96 research outputs found
On the Specific Features of Temperature Evolution in Ultracold Plasmas
A theoretical interpretation of the recent experimental studies of
temperature evolution in the course of time in the freely-expanding ultracold
plasma bunches, released from a magneto-optical trap, is discussed. The most
interesting result is finding the asymptotics of the form T_e ~ t^{-(1.2 +/-
0.1)} instead of t^{-2}, which was expected for the rarefied monatomic gas
during inertial expansion. As follows from our consideration, the substantially
decelerated decay of the temperature can be well explained by the specific
features of the equation of state for the ultracold plasmas with strong
Coulomb's coupling, whereas a heat release due to inelastic processes (in
particular, three-body recombination) does not play an appreciable role in the
first approximation. This conclusion is confirmed both by approximate
analytical estimates, based on the model of "virialization" of the
charged-particle energies, and by the results of "ab initio" numerical
simulation. Moreover, the simulation shows that the above-mentioned law of
temperature evolution is approached very quickly--when the virial criterion is
satisfied only within a factor on the order of unity.Comment: LaTeX + 3 eps figures, 16 pages. Plasma Physics Reports, v.37, in
press (2011
Cosmological expansion and local systems: a Lema\^{i}tre-Tolman-Bondi model
We propose a Lema\^{i}tre-Tolman-Bondi system mimicking a two-body system to
address the problem of the cosmological expansion versus local dynamics. This
system is strongly bound but participates in the cosmic expansion and is
exactly comoving with the cosmic substratum
Design and acoustic tests of the ATHENA WFI filter wheel assembly development model towards TRL5
The filter wheel (FW) assembly (FWA), developed by the CBK Institute, is one of the critical subsystems of the wide field imager (WFI) instrument on board the Advanced Telescope for High Energy Astrophysics—mission of the ESA Cosmic Vision 2015-25 space science program (launch scheduled around 2035). The instrument has to collect soft x-rays with very high quantum efficiency, thus WFI requires extremely thin optical blocking filter (OBF). Due to its thickness (∼150 nm) and large area (∼170 mm × 170 mm) needed to achieve a 40 ′ × 40 ′ instrument field of view, the filter is extremely vulnerable to acoustic loads generated during Ariane 6 rocket launch. On the other side, FW mechanism has to provide high overall reliability, so it is more favourable to launch the instrument in atmospheric pressure (without vacuum enclosure for filter protection). Design efforts of the FW subsystem were focused on two issues: providing maximal possible sound pressure level suppression and smallest possible differential pressure across the OBF, which should prevent filters from damaging. We describe the design of a reconfigurable acoustic-demonstrator model (DM) of WFI FWA created for purposes of acoustic testing. Also, the acoustic test campaign is described: test methodology, test criteria, and results discussion and its implication on future FWA design. In general, tests conducted with the FWA DM showed that current design of WFI is feasible and the project can be continued without introducing a vacuum enclosure, which would significantly increase system complexity and mass
Mos Circuits on Silicon—Boron Phosphide—Silicon Multilayers
ABSTRACTOne approach to the fabrication of multiple silicon — insulator silicon layers that is compatible with existing silicon batch processing technology is to grow all of thelayers heteroepitaxially in a hydride reactor. We have grown multiple Si—Ins—Si layers using boron phosphide as the insulator. Up to 4 layers of BP—Si havebeen grown on silicon substrates and up to 2 layers have been grown on SOS substrates. MOS integrated circuits have been fabricated on the various Si layers. In general, the individual device quality and the performance of the ICs was lower as the number of layersincreased, however, even ICs fabricated on 4 layers of Si—BP—Si had characteristics comparable with SOS ICs. The growth process for production of the multiple heteroepitaxial films will be described. The characteristics of the ICs will be correlated with the film properties. Other possible candidates for insulators will be discussed.</jats:p
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