Refine
Year of publication
- 2019 (290) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (135)
- Preprint (110)
- Doctoral Thesis (21)
- Conference Proceeding (18)
- Contribution to a Periodical (4)
- Habilitation (1)
- Master's Thesis (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (290) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (290)
Keywords
- Hadron-Hadron scattering (experiments) (4)
- Heavy Ion Experiments (4)
- Heavy-ion collisions (4)
- ALICE (3)
- LHC (2)
- Lattice QCD (2)
- NA61/SHINE (2)
- Phase Diagram of QCD (2)
- QCD equation of state (2)
- QCD phase diagram (2)
Institute
- Physik (290) (remove)
We present the first measurement of the proton–Ω correlation function in heavy-ion collisions for the central (0–40%) and peripheral (40–80%) Au + Au collisions at √sNN = 200 GeV by the STAR experiment at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC). Predictions for the ratio of peripheral collisions to central collisions for the proton–Ω correlation function are sensitive to the presence of a nucleon– bound state. These predictions are based on the proton– interaction extracted from (2 + 1)-flavor lattice QCD calculations at the physical point. The measured ratio of the proton–Ω correlation function between the peripheral (small system) and central (large system) collisions is less than unity for relative momentum smaller than 40 MeV/c. Comparison of our measured correlation ratio with theoretical calculation slightly favors a proton– bound system with a binding energy of ∼ 27 MeV.
We investigate the role of the Pauli Exclusion Principle (PEP) for light nuclei, at the examples of 12C and 16O. We show that ignoring the PEP does lead not only to a too dense spectrum at low energy but also to a wrong grouping into bands. Using a geometrical mapping, a triangular structure for 12C and a tetrahedral structure in 16O in the ground state is obtained by using the indistinguishably of the α-particles.
The main phospholipid (MPL) of Thermoplasma acidophilum DSM 1728 was isolated, purified and physico-chemically characterized by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)/differential thermal analysis (DTA) for its thermotropic behavior, alone and in mixtures with other lipids, cholesterol, hydrophobic peptides and pore-forming ionophores. Model membranes from MPL were investigated; black lipid membrane, Langmuir-Blodgett monolayer, and liposomes. Laboratory results were compared to computer simulation. MPL forms stable and resistant liposomes with highly proton-impermeable membrane and mixes at certain degree with common bilayer-forming lipids. Monomeric bacteriorhodopsin and ATP synthase from Micrococcus luteus were co-reconstituted and light-driven ATP synthesis measured. This review reports about almost four decades of research on Thermoplasma membrane and its MPL as well as transfer of this research to Thermoplasma species recently isolated from Indonesian volcanoes.
The last decades have brought tremendous progress in understanding the phase structure of the strongly interacting matter. This has been driven by studying heavy-ion collisions on the experimental side and Lattice QCD, functional approaches to QCD, perturbation theory and effective theories on the theoretical side. Of particular interest is the transition from hadrons to partonic degrees of freedom which is expected to occur at high temperatures or high baryon densities. These phases play an important role in the early universe and the core of neutron stars. Nowadays, the existence of a deconfined phase, i.e. Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP) and its phase transition at vanishing and small net-baryon densities, are well established. However, the situation at larger densities is less clear.
Complementary to the studies of matter at high temperatures and low net-baryon densities performed at RHIC and LHC, the proposed Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at the future FAIR facility, aims to explore the QCD phase diagram at very high baryon-net densities and moderate temperatures. The CBM research program includes the search for the deconfinement phase transition, the study of chiral symmetry restoration in super dense baryonic matter, the search for the critical endpoint, and the study of the nuclear equation of state at high densities. While other experiments (STAR-BES at BNL, BM@N at NICA) are suited to measure bulk observables, CBM is explicitly designed to access rare observables, such as multi-strange hadrons, dileptons, hypernuclei and charmonium. Therefore, a key feature of CBM is the very high interaction rate, exceeding those of contemporary and proposed nuclear collision experiments by several orders of magnitude. However, some of the rare probes have a complex signature, hidden in a background of several hundreds of charged tracks. This forbids a conventional, hardware-triggered readout; instead, the experiment combines self-triggered front-end electronics, fast and free-streaming data transport, online event reconstruction and online event selection.
The central detector for tracking and momentum determination of charged particles in the CBM experiment is the Silicon Tracking System (STS). It is designed to measure up to 700 charged particles in nucleus-nucleus collisions between 0.1 and 10 MHz interaction rate, to achieve a momentum resolution in 1 Tm dipole magnetic field better than 2%, and to be capable of identifying complex particle decays topologies, e.g., such with strangeness content. The STS comprises 8 tracking stations equipped with double-sided silicon microstrip sensors. Two million channels are read out with self-triggering electronics, matching the data streaming and on-line event analysis concept applied throughout the experiment. The detector’s functional building block consists of a silicon sensor, aluminum-kapton microcables and two front-end electronics boards integrated in a module. The custom-designed ASIC (STS-XYTER) implements the analog front-end, the digitizer and the generation of individual hit data for each signal.
Design of the front-end chip requires finding an optimal solution for time and input charge measurements with tight constraints: small area (58 μm channel pitch), low noise levels (below 1500 ENC(e− )), low power consumption (610 mW/channel), radiation hard architecture and speed requirements. Being a part of the first processing stage in the full readout and data acquisition chain, the characterization of the chip and its integration with the detector components is a crucial task. In this work, various methods and tools are established for testing and qualifying the ASIC analog front-end. A procedure for amplitude and timing calibration is developed using different functionalities of the chip. The procedure is optimized for our prototype system in order to achieve the best accuracy in the shortest amount of time. Results were verified using a gamma source and an external pulse generator, showing discrepancies below 5%.
Among the multiple operation requirements of the ASIC, the noise performance is of essential importance. The characterization of the chip noise is carried out as a function of a large number of parameters such as: low-voltage power regulators, input capacitance, shaping time, temperature and bond’s protective glue (glob-top). These studies allowed to optimize the ASIC configuration settings, to identify possible malfunctions in the low voltage powering scheme and to select possible glob-top materials to be used in the module assembly. Moreover, important differences are found among odd and even channels, which main cause was related to the bias scheme of the amplifiers of the two groups of channels. This effect has been corrected in the new version (v2.1) of the ASIC.
Despite the STS front-end electronics being located outside of the physics acceptance, they will be exposed to high fluxes of charged particles. Considering the SIS100 possible running scenario, the lifetime dose at the location of the electronics is expected not to exceed 800 krad. Consequently, the STS-XYTERv2 ASIC implements a radiation hard design based on dual-interlocked cells (DICE), and triple modular redundancy (TMR).
Multiple dedicated beam campaigns were carried out to evaluate the ASIC’s design in terms of immunity to single event upsets (SEU) errors and overall performance after a lifetime doses. The DICE cell SEU cross section was measured in a high-intensity proton beam. Result show a significant improvement of the SEU immunity in the STS-XYTERv2 compared to its predecessor, and allows to estimate the upset rate in the CBM running scenario, resulting in less than one SEU/ASIC/day.
The studies on the total ionizing dose (TID) show that the overall noise levels for the ASIC, at the end of the experiment lifetime, are expected to increase by approximately 40 – 60%. Moreover, they demonstrated that short periods of annealing at room temperature can favorably influence the noise performance of the chip.
The assembly and test of the STS modules, a complex process with multiple stages and a long learning curve, is illustrated in different parts of this work. The first prototype modules were built with the front-end board type B (FEBs-B), capable of reading out 128 channels for p and n side respectively. The studies were conducted with a relativistic proton beam of 1.7 GeV/c momentum at the COSY accelerator facility, Research Center Juelich, in March 2018. The campaign brought valuable insights to the development of an effective grounding and powering scheme for reading out the detectors. The signal-to-noise was measured for one of the prototype modules, resulting in values larger than 15 for both polarities. A deeper analysis into the collected data allowed the identification of a logic error in the ASIC that affected the readout rate and the quality of the data. This issue was corrected in the new version of the chip.
A precursor of the STS detector, named mini-STS (mSTS), has been built within the mCBM project carried out in FAIR Phase0. mSTS was built from 4 fully assembled detector modules. To ensure the proper operation of the ASICs that were used in the module assembly, it was required to develop a rigorous quality assurance procedure. A dedicated setup was built based on a custom designed pogo-pin station and a total of 339 chips were tested. More than 90% of good-quality and operational ASICs were obtained. In the mCBM beam campaign of March 2019, four detector modules were successfully operated in a close-to-final readout chain and valuable data were collected. The mSTS detector was exposed to the products of Ag+Au collisions at energies above 1.58 AGeV and overall interaction rates up to 106 , which resembles the real conditions of the CBM experiment.
Along this work, significant progress for the development of the STS detector modules was achieved. Techniques for characterization of the front-end electronics and the complete detector system were developed and worked out. They will be applied for QA of the components during the series production.
The Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) was designed and built to enhance the capabilities of the ALICE detector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). While aimed at providing electron identification and triggering, the TRD also contributes significantly to the track reconstruction and calibration in the central barrel of ALICE. In this paper the design, construction, operation, and performance of this detector are discussed. A pion rejection factor of up to 410 is achieved at a momentum of 1 GeV/c in p-Pb collisions and the resolution at high transverse momentum improves by about 40% when including the TRD information in track reconstruction. The triggering capability is demonstrated both for jet, light nuclei, and electron selection.
The ALICE experimentatthe LHC (CERN)iscurrently developinganew software framework designed for Run3: detector and software will havetocope with Pb–Pb collision rates 100 times higher than today, leadingtothe combinationofcore Online-Offline operations intoasingle framework called O2. The analysis code is expectedtorunonafew large Analysis Facilities counting 20k cores and sustaining a 100 GB/s throughput: this requiresaconjoint effort between the definitionofthe data format, the configurationofthe Analysis Facilities and the developmentofthe Analysis Framework. Wepresent the prototypeofanew Analysis Object Data format basedontimeframes and optimized for continuous readout. Such formatisdesigned tobeextensible and transported efficiently over the network. Wealso present the first iterationofthe Analysis Framework, basedonthe O2 Data Processing Layer and leveraging message passing acrossatopologyofprocesses. Wewill also illustrate the implementation and benchmarkingofacompatibility layer designedtomitigate the transition from the current event-oriented analysis modeltothe new time-oriented one. Finally,wewill giveastatus reportonthe integrationofthe Analysis Framework and Analysis Facilities for Run3into the current organized analysis model in ALICE.
Focused electron and ion beam-induced deposition (FEBID/FIBID) are direct-write techniques with particular advantages in three-dimensional (3D) fabrication of ferromagnetic or superconducting nanostructures. Recently, two novel precursors, HCo 3 Fe(CO) 12 and Nb(NMe 3 ) 2 (N-t-Bu), were introduced, resulting in fully metallic CoFe ferromagnetic alloys by FEBID and superconducting NbC by FIBID, respectively. In order to properly define the writing strategy for the fabrication of 3D structures using these precursors, their temperature-dependent average residence time on the substrate and growing deposit needs to be known. This is a prerequisite for employing the simulation-guided 3D computer aided design (CAD) approach to FEBID/FIBID, which was introduced recently. We fabricated a series of rectangular-shaped deposits by FEBID at different substrate temperatures between 5 ∘ C and 24 ∘ C using the precursors and extracted the activation energy for precursor desorption and the pre-exponential factor from the measured heights of the deposits using the continuum growth model of FEBID based on the reaction-diffusion equation for the adsorbed precursor.
The influence of temperature is regarded as particularly important for a structural health monitoring system based on ultrasonic guided waves. Since the temperature effect causes stronger signal changes than a typical defect, the former must be addressed and compensated for reliable damage assessment. Development of new temperature compensation techniques as well as the comparison of existing algorithms require high-quality benchmark measurements. This paper investigates a carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) plate that was fully characterized in previous research in terms of stiffness tensor and guided wave propagation. The same CFRP plate is used here for the analysis of the temperature effect for a wide range of ultrasound frequencies and temperatures. The measurement data are a contribution to the Open Guided Waves (OGW) platform: http://www.open-guided-waves.de. The technical validation includes initial results on the analysis of phase velocity variations with temperature and exemplary damage detection results using state-of-the-art signal processing methods that aim to suppress the temperature effect.
Steep rise of parton densities in the limit of small parton momentum fraction x poses a challenge for describing the observed energy-dependence of the total and inelastic proton-proton cross sections σtot/inelpp : considering a realistic parton spatial distribution, one obtains a too-strong increase of σtot/inelpp in the limit of very high energies. We discuss various mechanisms which allow one to tame such a rise, paying special attention to the role of parton-parton correlations. In addition, we investigate a potential impact on model predictions for σtotpp, related to dynamical higher twist corrections to parton-production process.