118 research outputs found
Acceleration and vacuum temperature
The quantum fluctuations of an "accelerated" vacuum state, that is vacuum
fluctuations in the presence of a constant electromagnetic field, can be
described by the temperature \TEH. Considering \TEH for the gyromagnetic
factor we show that \TEH(g=1)=\THU, where \THU is the Unruh
temperature experienced by an accelerated observer. We conjecture that both
particle production and nonlinear field effects inherent in the Unruh
accelerated observer case are described by the case QED of strong fields.
We present rates of particle production for and show that the case
is experimentally distinguishable from . Therefore, either
accelerated observers are distinguishable from accelerated vacuum or there is
unexpected modification of the theoretical framework.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; expanded discussion of experimental observables,
added references, version appearing in Phys Rev
Effects of Radiation-Reaction in Relativistic Laser Acceleration
The goal of this paper is twofold: to explore the response of classical
charges to electromagnetic force at the level of unity in natural units and to
establish a criterion that determines physical parameters for which the related
radiation-reaction effects are detectable. In pursuit of this goal, the
Landau-Lifshitz equation is solved analytically for an arbitrary (transverse)
electromagnetic pulse. A comparative study of the radiation emission of an
electron in a linearly polarized pulse for the Landau-Lifshitz equation and for
the Lorentz force equation reveals the radiation-reaction dominated regime, in
which radiation-reaction effects overcome the influence of the external fields.
The case of a relativistic electron that is slowed down by a counter
propagating electromagnetic pulse is studied in detail. We further show that
when the electron experiences acceleration of order unity, the dynamics of the
Lorentz force equation, the Landau-Lifshitz equation and the
Lorentz-Abraham-Dirac equation all result in different radiation emission that
could be distinguished in experiment. Finally, our analytic and numerical
results are compared with those appearing in the literature.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures; added appendix comparing to previously
published results; in press with Phys Rev
Photon and neutron production as in-situ diagnostics of proton-boron fusion
Short-pulse, ultra high-intensity lasers have opened new regimes for studying
fusion plasmas and creating novel ultra-short ion beams and neutron sources.
Diagnosing the plasma in these experiments is important for optimizing the
fusion yield but difficult due to the picosecond time scales, 10s of
micron-cubed volumes and high densities. We propose to use the yields of
photons and neutrons produced by parallel reactions involving the same
reactants to diagnose the plasma conditions and predict the yields of specific
reactions of interest. In this work, we focus on verifying the yield of the
high-interest aneutronic proton-boron fusion reaction
, which is difficult to measure directly due to
the short stopping range of the produced s in most materials. We
identify promising photon-producing reactions for this purpose and compute the
ratios of the photon yield to the yield as a function of plasma
parameters. In beam fusion experiments, the yield is an
easily-measurable observable to verify the yield. In light of our
results, improving and extending measurements of the cross sections for these
parallel reactions are important steps to gaining greater control over these
laser-driven fusion plasmas.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, revtex forma
Isolation of a wide range of minerals from a thermally treated plant: Equisetum arvense, a Mare’s tale
Silica is the second most abundant biomineral being exceeded in nature only by biogenic CaCO3. Many land plants (such as rice, cereals, cucumber, etc.) deposit silica in significant amounts to reinforce their tissues and as a systematic response to pathogen attack. One of the most ancient species of living vascular plants, Equisetum arvense is also able to take up and accumulate silica in all parts of the plant. Numerous methods have been developed for elimination of the organic material and/or metal ions present in plant material to isolate biogenic silica. However, depending on the chemical and/or physical treatment applied to branch or stem from Equisetum arvense; other mineral forms such glass-type materials (i.e. CaSiO3), salts (i.e. KCl) or luminescent materials can also be isolated from the plant material. In the current contribution, we show the chemical and/or thermal routes that lead to the formation of a number of different mineral types in addition to biogenic silica
Rapidity regulators in the semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering and Drell-Yan processes
High-charge 10 GeV electron acceleration in a 10 cm nanoparticle-assisted hybrid wakefield accelerator
In an electron wakefield accelerator, an intense laser pulse or charged
particle beam excites plasma waves. Under proper conditions, electrons from the
background plasma are trapped in the plasma wave and accelerated to
ultra-relativistic velocities. We present recent results from a
proof-of-principle wakefield acceleration experiment that reveal a unique
synergy between a laser-driven and particle-driven accelerator: a high-charge
laser-wakefield accelerated electron bunch can drive its own wakefield while
simultaneously drawing energy from the laser pulse via direct laser
acceleration. This process continues to accelerate electrons beyond the usual
decelerating phase of the wakefield, thus reaching much higher energies. We
find that the 10-centimeter-long nanoparticle-assisted wakefield accelerator
can generate 340 pC, 10.4+-0.6 GeV electron bunches with 3.4 GeV RMS convolved
energy spread and 0.9 mrad RMS divergence. It can also produce bunches with
lower energy, a few percent energy spread, and a higher charge. This
synergistic mechanism and the simplicity of the experimental setup represent a
step closer to compact tabletop particle accelerators suitable for applications
requiring high charge at high energies, such as free electron lasers or
radiation sources producing muon beams
Rapid genome editing by CRISPR-Cas9-POLD3 fusion
Precision CRISPR gene editing relies on the cellular homology-directed DNA repair (HDR) to introduce custom DNA sequences to target sites. The HDR editing efficiency varies between cell types and genomic sites, and the sources of this variation are incompletely understood. Here, we have studied the effect of 450 DNA repair protein-Cas9 fusions on CRISPR genome editing outcomes. We find the majority of fusions to improve precision genome editing only modestly in a locus- and cell-type specific manner. We identify Cas9-POLD3 fusion that enhances editing by speeding up the initiation of DNA repair. We conclude that while DNA repair protein fusions to Cas9 can improve HDR CRISPR editing, most need to be optimized to the cell type and genomic site, highlighting the diversity of factors contributing to locus-specific genome editing outcomes.Peer reviewe
High deuteron and neutron yields from the interaction of a petawatt laser with a cryogenic deuterium jet
A compact high-flux, short-pulse neutron source would have applications from nuclear astrophysics to cancer therapy. Laser-driven neutron sources can achieve fluxes much higher than spallation and reactor neutron sources by reducing the volume and time in which the neutron-producing reactions occur by orders of magnitude. We report progress towards an efficient laser-driven neutron source in experiments with a cryogenic deuterium jet on the Texas Petawatt laser. Neutrons were produced both by laser-accelerated multi-MeV deuterons colliding with Be and mixed metallic catchers and by d (d,n)³He fusion reactions within the jet. We observed deuteron yields of 10¹³/shot in quasi-Maxwellian distributions carrying ∼ 8 − 10 % of the input laser energy. We obtained neutron yields greater than 10¹⁰/shot and found indications of a deuteron-deuteron fusion neutron source with high peak flux (> 10²² cm⁻² s⁻¹). The estimated fusion neutron yield in our experiment is one order of magnitude higher than any previous laser-induced dd fusion reaction. Though many technical challenges will have to be overcome to convert this proof-of-principle experiment into a consistent ultra-high flux neutron source, the neutron fluxes achieved here suggest laser-driven neutron sources can support laboratory study of the rapid neutron-capture process, which is otherwise thought to occur only in astrophysical sites such as core-collapse supernova, and binary neutron star mergers
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