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Zur vollständigen Charakterisierung der Hochstrom-Protonenquelle im Rahmen des FRANZ-Projektes war es notwendig, die Emittanz dieser zu bestimmen. Die vorliegende Arbeit befasst sich mit der Entwicklung zweier unterschiedlicher Emittanz-Messsysteme, welche in der Lage sind, im kritischen Einsatzbereich hinter der Ionenquelle die Emittanz zu bestimmen.
Die grundsätzliche Problematik der Emittanzmessung an Hochstrom-Ionenquellen liegt in den besonderen Anforderungen, die an diese Messsysteme gestellt werden. Zum einen müssen diese extrem hohe Strahlleistungsdichten und Strahlströme verarbeiten können, ohne Schaden zu nehmen. Zum anderen, was die besondere Herausforderung darstellt, ist es notwendig, dass sie unempfindlich gegenüber Hochspannungsüberschläge sind, da es naturgemäß an einer Ionenquelle zu Hochspannungsüberschlägen kommen kann, welche die sensible und teure Messelektronik schädigen können.
Aus diesem Grund wurde eine Pepperpot-Emittanz-Messanlage weiterentwickelt, welche komplett ohne hochspannungsempfindliche Elektronik auskommt. Diese besteht aus einem effizient wassergekühlten Messkopf mit einer Lochblende aus einer Wolframlegierung. Die Lochgeometrie wurde an die zu vermessende Ionenquelle angepasst. Anstelle einer Multichannelplate und / oder eines Leuchtschirms kommt eine mit Öl vorbehandelte Aluminiumplatte als Schirm zum Einsatz. Aufgrund der Wechselwirkung der, durch die Lochblende hindurch driftenden, Teilstrahlen mit der Oberfläche des Schirms, bilden sich auf diesem, mit bloÿem Auge sichtbare, Kohlenstoffabdrücke aus. Aus der Lage im Ortsraum und der Intensitätsverteilung der einzelnen Abdrücke kann die Phasenraum-Verteilung berechnet werden. Der Nachweis, dass die Intensitätsverteilung der Kohlenstoffabdrücke proportional zur Strahlstromdichtenverteilung eines jeden Abdrucks ist, wurde im Rahmen der Grundlagenuntersuchungen erbracht. Parallel wurde eine zweite, konventionelle Schlitz-Gitter-Emittanz-Messanlage entwickelt und aufgebaut.
Für die Auswertung der Rohdaten wurde eine Analysesoftware entwickelt, welche kompatibel zu beiden Messsystemen ist. Mittels dieser kann aus den Rohdaten die Phasenraum-Verteilung, die Emittanzen (Lage und Fläche) berechnet und in verschiedenen Schnittebenen graphisch dargestellt werden. Ein Hauptaspekt lag in der notwendigen Untergrundreduktion. Insbesondere bei der Analyse der Pepperpot-Schirme tritt bei der Digitalisierung derselben eine nicht physikalische Veränderung der Intensitätsverteilung der Kohlenstoffabdrücke auf. Die erfolgreiche Separation der Abdrücke vom Hintergrund war von entscheidender Bedeutung.
Mit beiden Emittanzmesssystemen konnte im Rahmen dieser Arbeit die Emittanz der FRANZ-Hochstrom-Protonenquelle bestimmt und Abhängigkeiten diverser Strahlparameter untersucht werden. Dabei zeigen die Ergebnisse beider Messsysteme eine sehr gute Übereinstimmung, was die Leistungsfähigkeit des Pepperpot-Messsystems in diesem Einsatzbereich bestätigt.
Für die Erzeugung der, im Rahmen verschiedener Emittanzmessungen, benötigten Plasmadichten wurde die eingespeiste Bogenleistung um 265% von 2.85kW auf 7.56kW erhöht. Die geringe Varianz der gemessenen Emittanzen lässt den Schluss zu, dass sich die Ionentemperatur im Rahmen der Messgenauigkeit in dem untersuchten Bereich nicht merklich ändert. Dies ist insofern bemerkenswert, da dies bedeutet, dass sich die Ionentemperatur nicht signifikant verändert hat, obwohl die Leistung im Plasma stark erhöht wurde.
Im Laufe der Grundlagenuntersuchungen des Pepperpot-Systems wurde festgestellt, dass es unter bestimmten Voraussetzungen zur Bildung von zwei Kohlenstoffabdrücken pro Blendenloch kommen kann. Mit Hilfe von Strahlsimulationen mittels dem Code IGUN sowie vergleichenden Emittanzmessungen konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass bei der Extraktion im sogenannten angepassten Fall zwei Teilstrahlen extrahiert werden. Durch eine geringfügige Erhöhung der Perveanz können diese beiden Teilstrahlen in einen laminaren Ionenstrahl überführt werden.
Im Hinblick auf die Konditionierung der FRANZ-LEBT wurde erstmals im Institut der Transport eines Hochstrom-Ionenstrahls durch einen Solenoiden sowie die Auswirkungen dessen auf die Strahlemittanz untersucht. Aufgrund des projektierten Protonenstroms von Ip = 50mA wurden diese Untersuchungen mit einem vergleichbaren Protonenstrom und einer Strahlenergie von E = 55keV durchgeführt.
Darüber hinaus wurde die zeitliche Entwicklung der Emittanz innerhalb eines Strahlpulses (80Hz,1ms,Ip = 56mA,It = 70mA) hinter dem Solenoiden untersucht. Eine Analyse zeigt, dass die Strahlemittanz innerhalb der Messgenauigkeit entlang des Pulsplateus nahezu konstant bleibt. Jedoch ändert sich die Divergenz des Strahlkerns innerhalb des Zeitraumes des Pulsanstiegs, aufgrund der Raumladungskompensation sowie des ansteigenden Stroms.
Eine möglichst realistische Abschätzung von Strahlenschäden ist von entscheidender Bedeutung im Strahlenschutz und für die Strahlentherapie. Die primären Strahlenschäden an der DNS werden heute mit Monte-Carlo-Codes berechnet. Diese Codes benötigen möglichst genaue Fragmentierungsquerschnitte verschiedenster biomolekularer Systeme als Eingangsparameter. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein Experiment aufgebaut, welches die Bestimmung der Fragmentierungsquerschnitte von Biomolekülen ermöglicht. Die einzelnen Baugruppen des Aufbaus wurden vor dem Beginn des Experimentes bezüglich ihrer Eigenschaften, die die Genauigkeit der Messergebnisse beeinflussen können, charakterisiert. Die Resultate dieser Experimente werden als Eingangsdaten für die Berechnung von primären strahleninduzierten Schäden in der DNS mit Hilfe von Monte-Carlo-Codes eingesetzt.
Eine besondere Herausforderung stellte die Präparation eines Überschallgasstrahls für biomolekulare Substanzen dar. Für die Präparation müssen die Targetsubstanzen zunächst in die Gasphase überführt werden. Im Falle von Biomolekülen ist diese Überführung auf Grund ihrer niedrigen Dampfdrücke bei Raumtemperatur und chemischen Reaktivität mit technischen Problemen verbunden. Die Probleme wurden mittels einer speziellen Konstruktion der Präparationseinrichtung, welche eine direkte Einleitung der Probensubstanzen in die vom Trägergas durchströmte Mischkammer ermöglicht, gelöst. Für die Genauigkeit der gemessenen Fragmentierungsquerschnitte spielen mehrere Faktoren eine Rolle. Neben dem Bewegungsprofil des Überschallgasstrahls, den kinetischen Energien der Fragmentionen und den ionenoptischen Eigenschaften des Flugzeitspektrometers beeinflusst die geometrische Beschaffenheit der Detektionszone maßgeblich die Genauigkeit des Experimentes. Die Position und Ausdehnung des sichtbaren Volumens sind nicht nur durch den Überlappungsbereich zwischen dem Elektronen- und dem Überschallgasstrahl bestimmt, sondern hängen auch von der kinetischen Energie der Fragmente ab. Für dessen Ermittlung wurden daher auch die Trajektorien der Fragmente simuliert. Bei den Experimenten an der PTB-Apparatur ist die frei wählbare Zeitdifferenz zwischen dem Auslösen eines Elektronenpulses und dem Absaugen der Fragmentionen ein wichtiger Messparameter. Ihr Einfluss auf die Messergebnisse wurde ebenfalls neben der Nachweiswahrscheinlichkeit des verwendeten Ionendetektors untersucht. Die Kalibrierung der Flugzeitspektren, d. h. die Umwandlung der Flugzeitspektren in Massenspektren erfolgte anhand der bekannten Flugzeitspektren von Edelgasen und Wasserstoff.
Nach der Charakterisierung der Einflussfaktoren und Kalibrierung der Flugzeitspektren wurden die energieabhängigen Fragmentierungsquerschnitte für Elektronenstoß von mehreren organischen Molekülen, darunter die von Modellmolekülen für die DNS-Bausteine gemessen. Die Flugzeitspektren von THF wurden mit der PTB-Apparatur für einige kinetische Energien der Elektronen in Abhängigkeit von der Zeitdifferenz zwischen dem Auslösen des Elektronenpulses und dem Starten der Analyse durchgeführt. Messungen von Pyrimidin wurden sowohl an der PTB-Apparatur als auch mit COLTRIMS durchgeführt. Die mit COLTRIMS gewonnenen Ergebnisse liefern wichtige Zusatzinformationen über die Fragmentierungsprozesse. COLTRIMS ermöglicht die Messung der zeitlichen Korrelationen zwischen den auftretenden Fragmentionen und damit tiefere Einblicke in die bei der Entstehung der Fragmente beteiligten Reaktionskanäle. Der Vorteil der PTB-Apparatur besteht darin, dass die relativen Auftrittswahrscheinlichkeiten aller Fragmentionen genauer bestimmt werden können.
The phenomenon of magnetism has been known to humankind for at least over 2500 years and many useful applications of magnetism have been developed since then, starting from the compass to modern information storage and processing devices. While technological applications are an important part of the continuing interest in magnetic materials, their fundamental properties are still being studied, leading to new physical insights at the forefront of physics. The magnetism of magnetic materials is a pure quantum effect due to the electrons that carry an intrinsic spin of 1/2. The physics of interacting quantum spins in magnetic insulators is the main subject of this thesis.We focus here on a theoretical description of the antiferromagnetic insulator Cs2CuCl4. This material is highly interesting because it is a nearly ideal realization of the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 Heisenberg model on an anisotropic triangular lattice, where the Cu(2+) ions carry a spin of 1/2 and the spins interact via exchange couplings. Due to the geometric frustration of the triangular lattice, there exists a spin-liquid phase with fractional excitations (spinons) at finite temperatures in Cs2CuCl4. This spin-liquid phase is characterized by strong short-range spin correlations without long-range order. From an experimental point of view, Cs2CuCl4 is also very interesting because the exchange couplings are relatively weak leading to a saturation field of only B_c=8.5 T. All relevant parts of the phase diagram are therefore experimentally accessible. A recurring theme in this thesis will be the use of bosonic or fermionic representations of the spin operators which each offer in different situations suitable starting points for an approximate treatment of the spin interactions. The methods which we develop in this thesis are not restricted to Cs2CuCl4 but can also be applied to other materials that can be described by the spin-1/2 Heisenberg model on a triangular lattice; one important example is the material class Cs2Cu(Cl{4-x}Br{x}) where chlorine is partially substituted by bromine which changes the strength of the exchange couplings and the degree of frustration.
Our first topic is the finite-temperature spin-liquid phase in Cs2CuCl4. We study this regime by using a Majorana fermion representation of the spin-1/2 operators motivated by theoretical and experimental evidence for fermionic excitations in this spin-liquid phase. Within a mean-field theory for the Majorana fermions, we determine the magnetic field dependence of the critical temperature for the crossover from spin-liquid to paramagnetic behavior and we calculate the specific heat and magnetic susceptibility in zero magnetic field. We find that the Majorana fermions can only propagate in one dimension along the direction of the strongest exchange coupling; this reduction of the effective dimensionality of excitations is known as dimensional reduction.
The second topic is the behavior of ultrasound propagation and attenuation in the spin-liquid phase of Cs2CuCl4, where we consider longitudinal sound waves along the direction of the strongest exchange coupling. Due to the dimensional reduction of the excitations in the spin-liquid phase, we expect that we can describe the ultrasound physics by a one-dimensional Heisenberg model coupled to the lattice degrees of freedom via the exchange-striction mechanism. For this one-dimensional problem we use the Jordan-Wigner transformation to map the spin-1/2 operators to spinless fermions. We treat the fermions within the self-consistent Hartree-Fock approximation and we calculate the change of the sound velocity and attenuation as a function of magnetic field using a perturbative expansion in the spin-phonon couplings. We compare our theoretical results with experimental data from ultrasound experiments, where we find good agreement between theory and experiment.
Our final topic is the behavior of Cs2CuCl4 in high magnetic fields larger than the saturation field B_c=8.5 T. At zero temperature, Cs2CuCl4 is then fully magnetized and the ground state is therefore a ferromagnet where the excitations have an energy gap. The elementary excitations of this ferromagnetic state are spin-flips (magnons) which behave as hard-core bosons. At finite temperatures there will be thermally excited magnons that interact via the hard-core interaction and via additional exchange interactions. We describe the thermodynamic properties of Cs2CuCl4 at finite temperatures and calculate experimentally observable quantities, e.g., magnetic susceptibility and specific heat. Our approach is based on a mapping of the spin-1/2 operators to hard-core bosons, where we treat the hard-core interaction by the self-consistent ladder approximation and the exchange interactions by the self-consistent Hartree-Fock approximation. We find that our theoretical results for the specific heat are in good agreement with the available experimental data.
In this thesis, we study some features of the quantum chromodynamics (QCD) phase diagram at purely imaginary chemical potential using lattice techniques. This is one of the possible methodologies to get insights about the situation at finite density, where the sign problem prevents direct investigations from first principles.
We focus, in particular, on the Roberge-Weiss plane, where the phase structure with two degenerate flavours is studied both in the light and in the heavy quark mass limit. On the lattice, any result is affected by cut-off effects and so are the positions of the two tricritical points m_{tric}^{1,2} separating the second-order intermediate mass region from the first-order triple light and heavy mass regions. Therefore, changing the lattice spacing 'a', the values of m_{tric}^1 and m_{tric}^2 will change. In order to find their position in the continuum limit – i.e. for 'a' going to 0 – they have to be located on finer and finer lattices. Typically, in lattice QCD (LQCD) simulations, the temperature T is tuned through the bare coupling β, on which 'a' depends, while keeping Nt fixed. Hence, it is common to implicitly refer to how fine the lattice is just mentioning its temporal extent.
Using both Wilson and staggered fermions, we simulate Nf=2 QCD on Nt=6 lattices, varying the quark bare mass from the chiral (m_{u,d} going to 0) to the quenched (m_{u,d} going to infinity) limit. For each quark mass, a thorough finite scaling analysis is carried out, taking advantage of two different but consistent methods. In this way we identify the order of the phase transition locating, then, the position of the tricritical points. In order to convert our measurements to physical units we fix the scale measuring the lattice spacing as well as the pion mass corresponding to the quark bare mass used. This allows a comparison between different discretisation, getting a first idea of how serious are cut-off effects.
To be able to make a comparison between two different discretisations, we added an RHMC algorithm with staggered fermions to the CL2QCD software, a GPU code based on OpenCL, which we released in 2014. A considerable part of our work has been invested in ameliorating and optimising CL2QCD, as well as in developing new analysis tools regularly used next to it. Just to mention one, the multiple histogram method has been implemented in a completely general way and we took advantage of it in order to obtain more precise results. Finally, in order to efficiently handle and monitor the hundreds of simulations that are typically concurrently run in finite temperature LQCD, a completely new Bash library of tools has been developed. We plan to release it as a byproduct of CL2QCD in the near future.
Lepton pairs emerging from decays of virtual photons represent promising probes of nuclear matter under extreme conditions of temperature and density. These etreme conditions can be reached in heavy-ion collisions in various facilities around the world. Hereby the collision energy in the center-of-mass system (√SNN) varies from few GeV (SIS) to the TeV (LHC). In the energy domain of 1 - 2 GeV per nucleon (GeV/u), the HADES experiment at GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt studies dielectrons and strangeness production.
Various reactions, for example collisions of pions, protons, deuterons and heavy-ions with nuclei have been studied since its installation in the year 2001. Hereby the so called DLS Puzzle was solved experimentally, with remeasuring C+C at 1 and 2 GeV/u and by careful studies of inclusive pp and pn reactions at 1.25 GeV. With these measurements the so-called reference spectrum was established. Measurements of e+ e− production Ar+KCl showed an enhancement on the dilepton spectrum above the trivial NN back-
ground. Theory predicts a strong enhancement of medium radiation with the system size, due to large production of fast decaying baryonic resonances like ∆ and N∗ . The heaviest system measured so far was Au+Au at a kinetic beam energy of 1.23 GeV/u. The precise determination of the medium radiation depends
on a precise knowledge of the underlying hadronic cocktail composed of various sources contributing to the measured dilepton spectrum. In general the medium radiation needs to be separated from contributions coming from long-lived particles, that decay after the freeze out of the system. For a more model independent
understanding of the dilepton cocktail the production cross sections of these particles need to measured independently. In the related energy regime the main contributers are π0 and η Dalitz decays. Both mesons have a dominant decay into two real photons and have been reconstructed successfully in this channel. Since HADES has no electromagnetic calorimeter the mesons can not be identified in this decay channel directly. In this thesis the capability of HADES to detect e+ e− pairs from conversions of real photons is demonstrated.
Therefore not only the conversion probability but also the resulting efficiencies are shown. Furthermore, the reconstruction method for neutral mesons will be explained and the resulting spectra are interpreted. The measurement of neutral pions is compared to the independent measured charged pion distribution, and
extrapolated to full phase space. An integrated approach is used to determine the η yield. Both measurement are compared to the world data and to theory model claculations. Finally, the measurements will be used together with the reconstructed dilepton spectra to determine the amount and the properties of in medium radiation in the Au+Au system.
The term superconductivity describes the phenomenon of vanishing electrical resistivity in a certain material, then called a superconductor, below a critical typically very low temperature. Since the discovery of superconductivity in mercury in 1911 many other superconductors have been found and the critical temperature below which superconductivity occurs could recently be raised to the temperatures encountered in a cold antarctic winter.
Superconductors are promising materials for applications. They can serve as nearly loss-free cables for energy transmission, in coils for the generation of high magnetic fields or in various electronic devices, such as detectors for magnetic fields. Despite their obvious advantages, the cost for using superconductors, however, depends a lot on the cooling effort needed to realize the superconducting state. Therefore, the search for a superconductor with critical temperature above room-temperature, which would avoid the need for any specialized cooling system, is one of the main projects of contemporary research in condensed matter physics.
While a theory of superconductivity in simple metals has already been developed in the 1950s, it has meanwhile been recognized that many superconductors are unconventional in the sense that their behavior does not follow the aforementioned theory. Unconventional superconductors differ from conventional superconductors mainly by the momentum- and real-space symmetry of the order parameter, which is associated with the superconducting state. While conventional superconductors have a uniform order parameter, unconventional superconductors can have an order parameter that bears structure. Of course, alternative theoretical descriptions have been suggested, but the discussion on the right theory for unconventional superconductivity has not yet been settled. Ultimately, this lack of a general theory of superconductivity prevents a targeted search for the room-temperature superconductor. Any new theoretical approach must, however, prove its value by correctly predicting the structure of the superconducting order parameter and further material properties.
In this work we participate in the search for a theory of unconventional superconductivity. We discuss the theory of superconductivity mediated by electron-electron interactions, which has been popular in the last few decades due to its success in explaining various properties of the copper-based superconductors that emerged in the 1980s. We give a detailed derivation of the so-called random phase approximation for the Hubbard model in terms of a diagrammatic many-body theory and apply it in conjunction with low-energy kinetic Hamiltonians, which we construct from first principles calculations in the framework of density functional theory. Density functional theory is an established technique for calculating the electronic and magnetic properties of materials solely based on their crystal structure. Its practical implementations in computer codes, however, do for example not describe complicated many-electron phenomena like the superconducting state that we are interested in here. Nevertheless, it can provide important information about the properties of the normal state of the material, which superconductivity emerges from. In our theory we use these information and approach the superconducting state from the normal state.
Such an interfacing of different calculational techniques requires a lot of implementation work in the form of computer code. Inclusion of the computer code into this work would consume by far too much space, but since some of the decisions on approximations in the calculational formalism are guided by the feasibility of the associated computer calculations, we discuss the numerical implementation in great detail.
We apply the developed methods to quasi-two-dimensional organic charge transfer salts and iron-based superconductors. Finally, we discuss implications of our findings for the interpretation of various experiments.
Magnetism is a beautiful example of a macroscopic quantum phenomenon. While known at least since the ancient Greeks, a microscopic theoretical explanation of magnetism could only be achieved with the advent of quantum mechanics at the beginning of the 20th century. Then it was understood that in a certain class of solids the famous Pauli exclusion principle leads to an effective interaction between the microscopic magnetic moments, i.e., the spins, which favors an ordered, and hence macroscopically magnetic, state. Nowadays, magnetic phenomena are used in a host of applications, and are especially relevant for information storage and processing technologies.
Despite the long history of the field, magnetic phenomena are still an active research topic. In particular, in the last decade the fields of spintronics and spin-caloritronics emerged, which manipulate the microscopic spins via charge and heat currents respectively. This opens new avenues to potential applications; including the possibility to use the magnetic spin degrees of freedom instead of charges as carriers of information, which could provide a number of advantages such as reduced losses and further miniaturization.
In this thesis we do not delve any further into the realm of possible applications. Instead we use sophisticated theories to explore the microscopic spin dynamics which is the basis of all such applications. We also focus on a particular compound: Yttrium-iron garnet (YIG), which is a ferrimagnetic insulator. This material has been widely used in experiments on magnetism over the last decades, and is a popular candidate for spintronic devices. Microscopically, the low-energy magnetic properties of YIG can be described by a ferromagnetic Heisenberg model. For spintronics and spin-caloritronics applications, it is however insufficient to only consider the magnetic degrees of freedom; one should also include the coupling of the spins to the elastic lattice vibrations, i.e., the phonons. Besides giving an overview on techniques used throughout the thesis, the introductory Ch. 1 provides a discussion of the microscopic Hamiltonian used to model the coupled spin-phonon system in the subsequent chapters.
The topic of Ch. 2 are the consequences of the magnetoelastic coupling on the low-energy magnon excitations in YIG. Starting from the microscopic spin-phonon Hamiltonian, we rigorously derive the magnon-phonon hybridization and scattering vertices in a controlled spin wave expansion. For the experimentally relevant case of thin YIG films at room temperature, these vertices are then used to compute the magnetoelastic modes as well as the magnon damping. In the course of this work, the damping of magnons in this system was also investigated experimentally using Brillouin light scattering spectroscopy. While comparison to the experimental data shows that the magnetoelastic interactions do not dominate the total magnon relaxation in the experimentally accessible regime, we are able to show that the spin-lattice relaxation time is strongly momentum dependent, thereby providing a microscopic explanation of a recent experiment.
In the final Ch. 3, we investigate a different phenomenon occurring in thin YIG films: Room temperature condensation of magnons. Prior work attributed this condensation process to quantum mechanics, i.e., it was interpreted as Bose-Einstein condensation. However, this is not satisfactory because at room temperature, the magnons in YIG behave as purely classical waves. In particular, the quantum Bose-Einstein distribution reduces to the classical Rayleigh-Jeans distribution in this case. In addition, the effective spin in YIG is very large. Therefore we start from the hypothesis that the room temperature magnon condensation is actually a new example of the kinetic condensation of classical waves, which has so far only been observed by imaging classical light in a photorefractive crystal. To distinguish this classical condensation from the quantum mechanical Bose-Einstein one, we refer to it as Rayleigh-Jeans condensation. To prove our claim, we consider the classical equations of motion of the coupled spin-phonon system. By eliminating the phonon degrees of freedom, we microscopically derive a non-Markovian stochastic Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation (LLG) for the classical spin vectors. We then use this LLG to perform numerical simulations of the magnon dynamics, with all parameters fixed by experiments. These simulations accurately reproduce all stages of the magnon time evolution observed in experiments, including the appearance of the magnon condensate at the bottom of the magnon spectrum. In this way we confirm our initial hypothesis that the magnon condensation is a classical Rayleigh-Jeans condensation, which is unrelated to quantum mechanics.
For the transport of high-intensity hadron beams in low-energy beam lines of linear accelerators, the compensation of space charge forces by the accumulation of particles of opposite charge is an important effect, reducing the required focusing strength and potentially the emittance growth due to space charge forces. In this thesis, space charge compensation was studied by including the secondary particles in particle-in-cell simulations.
For this purpose, a new electrostatic particle-in-cell code named bender was developed. The software was tested using known self-consistent solutions for an electron plasma confined in an external potential as well as for a KV distributed beam in a periodic focusing lattice. For the simulation of compensation, models for residual gas ionisation by proton and electron impact were implemented.
The compensation process was studied for a 120 keV, 100 mA proton beam transported through a short drift section. Various features in the particle distributions were identified, which can not explained by a uniform reduction in the electric field of the beam. These were tied to the presence of thermal electrons confined within the beam potential. Using the Poisson-Boltzmann equation, their distribution could be reproduced and their influence on the beam for a wider range of parameters studied. However, the observed temperatures show a significant numerical influence. The hypothesis was formed, that stochastical heating present in particle-in-cell simulations is the mechanism leading to the formation of the observed (partial) thermal equilibrium.
For the low-energy beam transport line of the Frankfurt neutron source FRANZ, bender was used to predict the pulse shaping in the novel ExB chopper system. The code was also used for the design and the study of an electron lens for the Integrable Optics Test Accelerator at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. Aberrations due to guiding center drifts and the strong electric field of the electron beam as well as the current limits in such a system were investigated.
In this thesis we explore the characteristics of strongly interacting matter, described by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD). In particular, we investigate the properties of QCD at extreme densities, a region yet to be explored by first principle methods. We base the study on lattice gauge theory with Wilson fermions in the strong coupling, heavy quark regime. We expand the lattice action around this limit, and carry out analytic integrals over the gauge links to obtain an effective, dimensionally reduced, theory of Polyakov loop interactions.
The 3D effective theory suffers only from a mild sign problem, and we briefly outline how it can be simulated using either Monte Carlo techniques with reweighting, or the Complex Langevin flow. We then continue to the main topic of the thesis, namely the analytic treatment of the effective theory. We introduce the linked cluster expansion, a method ideal for studying thermodynamic expansions. The complex nature of the effective theory action requires the development of a generalisation of the linked cluster expansion. We find a mapping between generalised linked cluster expansion and our effective theory, and use this to compute the thermodynamic quantities.
Lastly, various resummation techniques are explored, and a chain resummation is implemented on the level of the effective theory itself. The resummed effective theory describes not only nearest neighbour, next to nearest neighbour, and so on, interactions, but couplings at all distances, making it well suited for describing macroscopic effects. We compute the equation of state for cold and dense heavy QCD, and find a correspondence with that of non-relativistic free fermions, indicating a shift of the dynamics in the continuum.
We conclude this thesis by presenting two possible extensions to new physics using the techniques outlined within. First is the application of the effective theory in the large-$N_c$ limit, of particular interest to the study of conformal field theory. Second is the computation of analytic Yang Lee zeros, which can be applied in the search for real phase transitions.
In den vergangen Jahren wurde erkannt, dass eine Quantenfeldtheorie (QFT) namens Quantenchromodynamik (QCD) die richtige Theorie der starken Wechselwirkungen ist. QCD beschreibt erfolgreich die starken Wechselwirkungen, die Quarks zu Nukleonen und Nukleonen zu Atomkernen zusammenbinden. Jedoch ist die theoretische Beschreibung vieler Phänomene der starken Wechselwirkung aufgrund des starken Kopplungsverhaltens bei niedrigen Energien schwierig. Stoßexperimente mit Schwerionen sind ein möglicher Weg, um die charakteristischen Phänomene und Eigenschaften der QCD-Materie zu untersuchen. In Stoßexperimenten mit Schwerionen werden schwere (d.h. große) Atomkerne aufeinander geschossen, beispielsweise Gold (am RHIC) oder Blei (am CERN, LHC), mit einer ultrarelativistischen Energie √s im Schwerpunktsystem. Auf diese Art ist es möglich, eine große Menge von Materie mit hoher Energiedichte hervorzubringen. Das Ziel von Schwerionenkollisionen ist die Erzeugung und Charakterisierung einer makroskopischen Phase von freien Quarks und Gluonen im lokalen thermischen Gleichgewicht. Ein solcher Aggregatzustand kann neue Informationen über das QCD-Phasendiagramm und den QCD-Phasenübergang liefern. Man nimmt an, dass ein solcher Übergang stattfand, als sich die Materie des frühen Universums von einem Plasma aus Quarks und Gluonen (QGP) in ein Gas von Hadronen umwandelte...