Resource Type

States

Application Of Chiral Two- And Three-Nucleon Interactions To The 4He Photo-Disintegration (open access)

Application Of Chiral Two- And Three-Nucleon Interactions To The 4He Photo-Disintegration

We report on an ab initio calculation of the {sup 4}He total photo-absorption cross section using two- and three-nucleon interactions based upon chiral effective field theory. The microscopic treatment of the continuum problem is achieved using the Lorentz integral transform method, applied within the no-core shell model approach.
Date: January 25, 2008
Creator: Quaglioni, S & Navratil, P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Digitally Controlled High Availability Power Supply (open access)

Digitally Controlled High Availability Power Supply

This paper reports the design and test results on novel topology, high-efficiency, and low operating temperature, 1,320-watt power modules for high availability power supplies. The modules permit parallel operation for N+1 redundancy with hot swap capability. An embedded DSP provides intelligent start-up and shutdown, output regulation, general control and fault detection. PWM modules in the DSP drive the FET switches at 20 to 100 kHz. The DSP also ensures current sharing between modules, synchronized switching, and soft start up for hot swapping. The module voltage and current have dedicated ADCs (>200 kS/sec) to provide pulse-by-pulse output control. A Dual CAN bus interface provides for low cost redundant control paths. Over-rated module components provide high reliability and high efficiency at full load. Low on-resistance FETs replace conventional diodes in the buck regulator. Saturable inductors limit the FET reverse diode current during switching. The modules operate in a two-quadrant mode, allowing bipolar output from complimentary module groups. Controllable, low resistance FETs at the input and output provide fault isolation and allow module hot swapping.
Date: September 25, 2008
Creator: MacNair, David
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spectral Interpolation on 3 x 3 Stencils for Prediction and Compression (open access)

Spectral Interpolation on 3 x 3 Stencils for Prediction and Compression

Many scientific, imaging, and geospatial applications produce large high-precision scalar fields sampled on a regular grid. Lossless compression of such data is commonly done using predictive coding, in which weighted combinations of previously coded samples known to both encoder and decoder are used to predict subsequent nearby samples. In hierarchical, incremental, or selective transmission, the spatial pattern of the known neighbors is often irregular and varies from one sample to the next, which precludes prediction based on a single stencil and fixed set of weights. To handle such situations and make the best use of available neighboring samples, we propose a local spectral predictor that offers optimal prediction by tailoring the weights to each configuration of known nearby samples. These weights may be precomputed and stored in a small lookup table. We show through several applications that predictive coding using our spectral predictor improves compression for various sources of high-precision data.
Date: June 25, 2007
Creator: Ibarria, L; Lindstrom, P & Rossignac, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron-Cloud Build-Up Simulations for the FNAL Main Injector (open access)

Electron-Cloud Build-Up Simulations for the FNAL Main Injector

None
Date: August 25, 2008
Creator: Furman, Miguel A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stable Electron Beams With Low Absolute Energy Spread From a LaserWakefield Accelerator With Plasma Density Ramp Controlled Injection (open access)

Stable Electron Beams With Low Absolute Energy Spread From a LaserWakefield Accelerator With Plasma Density Ramp Controlled Injection

Laser wakefield accelerators produce accelerating gradientsup to hundreds of GeV/m, and recently demonstrated 1-10 MeV energy spreadat energies up to 1 GeV using electrons self-trapped from the plasma.Controlled injection and staging may further improve beam quality bycircumventing tradeoffs between energy, stability, and energyspread/emittance. We present experiments demonstrating production of astable electron beam near 1 MeV with hundred-keV level energy spread andcentral energy stability by using the plasma density profile to controlselfinjection, and supporting simulations. Simulations indicate that suchbeams can be post accelerated to high energies,potentially reducingmomentum spread in laser acceleratorsby 100-fold or more.
Date: June 25, 2007
Creator: Geddes, Cameron G.R.; Cormier-Michel, E.; Esarey, E.; Leemans,W.P.; Nakamura, K.; Panasenko, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Streak Camera Temporal Resolution Improvement Using aTime-Dependent Field (open access)

Streak Camera Temporal Resolution Improvement Using aTime-Dependent Field

None
Date: June 25, 2007
Creator: Qiang, Ji; Byrd, John M.; Feng, June & Huang, Gang
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel QCD Phenomena at Electron-Proton Colliders (open access)

Novel QCD Phenomena at Electron-Proton Colliders

I discuss several novel phenomenological features of QCD which are observable in deep inelastic lepton-nucleon and lepton-nucleus scattering. Initial- and final-state interactions from gluon exchange, normally neglected in the parton model, have a profound effect on QCD hard-scattering reactions, leading to leading-twist single-spin asymmetries, the diffractive contribution to deep inelastic scattering, and the breakdown of the pQCD Lam-Tung relation in Drell-Yan reactions. Leading-twist diffractive processes in turn lead to nuclear shadowing and non-universal antishadowing--physics not incorporated in the light-front wavefunctions of the nucleus computed in isolation.
Date: July 25, 2008
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J. & /SLAC /Durham U., IPPP
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiological Studies for the LCLS Beam Abort System (open access)

Radiological Studies for the LCLS Beam Abort System

The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), a pioneer hard x-ray free electron laser is currently under construction at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. It is expected that by 2009 LCLS will deliver laser pulses of unprecedented brightness and short length, which will be used in several forefront research applications. This ambitious project encompasses major design challenges to the radiation protection like the numerous sources and the number of surveyed objects. In order to sort those, the showers from various loss sources have been tracked along a detailed model covering 1/2 mile of LCLS accelerator by means of the Monte Carlo intra nuclear cascade codes FLUKA and MARS15. This article covers the FLUKA studies of heat load; prompt and residual dose and environmental impact for the LCLS beam abort system.
Date: March 25, 2008
Creator: Santana Leitner, M.; Vollaire, J. & Mao, X.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Localized Electron States Near a Metal-SemiconductorNanocontact (open access)

Localized Electron States Near a Metal-SemiconductorNanocontact

The electronic structure of nanowires in contact withmetallic electrodes of experimentally relevant sizes is calculated byincorporating the electrostatic polarization potential into the atomisticsingle particle Schrodinger equation. We show that the presence of anelectrode produces localized electron/hole states near the electrode, aphenomenon only exhibited in nanostructures and overlooked in the past.This phenomenon will have profound implications on electron transport insuch nanosystems. We calculate several electrode/nanowire geometries,with varying contact depths and nanowire radii. We demonstrate the changein the band gap of up to 0.5 eV in 3 nm diameter CdSe nanowires andcalculate the magnitude of the applied electric field necessary toovercome the localization.
Date: April 25, 2007
Creator: Demchenko, Denis O. & Wang, Lin-Wang
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Progress on the Diamond Amplified Photo-Cathode Experiment. (open access)

Recent Progress on the Diamond Amplified Photo-Cathode Experiment.

We report recent progress on the Diamond Amplified Photo-cathode (DAP). The use of a pulsed electron gun provides detailed information about the DAP physics. The secondary electron gain has been measured under various electric fields. We have achieved gains of a few hundred in the transmission mode and observed evidence of emission of electrons from the surface. A model based on recombination of electrons and holes during generation well describes the field dependence of the gain. The emittance measurement system for the DAP has been designed, constructed and is ready for use. The capsule design of the DAP is also being studied in parallel.
Date: June 25, 2007
Creator: Chang,X.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Burrill, A.; Grimes, J.; Rao, T.; Segalov, Z. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Gridded Electron Gun for a Sheet Beam Klystron (open access)

A Gridded Electron Gun for a Sheet Beam Klystron

This paper describes the development of an electron gun for a sheet beam klystron. Initially intended for accelerator applications, the gun can operate at a higher perveance than one with a cylindrically symmetric beam. Results of 2D and 3D simulations are discussed.
Date: April 25, 2008
Creator: Read, M. E.; Miram, G.; Ives, R. L.; Ivanov, V. & Krasnykh, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Timescales of spherulite crystallization in obsidian inferred from water concentration profiles (open access)

Timescales of spherulite crystallization in obsidian inferred from water concentration profiles

We determined the kinetics of spherulite growth in obsidians from Krafla volcano, Iceland. We measured water concentration profiles around spherulites in obsidian by synchrotron Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The distribution of OH? groups surrounding spherulites decreases exponentially away from the spherulite-glass border, reflecting expulsion of water during crystallization of an anhydrous paragenesis (plagioclase + SiO2 + clinopyroxene + magnetite). This pattern is controlled by a balance between the growth rate of the spherulites and the diffusivity of hydrous solute in the rhyolitic melt. We modeled advective and diffusive transport of the water away from the growing spherulites by numerically solving the diffusion equation with a moving boundary. Numerical models fit the natural data best when a small amount of post-growth diffusion is incorporated in the model. Comparisons between models and data constrain the average spherulite growth rates for different temperatures and highlight size-dependent growth among a small population of spherulites.
Date: June 25, 2008
Creator: Castro, Jonathan M.; Beck, Pierre; Tuffen, Hugh; Nichols, Alexander R.L.; Dingwell, Donald B. & Martin, Michael C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Redesign of the SNS Modulator H-Bridge for Utilization of Press-Pack IGBTs (open access)

Redesign of the SNS Modulator H-Bridge for Utilization of Press-Pack IGBTs

The power conversion group at SLAC is currently redesigning the H-bridge switch plates of the High Voltage Converter Modulators at the Spallation Neutron Source. This integral part to the modulator operation has been indentified as a source of several modulator faults and potentially limits reliability with pulse width modulation operation. This paper is a presentation of the design and implementation of a redesigned switch plate based upon press-pack IGBTs.
Date: September 25, 2008
Creator: Kemp, Mark A.; Burkhart, Craig & Anderson, David E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test Results of the AC Field Measurements of Fermilab Booster Corrector Magnets (open access)

Test Results of the AC Field Measurements of Fermilab Booster Corrector Magnets

Multi-element corrector magnets are being produced at Fermilab that enable correction of orbits and tunes through the entire cycle of the Booster, not just at injection. The corrector package includes six different corrector elements--normal and skew orientations of dipole, quadrupole, and sextupole--each independently powered. The magnets have been tested during typical AC ramping cycles at 15Hz using a fixed coil system to measure the dynamic field strength and field quality. The fixed coil is comprised of an array of inductive pick-up coils around the perimeter of a cylinder which are sampled simultaneously at 100 kHz with 24-bit ADC's. The performance of the measurement system and a summary of the field results are presented and discussed.
Date: June 25, 2008
Creator: DiMarco, E.Joseph; Harding, D. J.; Kashikhin, V. S.; Kotelnikov, S. K.; Lamm, M. J.; Makulski, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical Challenges and Scientific Payoffs of Muon BeamAccelerators for Particle Physics (open access)

Technical Challenges and Scientific Payoffs of Muon BeamAccelerators for Particle Physics

Historically, progress in particle physics has largely beendetermined by development of more capable particle accelerators. Thistrend continues today with the recent advent of high-luminosityelectron-positron colliders at KEK and SLAC operating as "B factories,"the imminent commissioning of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, and theworldwide development effort toward the International Linear Collider.Looking to the future, one of the most promising approaches is thedevelopment of muon-beam accelerators. Such machines have very highscientific potential, and would substantially advance thestate-of-the-art in accelerator design. A 20-50 GeV muon storage ringcould serve as a copious source of well-characterized electron neutrinosor antineutrinos (a Neutrino Factory), providing beams aimed at detectorslocated 3000-7500 km from the ring. Such long baseline experiments areexpected to be able to observe and characterize the phenomenon ofcharge-conjugation-parity (CP) violation in the lepton sector, and thusprovide an answer to one of the most fundamental questions in science,namely, why the matter-dominated universe in which we reside exists atall. By accelerating muons to even higher energies of several TeV, we canenvision a Muon Collider. In contrast with composite particles likeprotons, muons are point particles. This means that the full collisionenergy is available to create new particles. A Muon Collider has roughlyten times the energy reach of a …
Date: September 25, 2007
Creator: Zisman, Michael S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electronic Spin Crossover of Iron in Ferroperclase in Earth?s Lower Mantle (open access)

Electronic Spin Crossover of Iron in Ferroperclase in Earth?s Lower Mantle

Pressure-induced electronic spin-pairing transitions of iron and associated effects on the physical properties have been reported to occur in the lower-mantle ferropericlase, silicate perosvkite, and perhaps in post silicate perovskite at high pressures and room temperature. These recent results are motivating geophysicists and geodynamicists to reevaluate the implications of spin transitions on the seismic heterogeneity, composition, as well as the stability of the thermal upwellings of the Earth's lower mantle. Here we have measured the spin states of iron in ferropericlase and its crystal structure up to 95 GPa and 2000 K using a newly constructed X-ray emission spectroscopy and diffraction with the laser-heated diamond cell. Our results show that an isosymmetric spin crossover occurs over a pressure-temperature range extending from the upper part to the lower part of the lower mantle, and low-spin ferropericlase likely exists in the lowermost mantle. Although continuous changes in physical and chemical properties are expected to occur across the spin crossover, the spin crossover results in peculiar behavior in the thermal compression and sound velocities. Therefore, knowledge of the fraction of the spin states in the lower-mantle phases is thus essential to correctly evaluate the composition, geophysics, and dynamics of the Earth's lower mantle.
Date: January 25, 2007
Creator: Lin, J. F.; Vanko, G.; Jacobsen, S. D.; Iota, V.; Struzhkin, V. V.; Prakapenka, V. B. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Black holes in supergravity: the non-BPS branch (open access)

Black holes in supergravity: the non-BPS branch

We construct extremal, spherically symmetric black hole solutions to 4D supergravity with charge assignments that preclude BPS-saturation. In particular, we determine the ground state energy as a function of charges and moduli. We find that the mass of the non-BPS black hole remains that of a marginal bound state of four basic constituents throughout the entire moduli space and that there is always a non-zero gap above the BPS bound.
Date: October 25, 2007
Creator: Gimon, Eric; Gimon, Eric G.; Larsen, Finn & Simon, Joan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiochemical Solar Neutrino Experiments - Successful and Otherwise. (open access)

Radiochemical Solar Neutrino Experiments - Successful and Otherwise.

Over the years, several different radiochemical systems have been proposed as solar neutrino detectors. Of these, two achieved operating status and obtained important results that helped to define the current field of neutrino physics: the first solar-neutrino experiment, the Chlorine Detector ({sup 37}Cl) that was developed by chemist Raymond Davis and colleagues at the Homestake Mine, and the subsequent Gallium ({sup 71}Ga) Detectors that were operated by (a) the SAGE collaboration at the Baksan Laboratory and (b) the GALLEX/GNO collaborations at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory. These experiments have been extensively discussed in the literature and in many previous International Neutrino Conferences. In this paper, I present important updates to the results from SAGE and GALLEX/GNO. I also review the principles of the radiochemical detectors and briefly describe several different detectors that have been proposed. In light of the well-known successes that have been subsequently obtained by real-time neutrino detectors such as Kamiokande, Super-Kamiokande, SNO, and KamLAND, I do not anticipate that any new radiochemical neutrino detectors will be built. At present, only SAGE is still operating; the Chlorine and GNO radiochemical detectors have been decommissioned and dismantled.
Date: May 25, 2008
Creator: Hahn,R.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE Epsilon*/Lambda BRANCHING RATIO OF Y*1 (open access)

THE Epsilon*/Lambda BRANCHING RATIO OF Y*1

Recently a T = 1 resonance in the {Lambda}{pi} system called Y*{sub 1} has been observed with a mass of 1385 Mev. Two types of resonances have been predicted that might relate this observation to other elementary-particle interactions: (1) P 3/2 resonances in the {Lambda}{pi} and {Sigma}{pi} systems predicted by global symmetry corresponding to the (3/2, 3/2) resonance of the {pi}N system; (2) a spin-1/2 Y-{pi} resonance resulting from a bound state in the KN system. The position and width of the observed Y*{sub 1} resonance agree with both theories, but since the spin and parity have not yet been determined, it is impossible at present to distinguish between the two theoretical interpretations.
Date: April 25, 1961
Creator: Alston, Margaret H.; Alvarez, Luis W.; Eberhard, Philippe; Good,Myron L.; Graziano, William; Ticho, Harold K. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Standard Model Condensates and the Cosmological Constant (open access)

Standard Model Condensates and the Cosmological Constant

This paper suggests a solution to the problem of some apparently excessive contributions to the cosmological constant from Standard-Model condensates.
Date: March 25, 2008
Creator: Brodsky, Stanley J.; /SLAC /SUNY, Stony Brook; Shrock, Robert & /SUNY, Stony Brook
System: The UNT Digital Library
Planning for an integrated research experiment (open access)

Planning for an integrated research experiment

We describe the goals and research program leading to the Heavy Ion Integrated Research Experiment (IRE). We review the basic constraints which lead to a design and give examples of parameters and capabilities of an IRE. We also show design tradeoffs generated by the systems code IBEAM.
Date: March 25, 2001
Creator: Barnard, J. J.; Ahle, L. E.; Bangerter, R. O.; Bieniosek, F. M.; Celata, C. M.; Faltens, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of Hadronic Transitions Between \Upsilon States and Observation of \Upsilon(4S) to\eta\Upsilon(1S) Decay (open access)

Study of Hadronic Transitions Between \Upsilon States and Observation of \Upsilon(4S) to\eta\Upsilon(1S) Decay

The authors present a study of hadronic transitions between {Upsilon}(mS) (m = 4,3,2) and {Upsilon}(nS) (n = 2,1) resonances based on 347.5 fb{sup -1} of data taken with the BABAR detector at the PEP-II storage rings.
Date: July 25, 2008
Creator: Aubert, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Symmetry Breaking in Few Layer Graphene Films (open access)

Symmetry Breaking in Few Layer Graphene Films

Recently, it was demonstrated that the quasiparticledynamics, the layer-dependent charge and potential, and the c-axisscreening coefficient could be extracted from measurements of thespectral function of few layer graphene films grown epitaxially on SiCusing angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). In this articlewe review these findings, and present detailed methodology for extractingsuch parameters from ARPES. We also present detailed arguments againstthe possibility of an energy gap at the Dirac crossing ED.
Date: May 25, 2007
Creator: Bostwick, A.; Ohta, T.; McChesney, J.L.; Emtsev, K.; Seyller,Th.; Horn, K. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structural analysis of flexible proteins in solution by SmallAngle X-ray Scattering combined with crystallography (open access)

Structural analysis of flexible proteins in solution by SmallAngle X-ray Scattering combined with crystallography

In the last few years, SAXS of biological materials has been rapidly evolving and promises to move structural analysis to a new level. Recent innovations in SAXS data analysis allow ab initio shape predictions of proteins in solution. Furthermore, experimental scattering data can be compared to calculated scattering curves from the growing data base of solved structures and also identify aggregation and unfolded proteins. Combining SAXS results with atomic resolution structures enables detailed characterizations in solution of mass, radius, conformations, assembly, and shape changes associated with protein folding and functions. SAXS can efficiently reveal the spatial organization of protein domains, including domains missing from or disordered in known crystal structures, and establish cofactor or substrate-induced conformational changes. For flexible domains or unstructured regions that are not amenable for study by many other structural techniques, SAXS provides a unique technology. Here, we present SAXS shape predictions for PCNA that accurately predict a trimeric ring assembly and for a full-length DNA repair glycosylase with a large unstructured region. These new results in combination with illustrative published data show how SAXS combined with high resolution crystal structures efficiently establishes architectures, assemblies, conformations, and unstructured regions for proteins and protein complexes in solution.
Date: May 25, 2006
Creator: Tsutakawa, Susan E.; Hura, Greg L.; Frankel, Ken A.; Cooper,Priscilla K. & Tainer, John A.
System: The UNT Digital Library