters remain scalar in nature. We show that under specific circumstances
the directly measured quantities do not reflect the true vortex parameters, and
we give procedures to derive the true vortex parameters from measurements taken
with arbitrary field orientations. Finally, we discuss the applicability of the
angular scaling properties to the measured and transformed vortex parameters
and we exploit these properties as a tool to unveil the existence of
directional pinning.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1402.316
Towards establishing Lepton Flavour Universality violation in decays
Rare semileptonic transitions provide some of the
most promising frameworks to search for new physics effects. Recent analyses of
these decays have indicated an anomalous behaviour in measurements of angular
distributions of the decay and
lepton-flavour-universality observables. Unambiguously establishing if these
deviations have a common nature is of paramount importance in order to
understand the observed pattern. We propose a novel approach to independently
and complementary probe this hypothesis by performing a simultaneous amplitude
analysis of and decays. This method enables the direct determination of
observables that encode potential non-equal couplings of muons and electrons,
and are found to be insensitive to nonperturbative QCD effects. If current
hints of new physics are confirmed, our approach could allow an early discovery
of physics beyond the standard model with LHCb run II data sets.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures. Matching the journal versio
zfit: scalable pythonic fitting
Statistical modeling is a key element in many scientific fields and
especially in High-Energy Physics (HEP) analysis. The standard framework to
perform this task in HEP is the C++ ROOT/RooFit toolkit; with Python bindings
that are only loosely integrated into the scientific Python ecosystem. In this
paper, zfit, a new alternative to RooFit written in pure Python, is presented.
Most of all, zfit provides a well defined high-level API and workflow for
advanced model building and fitting, together with an implementation on top of
TensorFlow, allowing a transparent usage of CPUs and GPUs. It is designed to be
extendable in a very simple fashion, allowing the usage of cutting-edge
developments from the scientific Python ecosystem in a transparent way. The
main features of zfit are introduced, and its extension to data analysis,
especially in the context of HEP experiments, is discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
PROJECT ÉVORA 3D: RESEARCH, METHODOLOGY, RECONSTRUCTION AND VISUALIZATION
The Évora 3D project was born from the collaboration between the Municipality
and the University of Évora, through the two research centres of CIDEHUS1 and
CHAIA2, with the objective of completing a virtual reconstruction of the city in a longtime frame. In the national and international context, the use of new technologies has led to the diversification of this type of proposal, both at the urban level and in the
reconstruction of concrete spaces. The application of this same model to Évora, contemplating several chronological layers, seems to impose itself in a city that, in the medieval and modern periods, was one of the most important of the kingdom, as Court city, and that today is classified as World Heritage Site
Optimisation of Low-Thrust and Hybrid Earth-Moon Transfers
This paper presents an optimization procedure to generate fast and low-∆v Earth-Moon transfer trajectories, by exploiting the multi-body dynamics of the Sun-Earth-Moon system. Ideal (first-guess) trajectories are generated at first, using two coupled planar circular restricted three-body problems, one representing the Earth-Moon system, and one representing the Sun-Earth. The trajectories consist of a first ballistic arc in the Sun-Earth system, and a second ballistic arc in the Earth-Moon system. The two are connected at a patching point at one end (with an instantaneous ∆v), and they are bounded at Earth and Moon respectively at the other end. Families of these trajectories are found by means of an evolutionary optimization method. Subsequently, they are used as first-guess for solving an optimal control problem, in which the full three-dimensional 4-body problem is introduced and the patching point is set free. The objective of the optimisation is to reduce the total ∆v, and the time of flight, together with introducing the constraints on the transfer boundary conditions and of the considered propulsion technology. Sets of different optimal trajectories are presented, which represents trade-off options between ∆v and time of flight. These optimal transfers include conventional solar-electric low-thrust and hybrid chemical/solar-electric high/low-thrust, envisaging future spacecraft that can carry both systems. A final comparison is made between the optimal transfers found and only chemical high-thrust optimal solutions retrieved from literature
Vortex pinning and flux flow microwave studies of coated conductors
Demanding microwave applications in a magnetic field require the material
optimization not only in zero-field but, more important, in the in-field flux
motion dominated regime. However, the effect of artificial pinning centers
(APC) remains unclear at high frequency. Moreover, in coated conductors the
evaluation of the high frequency material properties is difficult due to the
complicated electromagnetic problem of a thin superconducting film on a
buffered metal substrate. In this paper we present an experimental study at 48
GHz of 150-200 nm YBaCuO coated conductors, with and without
APCs, on buffered Ni-5at%W tapes. By properly addressing the electromagnetic
problem of the extraction of the superconductor parameters from the measured
overall surface impedance , we are able to extract and to comment on the
London penetration depth, the flux flow resistivity and the pinning constant,
highlighting the effect of artificial pinning centers in these samples.Comment: 5 pages, IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond., accepted for publication
(2019
Surface impedance measurements on NbSn at high magnetic fields
NbSn is a superconductor of great relevance for perspective RF
applications. We present for the first time surface impedance
measurements at 15 GHz and low RF field amplitude on NbSn in high
magnetic fields up to 12 T, with the aim of increasing the knowledge of
NbSn behavior in such conditions. is a fundamental material
parameter that directly gives useful information about the dissipative and
reactive phenomena when the superconductor is subjected to high-frequency
excitations. Therefore, we present an analysis of the measured with the
aim of extracting interesting data about pinning in NbSn at high
frequencies. From we extract the vortex motion complex resistivity to
obtain the -parameter and the depinning frequency in high magnetic
fields. The comparison of the results with the literature shows that the
measured on bulk NbSn is several times greater than that of pure
Nb. This demonstrates how NbSn can be a good candidate for RF
technological applications, also in high magnetic fields.Comment: ASC 2018 conference, accepted in IEEE Trans Appl Supercon
Measurements of microwave vortex response in dc magnetic fields in TlBaCaCuO films
There is a renewed interest in superconductors for high-frequency
applications, leading to a reconsideration of already known low- and
high- materials. In this view, we present an experimental investigation of
the millimeter-wave response in moderate magnetic fields of
TlBaCaCuO superconducting films with the aim of identifying
the mechanisms of the vortex-motion-induced response. We measure the dc
magnetic-field-dependent change of the surface impedance, at 48 GHz by means of the dielectric resonator
method. We find that the overall response is made up of several contributions,
with different weights depending on the temperature and field: a possible
contribution from Josephson or Abrikosov-Josephson fluxons at low fields; a
seemingly conventional vortex dynamics at higher fields; a significant pair
breaking in the temperature region close to . We extract the vortex motion
depinning frequency , which attains surprisingly high values. However, by
exploiting the generalized model for relaxational dynamics we show that this
result come from a combination of a pinning constant arising from
moderate pinning, and a vortex viscosity with anomalously small values.
This latter fact, implying large dissipation, is likely a result from a
peculiar microscopic structure and thus poses severe limits to the application
of TlBaCaCuO in a magnetic field.Comment: Presented at Applied Superconductivity Conference, Seattle (US) 2018.
Accepted for publication on IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercon
Frequency span optimization for asymmetric resonance curve fitting
The wide application of the modern resonant measurement techniques makes all
the steps of the measuring process, including data acquisition more efficient
and reliable. Here we investigate the multidimensional space of the parameters
to determine the optimum span for resonant measurements. The study concentrated
on experimental systems with standard performance and capabilities. We
determine the range of the optimum span for the resonant frequency and quality
factor by simulating and fitting resonant curves with different levels of
asymmetry.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, Accepted to IEEE I2MTC 2021 conferenc
Types, equations, dimensions and the Pi theorem
The languages of mathematical physics and modelling are endowed with a rich
"grammar of dimensions" that common abstractions of programming languages fail
to represent. We propose a dependently typed domain-specific language (embedded
in Idris) that captures this grammar. We apply it to explain basic notions of
dimensional analysis and Buckingham's Pi theorem. We hope that the language
makes mathematical physics more accessible to computer scientists and
functional programming more palatable to modelers and physicists.Comment: Submitted for publication in the "Journal of Functional Programming"
in August 202
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