Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Physics Faculty Publications

Discipline
Institution
Keyword
Publication Year

Articles 901 - 930 of 1942

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Multipole Field Effects For The Superconducting Parallel-Bar/Rf-Dipole Deflecting/Crabbing Cavities, S. U. De Silva, J. R. Delayen Jan 2013

Multipole Field Effects For The Superconducting Parallel-Bar/Rf-Dipole Deflecting/Crabbing Cavities, S. U. De Silva, J. R. Delayen

Physics Faculty Publications

The superconducting parallel-bar deflecting/crabbing cavity is currently being considered as one of the design options in rf separation for the Jefferson Lab 12 GeV upgrade and for the crabbing cavity for the proposed LHC luminosity upgrade. Knowledge of multipole field effects is important for accurate beam dynamics study of rf structures. The multipole components can be accurately determined numerically using the electromagnetic surface field data in the rf structure. This paper discusses the detailed analysis of those components for the fundamental deflecting/crabbing mode and higher order modes in the parallel-bar deflecting/crabbing cavity.


Geometry Effects On Multipole Components And Beam Optics In High-Velocity Multi-Spoke Cavities, C. S. Hopper, K. Deitrick, J. R. Delayen Jan 2013

Geometry Effects On Multipole Components And Beam Optics In High-Velocity Multi-Spoke Cavities, C. S. Hopper, K. Deitrick, J. R. Delayen

Physics Faculty Publications

Velocity-of-light, multi-spoke cavities are being proposed to accelerate electrons in a compact light-source [1]. There are strict requirements on the beam quality which require that the linac have only small non-uniformities in the accelerating field. Beam dynamics simulations have uncovered varying levels of focusing and defocusing in the proposed cavities, which is dependent on the geometry of the spoke in the vicinity of the beam path. Here we present results for the influence different spoke geometries have on the multipole components of the accelerating field and how these components, in turn, impact the simulated beam properties.


Mechanical Analysis Of The 400 Mhz Rf-Dipole Crabbing Cavity Prototype For Lhc High Luminosity Upgrade, S. U. De Silva, H. Park, J. R. Delayen, Z. Li Jan 2013

Mechanical Analysis Of The 400 Mhz Rf-Dipole Crabbing Cavity Prototype For Lhc High Luminosity Upgrade, S. U. De Silva, H. Park, J. R. Delayen, Z. Li

Physics Faculty Publications

The proposed LHC high luminosity upgrade requires two crabbing systems in increasing the peak luminosity, operating both vertically and horizontally at two interaction points of IP1 and IP5. The required system has tight dimensional constraints and needs to achieve higher operational gradients. A proof-of-principle 400 MHz crabbing cavity design has been successfully tested and has proven to be an ideal candidate for the crabbing system. The cylindrical proof-of-principle rf-dipole design has been adapted in to a square shaped design to further meet the dimensional requirements. The new rf-dipole design has been optimized in meeting the requirements in rf-properties, higher order …


Deep Exclusive Π+ Electroproduction Off The Proton At Clas, K. P. Adhikari, M. J. Amaryan, R. P. Bennett, G. E. Dodge, S. E. Kuhn, M. Mayer, C. S. Nepali, H. Seraydaryan, L. B. Weinstein, J. Zhang Jan 2013

Deep Exclusive Π+ Electroproduction Off The Proton At Clas, K. P. Adhikari, M. J. Amaryan, R. P. Bennett, G. E. Dodge, S. E. Kuhn, M. Mayer, C. S. Nepali, H. Seraydaryan, L. B. Weinstein, J. Zhang

Physics Faculty Publications

The exclusive electroproduction of π + above the resonance region was studied using the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) at Jefferson Laboratory by scattering a 6GeV continuous electron beam off a hydrogen target. The large acceptance and good resolution of CLAS, together with the high luminosity, allowed us to measure the cross section for the γ * p + process in 140 (Q 2, x B , t) bins: 0.16 < x B < 0.58, 1.6 GeV2 < Q 2 < 4.5 GeV2 and 0.1 GeV2 < −t < 5.3 GeV2. For most bins, the statistical accuracy is on the order of a …


Demonstration Of A Novel Technique To Measure Two-Photon Exchange Effects In Elastic E±P Scattering, M. Niroula, L. B. Weinstein, D. Adikaram, J. Lanchiet, K. P. Adhikari, M. J. Amaryan, R. P. Bennett, C. E. Hyde, S.E. Kuhn, H. Seraydaryan Jan 2013

Demonstration Of A Novel Technique To Measure Two-Photon Exchange Effects In Elastic E±P Scattering, M. Niroula, L. B. Weinstein, D. Adikaram, J. Lanchiet, K. P. Adhikari, M. J. Amaryan, R. P. Bennett, C. E. Hyde, S.E. Kuhn, H. Seraydaryan

Physics Faculty Publications

Background: The discrepancy between proton electromagnetic form factors extracted using unpolarized and polarized scattering data is believed to be a consequence of two-photon exchange (TPE) effects. However, the calculations of TPE corrections have significant model dependence, and there is limited direct experimental evidence for such corrections.

Purpose: The TPE contributions depend on the sign of the lepton charge in e±p scattering, but the luminosities of secondary positron beams limited past measurement at large scattering angles, where the TPE effects are believe to be most significant. We present the results of a new experimental technique for making direct e±p comparisons, which …


Hom Damping Coupler Design For The 400-Mhz Rf Dipole Compact Crab Cavity For The Lhc Hilumi Upgrade, Zenghai Li, Lixin Ge, Jean R. Delayen, Subashini U. De Silva Jan 2013

Hom Damping Coupler Design For The 400-Mhz Rf Dipole Compact Crab Cavity For The Lhc Hilumi Upgrade, Zenghai Li, Lixin Ge, Jean R. Delayen, Subashini U. De Silva

Physics Faculty Publications

Crab cavities are adapted as the baseline design for the LHC HiLumi upgrade to achieve head-on beam-beam collisions for further improvement in luminosity. A 400- MHz compact RF dipole crab cavity design was developed by a joint effort between Old Dominion University and SLAC under the support of US LARP program. This design has shown very favorable RF parameters and can fit into the available beamline spacing for both vertical and horizontal crabbing schemes. A niobium proof-of-principle cavity based on such a design has been manufactured for vertical test. In addition, there are stringent wakefield requirements that needed to be …


Compact Superconducting Rf-Dipole Cavity Designs For Deflecting And Crabbing Applications, Subashini De Silva, Jean R. Delayen, A. Castilla Jan 2013

Compact Superconducting Rf-Dipole Cavity Designs For Deflecting And Crabbing Applications, Subashini De Silva, Jean R. Delayen, A. Castilla

Physics Faculty Publications

Over the years the superconducting parallel-bar design has evolved into an rf-dipole cavity with improved properties. The new rf-dipole design is considered for a number of deflecting and crabbing applications. Some of those applications are the 499 MHz rf separator system for the Jefferson Lab 12 GeV upgrade, the 400 MHz crabbing cavity system for the proposed LHC high luminosity upgrade, and the 750 MHz crabbing cavity for the medium energy electron-ion collider in Jefferson Lab. In this paper we present the optimized rf design in terms of rf performance including rf properties, higher order modes (HOM) properties, multipacting, and …


Multipole Expansion Of The Fields In Superconducting High-Velocity Spoke Cavities, R. G. Olave, Jean R. Delayen, C. S. Hopper Jan 2013

Multipole Expansion Of The Fields In Superconducting High-Velocity Spoke Cavities, R. G. Olave, Jean R. Delayen, C. S. Hopper

Physics Faculty Publications

Multi-spokes superconducting cavities in the high-beta regime are being considered for a number of applications. In order to accurately model the dynamics of the particles in such cavities, knowledge of the fields off-axis are needed. We present a study of the multipoles expansion of the fields from an EM simulation field data for two-spokes cavities operating at 325 MHz, β = 0.82, and 500 MHz, β = 1.


Superconducting Spoke Cavities For High-Velocity Applications, C. S. Hopper, J. R. Delayen Jan 2013

Superconducting Spoke Cavities For High-Velocity Applications, C. S. Hopper, J. R. Delayen

Physics Faculty Publications

To date, superconducting spoke cavities have been designed, developed, and tested for particle velocities up to β0 ~ to 0.6, but there is a growing interest in possible applications of multispoke cavities for high-velocity applications. We have explored the design parameter space for low-frequency, high-velocity, double-spoke superconducting cavities in order to determine how each design parameter affects the electromagnetic properties, in particular the surface electromagnetic fields and the shunt impedance. We present detailed design for cavities operating at 325 and 352 MHz and optimized for β0 = 0.82 and 1.


Fluctuations Of Charge Separation Perpendicular To The Event Plane And Local Parity Violation In √ˢᴺᴺ = 200 Gev Au + Au Collisions At The Bnl Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, L. Adamczyk, J. K. Adkins, G. Agakishiev, S. Bültmann, M. Zyzak, Star Collaboration Jan 2013

Fluctuations Of Charge Separation Perpendicular To The Event Plane And Local Parity Violation In √ˢᴺᴺ = 200 Gev Au + Au Collisions At The Bnl Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, L. Adamczyk, J. K. Adkins, G. Agakishiev, S. Bültmann, M. Zyzak, Star Collaboration

Physics Faculty Publications

Previous experimental results based on data (~ 15 x 106 events) collected by the STAR detector at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider suggest event-by-event charge-separation fluctuations perpendicular to the event plane in noncentral heavy-ion collisions. Here we present the correlator previously used split into its two component parts to reveal correlations parallel and perpendicular to the event plane. The results are from a high-statistics 200-GeV Au + Au collisions data set (57 x 106 events) collected by the STAR experiment. We explicitly count units of charge separation from which we find clear evidence for more charge-separation fluctuations …


Measurement Of Transparency Ratios For Protons From Short-Range Correlated Pairs, Clas Collaboration, L. B. Weinstein, K. P. Adhikari, M. J. Amaryan, H. Baghdasaryan, G. E. Dodge, C. E. Hyde, S. E. Kuhn, M. Mayer, H. Seradaryan Jan 2013

Measurement Of Transparency Ratios For Protons From Short-Range Correlated Pairs, Clas Collaboration, L. B. Weinstein, K. P. Adhikari, M. J. Amaryan, H. Baghdasaryan, G. E. Dodge, C. E. Hyde, S. E. Kuhn, M. Mayer, H. Seradaryan

Physics Faculty Publications

Nuclear transparency, Tp(A), is a measure of the average probability for a struck proton to escape the nucleus without significant re-interaction. Previously, nuclear transparencies were extracted for quasi-elastic A(e,e′p) knockout of protons with momentum below the Fermi momentum, where the spectral functions are well known. In this Letter we extract a novel observable, the transparency ratio, Tp(A)/Tp(12C), for knockout of high-missing-momentum protons from the breakup of short-range correlated pairs (2N-SRC) in Al, Fe and Pb nuclei relative to C. The ratios were measured at momentum transfer Q2 ⩾1.5(GeV/c)2 and x …


Semiclassical Partition Functions For Gravity With Cosmic Strings, Christopher L. Duston Jan 2013

Semiclassical Partition Functions For Gravity With Cosmic Strings, Christopher L. Duston

Physics Faculty Publications

In this paper we describe an approach to construct semiclassical partition functions in gravity which are complete in the sense that they contain a complete description of the differentiable structures of the underlying 4-manifold. In addition, we find our construction naturally includes cosmic strings. We prove that the mass density of these strings uniquely specifies the topology of the leaves of a dimension 2 foliation, and conjecture that spacetime topology emerges as a result of the symmetry breaking of the fundamental fields. We discuss some possible applications of the partition functions in the fields of both quantum gravity and topological …


Spectroscopy Of 88Y By The (P,Dγ) Reaction, T. J. Ross, C. W. Beausang, R. O. Hughes, N. D. Scielzo, J. T. Burke, J. M. Allmond, C. Angell, M. S. Basunia, D. L. Bleuel, R. J. Casperson, J. Escher, P. Fallon, R. Hatarik, J. Munson, S. Paschalis, M. Petri, L. Phair, J. J. Ressler Dec 2012

Spectroscopy Of 88Y By The (P,Dγ) Reaction, T. J. Ross, C. W. Beausang, R. O. Hughes, N. D. Scielzo, J. T. Burke, J. M. Allmond, C. Angell, M. S. Basunia, D. L. Bleuel, R. J. Casperson, J. Escher, P. Fallon, R. Hatarik, J. Munson, S. Paschalis, M. Petri, L. Phair, J. J. Ressler

Physics Faculty Publications

Low-spin, high-excitation energy states in 88Y have been studied using the 89Y(p,dγ) reaction. For this experiment a 25 MeV proton beam was incident upon a monoisotopic 89Y target. A silicon telescope array was used to detect deuterons, and coincident γ rays were detected using a germanium clover array. Most of the known low-excitation-energy low-spin states populated strongly via the (p,d) reaction mechanism are confirmed. Two states are seen for the first time and seven new transitions, including one which bypasses the two low-lying isomeric states, are observed.


Logistic Curves, Extraction Costs And Peak Oil, Robert J. Brecha Dec 2012

Logistic Curves, Extraction Costs And Peak Oil, Robert J. Brecha

Physics Faculty Publications

Debates about the possibility of a near-term maximum in world oil production have become increasingly prominent over the past decade, with the focus often being on the quantification of geologically available and technologically recoverable amounts of oil in the ground. Economically, the important parameter is not a physical limit to resources in the ground, but whether market price signals and costs of extraction will indicate the efficiency of extracting conventional or nonconventional resources as opposed to making substitutions over time for other fuels and technologies. We present a hybrid approach to the peak-oil question with two models in which the …


Saturation-Dependence Of Dispersion In Porous Media, B. Ghanbarian-Alavijeh, Thomas E. Skinner, Allen Hunt Dec 2012

Saturation-Dependence Of Dispersion In Porous Media, B. Ghanbarian-Alavijeh, Thomas E. Skinner, Allen Hunt

Physics Faculty Publications

In this study, we develop a saturation-dependent treatment of dispersion in porous media using concepts from critical path analysis, cluster statistics of percolation, and fractal scaling of percolation clusters. We calculate spatial solute distributions as a function of time and calculate arrival time distributions as a function of system size. Our previous results correctly predict the range of observed dispersivity values over ten orders of magnitude in experimental length scale, but that theory contains no explicit dependence on porosity or relative saturation. This omission complicates comparisons with experimental results for dispersion, which are often conducted at saturation less than 1. …


Triaxial Deformation And Nuclear Shape Transition In 192Au, Y. Oktem, D. L. Balabanski, B. Akkus, L. Amon Susam, L. Atanasova, C. W. Beausang, R. Cakirli, R. F. Casten, M. Danchev, M. Djongolov, E. Ganioglu, K. A. Gladnishki, J. Tm. Goon, D. J. Hartley, A. A. Hecht, R. Krucken, J. R. Novak, G. Rainovski, L. L. Riedinger, T. Venkova, I. Yigitoglu, N. V. Zamfir, O. Zeidan Nov 2012

Triaxial Deformation And Nuclear Shape Transition In 192Au, Y. Oktem, D. L. Balabanski, B. Akkus, L. Amon Susam, L. Atanasova, C. W. Beausang, R. Cakirli, R. F. Casten, M. Danchev, M. Djongolov, E. Ganioglu, K. A. Gladnishki, J. Tm. Goon, D. J. Hartley, A. A. Hecht, R. Krucken, J. R. Novak, G. Rainovski, L. L. Riedinger, T. Venkova, I. Yigitoglu, N. V. Zamfir, O. Zeidan

Physics Faculty Publications

Background: Nuclei in the A≈190 mass region show gradual shape changes from prolate through nonaxial deformed shapes and ultimately towards spherical shapes as the Pb region is approached. Exploring how this shape evolution occurs will help us understand the evolution of collectivity in this region.

Purpose: The level scheme of the 192Au nucleus in A ≈ 190 region was studied in order to deduce its deformations.

Methods: High-spin states of 192Au have been populated in the 186W(11B, 5n) reaction at a beam energy of 68 MeV and their γ decay was studied …


"Tuning Hole Mobility In Inp Nanowires", Mariama Rebello Sousa Dias, A. Picinin, V. Lopez-Richard, S. E. Ulloa, L. K. Castelano, J. P. Rino, G. E. Marques Nov 2012

"Tuning Hole Mobility In Inp Nanowires", Mariama Rebello Sousa Dias, A. Picinin, V. Lopez-Richard, S. E. Ulloa, L. K. Castelano, J. P. Rino, G. E. Marques

Physics Faculty Publications

Transport properties of holes in InP nanowires (NWs) were calculated considering electron-phonon interaction via deformation potentials, the effect of temperature, and strain fields. Using molecular dynamics, we simulate NW structures, the longitudinal optical phonon (LO-phonon) energy renormalization, and lifetime. The valence band ground state changes between light- and heavy-hole character, as the strain fields and the NW size vary. Drastic changes in the mobility arise with the onset of resonance between the LO-phonons and the separation between valence subbands.


A Modular Fibrinogen Model That Captures The Stress-Strain Behavior Of Fibrin Fibers, Rodney D. Averett, Bryant Menn, Eric H. Lee, Christine C. Helms, Thomas Barker, Martin Guthold Oct 2012

A Modular Fibrinogen Model That Captures The Stress-Strain Behavior Of Fibrin Fibers, Rodney D. Averett, Bryant Menn, Eric H. Lee, Christine C. Helms, Thomas Barker, Martin Guthold

Physics Faculty Publications

We tested what to our knowledge is a new computational model for fibrin fiber mechanical behavior. The model is composed of three distinct elements: the folded fibrinogen core as seen in the crystal structure, the unstructured α-C connector, and the partially folded α-C domain. Previous studies have highlighted the importance of all three regions and how they may contribute to fibrin fiber stress-strain behavior. Yet no molecular model has been computationally tested that takes into account the individual contributions of all these regions. Constant velocity, steered molecular dynamics studies at 0.025 Å/ps were conducted on the folded fibrinogen …


Economics Of Nuclear Power And Climate Change Mitigation Policies, Nico Bauer, Robert J. Brecha, Gunnar Luderer Oct 2012

Economics Of Nuclear Power And Climate Change Mitigation Policies, Nico Bauer, Robert J. Brecha, Gunnar Luderer

Physics Faculty Publications

The events of March 2011 at the nuclear power complex in Fukushima, Japan, raised questions about the safe operation of nuclear power plants, with early retirement of existing nuclear power plants being debated in the policy arena and considered by regulators. Also, the future of building new nuclear power plants is highly uncertain. Should nuclear power policies become more restrictive, one potential option for climate change mitigation will be less available. However, a systematic analysis of nuclear power policies, including early retirement, has been missing in the climate change mitigation literature. We apply an energy economy model framework to derive …


Experimental Study Of The P11(1440) And D13(1520) Resonances From The Clas Data On Ep→E′Π+Π−P′, V. I. Mokeev, Gerard P. Gilfoyle, Et. Al. Sep 2012

Experimental Study Of The P11(1440) And D13(1520) Resonances From The Clas Data On Ep→E′Π+Π−P′, V. I. Mokeev, Gerard P. Gilfoyle, Et. Al.

Physics Faculty Publications

The transition helicity amplitudes from the proton ground state to the P11(1440) and D13(1520) excited states (vγpN* electrocouplings) were determined from the analysis of nine independent one-fold differential π+πp electroproduction cross sections off a proton target, taken with CLAS at photon virtualities of 0.25 < Q2 < 0.60 GeV2. The phenomenological reaction model was employed for separation of the resonant and nonresonant contributions to the final state. The P11(1440) and D13(1520) electrocouplings were obtained from the resonant amplitudes parametrized within the framework of a unitarized …


Continuous Single-Column Model Evaluation At A Permanent Meteorological Supersite, Roel A.J. Neggers, A. Pier Siebesma, Thijs Heus Sep 2012

Continuous Single-Column Model Evaluation At A Permanent Meteorological Supersite, Roel A.J. Neggers, A. Pier Siebesma, Thijs Heus

Physics Faculty Publications

Uncertainties in numerical predictions of weather and climate are often linked to the representation of unresolved processes that act relatively quickly compared to the resolved general circulation. These processes include turbulence, convection, clouds, and radiation. Single-column model (SCM) simulation of idealized cases and the subsequent evaluation against large-eddy simulation (LES) results has become an often used and relied on method to obtain insight at process level into the behavior of such parameterization schemes; benefits of SCM simulation are the enhanced model transparency and the high computational efficiency. Although this approach has achieved demonstrable success, some shortcomings have been identified; among …


Geometric Constructions For Image Formation By A Converging Lens, Ulrich Zürcher Jul 2012

Geometric Constructions For Image Formation By A Converging Lens, Ulrich Zürcher

Physics Faculty Publications

Light rays emerge from an object in all directions. In introductory texts, three 'special' rays are selected to draw the image produced by lenses and mirrors. This presentation may suggest to students that these three rays are necessary for the formation of an image. We discuss that the three rays attain their 'special status' from the geometric solution of the equation of a hyperbola x−1 + y−1 = c−1 (mirror/lens equation). The material is suitable for use in introductory courses for science majors.


Effect Of Disorder On Quantum Phase Transition In The Double Layered Ruthenates (Sr1−Xcax)3ru2o7effect Of Disorder On Quantum Phase Transition In The Double Layered Ruthenates (Sr1−Xcax)3ru2o7, Leonard Spinu, Zhe Qu, Jin Peng, Tijang Liu, David Forbes, Vkad Dobrosavljevic, Z Q. Mao Jul 2012

Effect Of Disorder On Quantum Phase Transition In The Double Layered Ruthenates (Sr1−Xcax)3ru2o7effect Of Disorder On Quantum Phase Transition In The Double Layered Ruthenates (Sr1−Xcax)3ru2o7, Leonard Spinu, Zhe Qu, Jin Peng, Tijang Liu, David Forbes, Vkad Dobrosavljevic, Z Q. Mao

Physics Faculty Publications

(Sr1−xCax)3Ru2O7 is characterized by complex magnetic states, spanning from a long-range antiferromagnetically ordered state over an unusual heavy-mass nearly ferromagnetic (NFM) state to an itinerant metamagnetic (IMM) state. The NFM state, which occurs in the 0.4 > x > 0.08 composition range, freezes into a clusterspin glass (CSG) phase at low temperatures [Z. Qu et al., Phys. Rev. B 78, 180407(R) (2008)]. In this article, we present the scaling analyses of magnetization and the specific heat for (Sr1−xCax)3Ru2O7 in the 0.4 > x > 0.08 composition …


The Helium-Rich Subdwarf Cpd−20°1123: A Post-Common-Envelope Binary Evolving On To The Extended Horizontal Branch, Naslim N., S. Geier, C. S. Jeffery, N. T. Behara, V. M. Woolf, L. Classen Jul 2012

The Helium-Rich Subdwarf Cpd−20°1123: A Post-Common-Envelope Binary Evolving On To The Extended Horizontal Branch, Naslim N., S. Geier, C. S. Jeffery, N. T. Behara, V. M. Woolf, L. Classen

Physics Faculty Publications

Subluminous B stars come in a variety of flavours including single stars, close and wide binaries, and pulsating and non-pulsating variables. A majority have helium-poor surfaces (helium by number nHe < 1 per cent), whilst a minority have extremely helium rich surfaces (nHe > 90 per cent). A small number have an intermediate surface helium abundance (≈10–30 per cent), accompanied by peculiar abundances of other elements. The questions posed are (i) whether these abundance peculiarities are associated with radiatively driven and time-dependent stratification of elements within the photosphere as the star evolves from a helium-enriched progenitor to become a normal helium-poor sdB star and (ii) whether these phenomena occur only in …


Comparison Of Forward And Backward Pp Pair Knockout In 3He(E,E′Pp)N, H. Baghdasaryan, Gerard P. Gilfoyle, Et. Al. Jun 2012

Comparison Of Forward And Backward Pp Pair Knockout In 3He(E,E′Pp)N, H. Baghdasaryan, Gerard P. Gilfoyle, Et. Al.

Physics Faculty Publications

Measuring nucleon-nucleon short range correlations (SRCs) has been a goal of the nuclear physics community for many years. They are an important part of the nuclear wave function, accounting for almost all of the high-momentum strength. They are closely related to the EMC effect. While their overall probability has been measured, measuring their momentum distributions is more difficult. In order to determine the best configuration for studying SRC momentum distributions, we measured the 3He(e,e’ pp)n reaction, looking at events with high-momentum protons (pp > 0.35 GeV/c) and a low-momentum neutron ( …


Flux And Photon Spectral Index Distributions Of Fermi-Lat Blazars And Contribution To The Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Background, Jack Singal, V. Petrosian, M. Ajello Jun 2012

Flux And Photon Spectral Index Distributions Of Fermi-Lat Blazars And Contribution To The Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Background, Jack Singal, V. Petrosian, M. Ajello

Physics Faculty Publications

We present a determination of the distributions of the photon spectral index and gamma-ray flux—the so-called log N–log S relation—for the 352 blazars detected with a greater than approximately 7σ detection threshold and located above ±20◦ Galactic latitude by the Large Area Telescope of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope in its first year catalog. Because the flux detection threshold depends on the photon index, the observed raw distributions do not provide the true log N–log S counts or the true distribution of the photon index. We use the non-parametric methods developed by Efron and Petrosian to reconstruct the intrinsic distributions …


Extraordinary Optical Transmission And Extinction In A Terahertz Wire-Grid Polarizer, J. S. Cetnar, J. R. Middendorf, Elliott R. Brown Jun 2012

Extraordinary Optical Transmission And Extinction In A Terahertz Wire-Grid Polarizer, J. S. Cetnar, J. R. Middendorf, Elliott R. Brown

Physics Faculty Publications

A THz wire grid polarizer is simulated and demonstrated consisting of 40-μm periodic aluminum strips mounted on a polycarbonate substrate with a variable metal-to-gap ratio. Full-wave numerical simulations were performed from 100 GHz to 550 GHz predicting that the transmission in perpendicular (parallel) polarization is much higher (lower) than that predicted by geometric optics, leading to a very high extinction ratio of ∼60 dB between 100 and 550 GHz when the gaps become very small (<5 >μm). This behavior is confirmed qualitatively in experiments between 100 and 530 GHz where extinction ratios exceeding 40 dB are achieved. …


Quasielastic Scattering In The Interaction Of Ultracold Neutrons With A Liquid Wall And Application In A Reanalysis Of The Mambo I Neutron-Lifetime Experiment, Albert Steyerl, J. M. Pendlebury, Charles Kaufman, Surendra S. Malik, A. M. Desai Jun 2012

Quasielastic Scattering In The Interaction Of Ultracold Neutrons With A Liquid Wall And Application In A Reanalysis Of The Mambo I Neutron-Lifetime Experiment, Albert Steyerl, J. M. Pendlebury, Charles Kaufman, Surendra S. Malik, A. M. Desai

Physics Faculty Publications

We develop a theory of ultracold and very cold neutron scattering on viscoelastic surface waves up to second-order perturbation theory. The results are applied to reanalyze the 1989 neutron-lifetime experiment using ultracold neutron storage in a Fomblin-coated vessel by Mampe et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 63, 593 (1989)]. Inclusion of this theory of the quasielastic scattering process in the data analysis shifts the neutron lifetime value from 887.6 ± 3 to 882.5 ± 2.1 s.


Measurement Of The Entry-Spin Distribution Imparted To The High Excitation Continuum Region Of Gadolinium Nuclei Via (P,D) And (P,T) Reactions, T. J. Ross, C. W. Beausang, R. O. Hughes, J. M. Allmond, C. Angell, M. S. Basunia, D. L. Bleuel, J. T. Burke, R. J. Casperson, J. Escher, P. Fallon, R. Hatarik, J. Munson, S. Paschalis, M. Petri, L. Phair, J. J. Ressler, N. D. Scielzo, I. Thompson May 2012

Measurement Of The Entry-Spin Distribution Imparted To The High Excitation Continuum Region Of Gadolinium Nuclei Via (P,D) And (P,T) Reactions, T. J. Ross, C. W. Beausang, R. O. Hughes, J. M. Allmond, C. Angell, M. S. Basunia, D. L. Bleuel, J. T. Burke, R. J. Casperson, J. Escher, P. Fallon, R. Hatarik, J. Munson, S. Paschalis, M. Petri, L. Phair, J. J. Ressler, N. D. Scielzo, I. Thompson

Physics Faculty Publications

Over the last several years, the surrogate reaction technique has been successfully employed to extract (n,f) and (n,γ) cross sections in the actinide region to a precision of ∼5% and ∼20%, respectively. However, attempts to apply the technique in the rare earth region have shown large (factors of 2–3) discrepancies between the directly measured (n,γ) and extracted surrogate cross sections. One possible origin of this discrepancy lies in differences between the initial spin-parity population distribution in the neutron induced and surrogate reactions. To address this issue, the angular …


Statistical Γ Rays In The Analysis Of Surrogate Nuclear Reactions, N. D. Scielzo, J. Escher, J. M. Allmond, M. S. Basunia, C. W. Beausang, L. A. Bernstein, D. L. Bleuel, J. T. Burke, R. M. Clark, F. S. Dietrich, P. Fallon, J. Gibelin, B. L. Goldblum, S. R. Lesher, M. A. Mcmahan, E. B. Norman, L. Phair, E. Rodriguez-Vieitez, S. A. Sheets, I. Thompson, M. Wiedeking May 2012

Statistical Γ Rays In The Analysis Of Surrogate Nuclear Reactions, N. D. Scielzo, J. Escher, J. M. Allmond, M. S. Basunia, C. W. Beausang, L. A. Bernstein, D. L. Bleuel, J. T. Burke, R. M. Clark, F. S. Dietrich, P. Fallon, J. Gibelin, B. L. Goldblum, S. R. Lesher, M. A. Mcmahan, E. B. Norman, L. Phair, E. Rodriguez-Vieitez, S. A. Sheets, I. Thompson, M. Wiedeking

Physics Faculty Publications

The surrogate nuclear reaction method is being applied in many efforts to indirectly determine neutron-induced reaction cross sections on short-lived isotopes. This technique aims to extract accurate (n,γ) cross sections from measured decay properties of the compound nucleus of interest (created using a different reaction). The advantages and limitations of a method that identifies the γ-ray decay channel by detecting any high-energy (“statistical”) γ ray emitted during the relaxation of the compound nucleus were investigated. Data collected using the Silicon Telescope Array for Reaction Studies and Livermore-Berkeley Array for Collaborative Experiments silicon and germanium detector arrays were used …