1,033 research outputs found
A Flexible Simple Thermostat for Small Objects and the Range of 100 to 400 K
A flexible, inexpensive thermostat for the temperature range 100 to 400 K is described. Liquid nitrogen is the coolant and a gas serves as transfer medium. The temperature can be set to better than 1 K and is held there within (1/2) K by an electronic control system. The relatively small working volume of the order of 10 cm^3 allows quick changes of temperature, a desirable feature in typical semiconductor experiments
Space Station Freedom Solar Array design development
The Space Station Freedom Solar Array Program is required to provide a 75 kW power module that uses eight solar array (SA) wings over a four-year period in low Earth orbit (LEO). Each wing will be capable of providing 23.4 kW at the 4-year design point. Lockheed Missles and Space Company, Inc. (LMSC) is providing the flexible substrate SAs that must survive exposure to the space environment, including atomic oxygen, for an operating life of fifteen years. Trade studies and development testing, important for evolving any design to maturity, are presently underway at LMSC on the flexible solar array. The trade study and development areas being investigated include solar cell module size, solar cell weld pads, panel stiffener frames, materials inherently resistant to atomic oxygen, and weight reduction design alternatives
Noise and Equivalent Circuit of Double Injection
Measurements of the high‐frequency noise of a silicon double‐injection diode result in 〈i^2〉 = α⋅4kT(1/r)Δf with α=1.04 and in agreement with the literature. A new interpretation demands Nyquist noise with α≡1 in these devices at high frequencies. This is in accord with an equivalent circuit derived for the double‐injection process. Speculations are made on the general validity of Nyquist noise in nonlinear devices at high frequencies. In addition, generation‐recombination noise is suggested as the prime source of the low‐frequency noise
A flexible, simple thermostat for small objects and the temperature range of 100 deg K to 400 deg K
Thermostat for small objects with temperature range of 100 to 400
Search for Exotic Muon Decays
Recently, it has been proposed that the observed anomaly in the time
distribution of neutrino induced reactions, reported by the KARMEN
collaboration, can be interpreted as a signal from an exotic muon decay branch
mu+ to e+ X. It has been shown that this hypothesis gives an acceptable fit to
the KARMEN data if the boson X has a mass of m_X=103.9MeV/c^2, close to the
kinematical limit. We have performed a search for the X particle by studying
for the first time the very low energy part of the Michel spectrum in mu+
decays. Using a HPGe detector setup at the muE4 beamline at PSI we find
branching ratios BR(mu+ to e+ X)<5.7e-4 (90% C.L.) for most of the region
103MeV/c^2<m_X<105MeV/c^2.Comment: 9 page
Three-body decay of the d* dibaryon
Under certain circumstances, a three-body decay width can be approximated by
an integral involving a product of two off-shell two-body decay widths. This
``angle-average'' approximation is used to calculate the decay width
of the dibaryon in a simple model for the most
important Feynman diagrams describing pion emissions with baryon-baryon recoil
and meson retardation. The decay width is found to be about 0.006 (0.07, 0.5)
MeV at the mass of 2065 (2100, 2150) MeV for input dynamics derived from
the Full Bonn potential. The smallness of this width is qualitatively
understood as the result of the three-body decay being ``third forbidden''. The
concept of forbiddenness and the threshold behavior of a three-body
decay are further studied in connection with the decay of the dibaryon
where the idea of unfavorness has to be introduced.
The implications of these results are briefly discussed.Comment: 15 pages, RevTeX, two-column journal style, six figure
Collision damping in the pi 3He -> d'N reaction near the threshold
We present a simple quantum mechanical model exploiting the optical potential
approach for the description of collision damping in the reaction pi 3He -> d'N
near the threshold, which recently has been measured at TRIUMF. The influence
of the open d'N -> NNN channel is taken into account. It leads to a suppression
factor of about ten in the d' survival probability. Applications of the method
to other reactions are outlined.Comment: RevTeX4, 14 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses epsfig.sty, to appear
in Phys.Rev.
The Reaction 7Li(pi+,pi-)7B and its Implications for 7B
The reaction 7Li(pi+,pi-)7B has been measured at incident pion energies of
30-90 MeV. 7Li constitutes the lightest target nucleus, where the pionic charge
exchange may proceed as a binary reaction to a discrete final state. Like in
the Delta-resonance region the observed cross sections are much smaller than
expected from the systematics found for heavier nuclei. In analogy to the
neutron halo case of 11Li this cross section suppression is interpreted as
evidence for a proton halo in the particle-unstable nucleus 7B.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Quark Cluster Model Study of Isospin-Two Dibaryons
Based on a quark cluster model for the non-strange sector that reproduces
reasonably well the nucleon-nucleon system and the excitation of the
isobar, we generate a nucleon- interaction and present the predictions
for the several isospin two channels. The only attractive channels are
and , but not attractive enough to generate a resonance. If a resonance is
artificially generated and is required to have the observed experimental mass,
then our model predicts a width that agrees with the experimental result.Comment: 12 pages, 5 poscript figures available under request. To appear in
Phys. Rev.
- …
