1,600 research outputs found
Hydrogen slush density reference system
A hydrogen slush density reference system was designed for calibration of field-type instruments and/or transfer standards. The device is based on the buoyancy principle of Archimedes. The solids are weighed in a low-mass container so arranged that solids and container are buoyed by triple-point liquid hydrogen during the weighing process. Several types of hydrogen slush density transducers were developed and tested for possible use as transfer standards. The most successful transducers found were those which depend on change in dielectric constant, after which the Clausius-Mossotti function is used to relate dielectric constant and density
Instrumentation for hydrogen slush storage containers
Hydrogen liquid and slush tank continuous inventory during ground storag
Novel Nonreciprocal Acoustic Effects in Antiferromagnets
The possible occurrence of nonreciprocal acoustic effects in antiferromagnets
in the absence of an external magnetic field is investigated using both (i) a
microscopic formulation of the magnetoelastic interaction between spins and
phonons and (ii) symmetry arguments. We predict for certain antiferromagnets
the existence of two new nonreciprocal (non-time invariant) effects:
A boundary-condition induced nonreciprocal effect and the occurrence of
transversal phonon modes propagating in opposite directions having different
velocities. Estimates are given and possible materials for these effects to be
observed are suggested.Comment: Euro. Phys. Lett. (in press
Epidemiological and clinical features of travel-associated cryptosporidiosis
ABSTRACTData concerning the clinical and epidemiological features of travel-associated cryptosporidiosis are lacking. In order to investigate the impact of this disease on travellers' health, a retrospective study was conducted at the Institute of Tropical Medicine, Berlin. In total, 57 cryptosporidial infections were identified between 2000 and 2004, resulting in a prevalence of 2.9% in patients with travel-associated diarrhoea. Travel to south-central Asia, especially India, was associated with a higher prevalence of infection than was travel to other destinations. Clinically, the disease resembled giardiasis, but fever and arthralgias seemed to occur more frequently
FACT - Long-term Monitoring of Bright TeV-Blazars
Since October 2011, the First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) is operated
successfully on the Canary Island of La Palma. Apart from the proof of
principle for the use of G-APDs in Cherenkov telescopes, the major goal of the
project is the dedicated long-term monitoring of a small sample of bright TeV
blazars. The unique properties of G-APDs permit stable observations also during
strong moon light. Thus a superior sampling density is provided on time scales
at which the blazar variability amplitudes are expected to be largest, as
exemplified by the spectacular variations of Mrk 501 observed in June 2012.
While still in commissioning, FACT monitored bright blazars like Mrk 421 and
Mrk 501 during the past 1.5 years so far. Preliminary results including the Mrk
501 flare from June 2012 will be presented.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, presented at the 33rd ICRC (2013
FlashCam: a fully-digital camera for the medium-sized telescopes of the Cherenkov Telescope Array
The FlashCam group is currently preparing photomultiplier-tube based cameras
proposed for the medium-sized telescopes (MST) of the Cherenkov Telescope Array
(CTA). The cameras are designed around the FlashCam readout concept which is
the first fully-digital readout system for Cherenkov cameras, based on
commercial FADCs and FPGAs as key components for the front-end electronics
modules and a high performance camera server as back-end. This contribution
describes the progress of the full-scale FlashCam camera prototype currently
under construction, as well as performance results also obtained with earlier
demonstrator setups. Plans towards the production and implementation of
FlashCams on site are also briefly presented.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic
Ray Conference (ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherlands. All CTA contributions
at arXiv:1508.0589
FACT - Threshold prediction for higher duty cycle and improved scheduling
The First G-APD Cherenkov telescope (FACT) is the first telescope using
silicon photon detectors (G-APD aka. SiPM). The use of Silicon devices promise
a higher photon detection efficiency, more robustness and higher precision than
photo-multiplier tubes. Being operated during different light-conditions, the
threshold settings of a Cherenkov telescope have to be adapted to feature the
lowest possible threshold but also an efficient suppression of triggers from
night-sky background photons. Usually this threshold is set either by
experience or a mini-ratescan. Since the measured current through the sensors
is directly correlated with the noise level, the current can be used to set the
best threshold at any time. Due to the correlation between the physical
threshold and the final energy threshold, the current can also be used as a
measure for the energy threshold of any observation. This presentation
introduces a method which uses the properties of the moon and the source
position to predict the currents and the corresponding energy threshold for
every upcoming observation allowing to adapt the observation schedule
accordingly
Calibration and performance of the photon sensor response of FACT -- The First G-APD Cherenkov telescope
The First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) is the first in-operation test of
the performance of silicon photo detectors in Cherenkov Astronomy. For more
than two years it is operated on La Palma, Canary Islands (Spain), for the
purpose of long-term monitoring of astrophysical sources. For this, the
performance of the photo detectors is crucial and therefore has been studied in
great detail. Special care has been taken for their temperature and voltage
dependence implementing a correction method to keep their properties stable.
Several measurements have been carried out to monitor the performance. The
measurements and their results are shown, demonstrating the stability of the
gain below the percent level. The resulting stability of the whole system is
discussed, nicely demonstrating that silicon photo detectors are perfectly
suited for the usage in Cherenkov telescopes, especially for long-term
monitoring purpose
A Halomethane thermochemical network from iPEPICO experiments and quantum chemical calculations
Internal energy selected halomethane cations CH3Cl+, CH2Cl2+, CHCl3+, CH3F+, CH2F2+, CHClF2+ and CBrClF2+ were prepared by vacuum ultraviolet photoionization, and their lowest energy dissociation channel studied using imaging photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy (iPEPICO). This channel involves hydrogen atom loss for CH3F+, CH2F2+ and CH3Cl+, chlorine atom loss for CH2Cl2+, CHCl3+ and CHClF2+, and bromine atom loss for CBrClF2+. Accurate 0 K appearance energies, in conjunction with ab initio isodesmic and halogen exchange reaction energies, establish a thermochemical network, which is optimized to update and confirm the enthalpies of formation of the sample molecules and their dissociative photoionization products. The ground electronic states of CHCl3+, CHClF2+ and CBrClF2+ do not confirm to the deep well assumption, and the experimental breakdown curve deviates from the deep well model at low energies. Breakdown curve analysis of such shallow well systems supplies a satisfactorily succinct route to the adiabatic ionization energy of the parent molecule, particularly if the threshold photoelectron spectrum is not resolved and a purely computational route is unfeasible. The ionization energies have been found to be 11.47 ± 0.01 eV, 12.30 ± 0.02 eV and 11.23 ± 0.03 eV for CHCl3, CHClF2 and CBrClF2, respectively. The updated 0 K enthalpies of formation, ∆fHo0K(g) for the ions CH2F+, CHF2+, CHCl2+, CCl3+, CCl2F+ and CClF2+ have been derived to be 844.4 ± 2.1, 601.6 ± 2.7, 890.3 ± 2.2, 849.8 ± 3.2, 701.2 ± 3.3 and 552.2 ± 3.4 kJ mol–1, respectively. The ∆fHo0K(g) values for the neutrals CCl4, CBrClF2, CClF3, CCl2F2 and CCl3F and have been determined to be –94.0 ± 3.2, –446.6 ± 2.7, –702.1 ± 3.5, –487.8 ± 3.4 and –285.2 ± 3.2 kJ mol–1, respectively
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