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Institute
Landau's Fermi liquid theory has been the main tool for investigating interactions between fermions at low energies for more than 50 years. It has been successful in describing, amongst other things, the mass enhancement in ³He and the thermodynamics of a large class of metals. Whilst this in itself is remarkable given the phenomenological nature of the original theory, experiments have found several materials, such as some superconducting and heavy-fermion materials, which cannot be described within the Fermi liquid picture. Because of this, many attempts have been made to understand these ''non Fermi liquid'' phases from a theoretical perspective. This will be the broad topic of the first part of this thesis and will be investigated in Chapter 2, where we consider a two-dimensional system of electrons interacting close to a Fermi surface through a damped gapless bosonic field. Such systems are known to give rise to non Fermi liquid behaviour. In particular we will consider the Ising-nematic quantum critical point of a two-dimensional metal. At this quantum critical point the Fermi liquid theory breaks down and the fermionic self-energy acquires the non Fermi liquid like {omega}²/³ frequency dependence at lowest order and within the canonical Hertz-Millis approach to quantum criticality of interacting fermions. Previous studies have however shown that, due to the gapless nature of the electronic single-particle excitations, the exponent of 2/3 is modified by an anomalous dimension {eta_psi} which changes, not only the exponent of the frequency dependence, but also the exponent of the momentum dependence of the self-energy. These studies also show that the usual 1/N-expansion breaks down for this problem. We therefore develop an alternative approach to calculate the anomalous dimensions based on the functional renormalization group, which will be introduced in the introductory Chapter 1. Doing so we will be able to calculate both the anomalous dimension renormalizing the exponent of the frequency dependence and the exponent renormalizing the momentum dependence of the self-energy. Moreover we will see that an effective interaction between the bosonic fields, mediated by the fermions, is crucial in order to obtain these renormalizations.
In the second part of this thesis, presented in Chapter 3, we return to Fermi liquid theory itself. Indeed, despite its conceptual simplicity of expressing interacting electrons through long-lived quasi-particles which behave in a similar fashion as free particles, albeit with renormalized parameters, it remains an active area of research. In particular, in order to take into account the full effects of interactions between quasi-particles, it is crucial to consider specific microscopic models. One such effect, which is not captured by the phenomenological theory itself, is the appearance of non-analytic terms in the expansions of various thermodynamic quantities such as heat-capacity and susceptibility with respect to an external magnetic field, temperature, or momentum. Such non-analyticities may have a large impact on the phase diagram of, for example, itinerant electrons near a ferromagnetic quantum phase transition. Inspired by this we consider a system of interacting electrons in a weak external magnetic field within Fermi liquid theory. For this system we calculate various quasi-particle properties such as the quasi-particle residue, momentum-renormalization factor, and a renormalization factor which relates to the self-energy on the Fermi surface. From these renormalization factors we then extract physical quantities such as the renormalized mass and renormalized electron Lande g-factor. By calculating the renormalization factors within second order perturbation theory numerically and analytically, using a phase-space decomposition, we show that all renormalization factors acquire a non-analytic term proportional to the absolute value of the magnetic field. We moreover explicitly calculate the prefactors of these terms and find that they are all universal and determined by low-energy scattering processes which we classify. We also consider the non-analytic contributions to the same renormalization factors at finite temperatures and for finite external frequencies and discuss possible experimental ways of measuring the prefactors. Specifically we find that the tunnelling density of states and the conductivity acquire a non-analytic dependence on magnetic field (and temperature) coming from the momentum-renormalization factor. For the latter we discuss how this relates to previous works which show the existence of non-analyticities in the conductivity at first order in the interaction.
The present work deals with the integration of variable renewable energy sources, wind and solar energy into the European and US power grid. In contrast to other networks, such as the gas supply mains, the electricity network is practically not able to store energy. Generation and consumption therefore always have tobe balanced. Currently, the load curve is viewed as a rigid boundary condition, which must be followed by the generation system. The basic idea of the approach followed here is that weather-dependent generation causes a shift of focus of the electricity supply. At high shares of wind and solar generation, the role of the rigid boundary condition falls to the residual load, that is, the remaining load after subtraction of renewable generation. The goal is to include the weather dependence as well as the load curve in the design of the future electricity supply.
After a brief introduction, the present work first turns to the underlying weather-, generation and load data, which form the starting point of the analysis. In addition, some basic concepts of energy economics are discussed, which are needed in the following.
In the main part of the thesis, several algorithms are developed to determine the load flow in a network with a high share of wind and solar energy and to determine the backup supply needed at the same time. Minimization of the energy needed from controllable power plants, the capacity variable power plants, and the capacity of storing serve as guiding principles. In addition, the optimization problem of grid extensions is considered. It is shown that it can be formulated as a convex optimization problem. It turns out that with an optimized, international transmission network which is about four times the currently available transmission capacity, much of the potential savings in backup energy (about 40%) in Europe can be reached. In contrast, a twelvefold increase the transmission capacity would be necessary for a complete implementation of all possible savings in dispatchable power plants.
The reduction of the dispatchable generation capacity and storage capacity, however, presents a greater challenge. Due to correlations in the generation of time series of individual countries, it may be reduced only with difficulty, and by only about 30%.
In the following, the influence of the relative share of wind and solar energy is illuminated and examined the interplay with the line capacitance. A stronger transmission network tends to lead to a higher proportion of wind energy being better integrated. With increasing line capacity, the optimal mix in Europe therefore shifts from about 70% to 80% wind. Similar analyses are carried out for the US with comparable results.
In addition, the cost of the overall system can be reduced. It is interesting at this point that the advantages for the network integration may outweigh higher production costs of individual technologies, so that it is more favourable from the viewpoint of the entire system to use the more expensive technologies.
Finally, attention is given to the flexibility of the dispatchable power plants. Starting from a Fourier-like decomposition of the load curve as it was a few years ago, when hardly renewable generation capacity was present, capacities of different flexibility classes of dispatchable power plant are calculated. For this purpose, it is assumed that the power plant park is able to follow the load curve without significant surplusses or deficits. From this examination, it is derived what capacity must at least be available without having to resort to a detailed database of existing power plants.
Assuming a strong European cooperation, with a stronger international transmission network, the dispatchable power capacity can be significantly reduced while maintaining security of supply and generating relatively small surplusses in dispatchable power plants.
Focus on quantum efficiency
(2014)
Technologies which convert light into energy, and vice versa, rely on complex, microscopic transport processes in the condensed phase, which obey the laws of quantum mechanics, but hitherto lack systematic analysis and modeling. Given our much improved understanding of multicomponent, disordered, highly structured, open quantum systems, this ‘focus on’ collection collects cuttingedge research on theoretical and experimental aspects of quantum transport in truly complex systems as defined, e.g., by the macromolecular functional complexes at the heart of photosynthesis, by organic quantum wires, or even photovoltaic devices. To what extent microscopic quantum coherence effects can (be made to) impact on macroscopic transport behavior is an equally challenging and controversial question, and this "focus on" collection provides a setting for the present state of affairs, as well as for the "quantum opportunities" on the horizon.
In this thesis, a novel 257 kHz chopper device was numerically developed, technically designed and experimentally commissioned; a 4-solenoid, low-energy ion beam transport line was numerically investigated, installed and experimentally commissioned; and a novel massless beam-separation system was numerically developed.
The chopper combines a pulsed electric field with a static magnetic field in an ExB or Wien-filter type field configuration. Chopped beam pulses with a 257 kHz repetition rate and rise times of 110 ns were experimentally achieved using a 14 keV helium beam.
Due to the achieved results, the complete LEBT line for the future Frankfurt Neutron Source FRANZ is ready to deliver a dc or a pulsed beam. At the same time, the LEBT section represents an attractive test stand for the study of low-energy ion beams. It combines magnetic lenses, which allow space-charge compensated beam transport, and a chopper system capable of producing short beam pulses in the hundred nanosecond range. Since these beam pulses are transported onwards, their longitudinal and transverse properties can be analyzed. The pulse duration and time of flight are well below the rise time for the space-charge compensation through residual gas ionization. This opens the possibility for dedicated investigations of the transport of short, low-energy beam pulses including longitudinal and transverse space-charge effects and of relevant issues like the dynamics of space-charge compensation and electron effects in short pulses.
Der Radiofrequenzquadrupol (RFQ) wird typischerweise als erstes beschleunigendes Element in Beschleunigeranlagen eingesetzt. Das elektrische Quadrupolfeld ermöglicht die gleichzeitige Fokussierung und Beschleunigung des Ionenstrahls. Zudem ist der RFQ in der Lage den Gleichstromstrahl von der Ionenquelle zu Teilchenpaketen (Bunche) zu formen, die von den nachfolgenden Driftröhrenbeschleunigern benötigt werden. Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war die Untersuchung zur Realisierbarkeit eines 325 MHz 4-rod RFQ Beschleunigers. Die Frequenz von 325 MHz stellt eine ungewöhnlich hohe Betriebsfrequenz für die 4-rod Struktur dar und wird z.B. für den Protonenlinac des FAIR Projektes benötigt. Ein Problem hierbei war, dass durch die bauartbedingten unsymmetrischen Elektrodenaufhängung und der hohen Frequenz ein, das Quadrupolfeld überlagerndes, Dipolfeld erzeugt wird. Dieses störende Feld kann z.B. zu einem Versatz der Strahlachse führen. Hierzu wurde die 4-rod Struktur in Simulationen grundlegend auf Einflüsse von verschiedenen Parametern auf die Resonanzfrequenz und das Dipolfeld untersucht. Es wurden Lösungsstrategien erarbeitet das Diopolfeld zu kompensieren und auf einen Prototypen angewendet. Zudem wurde das Verhalten höherer Schwingungsmoden dieser Struktur simuliert. In diesem Rahmen wurden auch Simulationen zu Randfeldern zwischen den 4-rod Elektroden und der Tankwand untersucht, um nachteilige Effekte für die Strahlqualität auszuschließen. Basierend auf den Simulationsergebnissen wurde ein Prototyp angefertigt. Dieser Prototyp wurde zur Demonstration der Betriebseigenschaften mit Leistungen bis 40 kW getestet. Hierbei wurde die Elektrodenspannung mittels Gammaspektroskopie bestimmt und daraus die Shuntimpedanz berechnet. Diese Werte wurden mit anderen Methoden der Shuntimpedanzbes- timmung verglichen. Außerdem wurden alternative RFQ Resonatorkonzepte ebenfalls auf ihre Realisierbarkeit für den Protonenlinac untersucht. Die Einflüsse verschiedener Parameter auf die Betriebsfrequenz, die Möglichkeiten des Frequenztunings und der Einstellung der longitudinalen Spannungsverteilung gefertigter Modelle wurden in einer Diskussion gegenübergestellt.
The laser-driven acceleration of protons from thin foils irradiated by hollow high-intensity laser beams in the regime of target normal sheath acceleration is reported for the first time. The use of hollow beams aims at reducing the initial emission solid angle of the TNSA source, due to a flattening of the electron sheath at the target rear side. The experiments were conducted at the PHELIX laser facility at the GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH with laser intensities in the range from 10^18 to 10^20 W/cm^2. We observed an average reduction of the half opening angle by (3.07±0.42)° or (13.2±2)% when the targets have a thickness between 12 to 14 μm. In addition, the highest proton energies were achieved with the hollow laser beam in comparison to the typical Gaussian focal spot.
The subatomic world is governed by the strong interactions of quarks and gluons, described by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD). Quarks experience confinement into colour-less objects, i.e. they can not be observed as free particles. Under extreme conditions such as high temperature or high density, this constraint softens and a transition to a phase where quarks and gluons are quasi-free particles (Quark-Gluon-Plasma) can occur. This environment resembles the conditions prevailing during the early stages of the universe shortly after the Big Bang.
The phase diagram of QCD is under investigation in current and future collider experiments, for example at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) or at the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR). Due to the strength of the strong interactions in the energy regime of interest, analytic methods can not be applied rigorously. The only tool to study QCD from first principles is given by simulations of its discretised version, Lattice QCD (LQCD).
These simulations are in the high-performance computing area, hence, the numerical aspects of LQCD are a vital part in this field of research. In recent years, Graphic Processing Units (GPUs) have been incorporated in these simulations as they are a standard tool for general purpose calculations today.
In the course of this thesis, the LQCD application cl2qcd has been developed, which allows for simulations on GPUs as well as on traditional CPUs, as it is based on OpenCL. cl2qcd constitutes the first application for Wilson type fermions in OpenCL.
It provides excellent performance and has been applied in physics studies presented in this thesis. The investigation of the QCD phase diagram is hampered by the notorious sign-problem, which restricts current simulation algorithms to small values of the chemical potential.
Theoretically, studying unphysical parameter ranges allows for constraints on the phase diagram. Of utmost importance is the clarification of the order of the finite temperature transition in the Nf=2 chiral limit at zero chemical potential. It is not known if it is of first or second order. To this end, simulations utilising Twisted Mass Wilson fermions aiming at the chiral limit are presented in this thesis.
Another possibility is the investigation of QCD at purely imaginary chemical potential. In this region, QCD is known to posses a rich phase structure, which can be used to constrain the phase diagram of QCD at real chemical potential and to clarify the nature of the Nf=2 chiral limit. This phase structure is studied within this thesis, in particular the nature of the Roberge-Weiss endpoint is mapped out using Wilson fermions.
Das Schwerionenkollisionen Programm der Beschleuniger RHIC und LHC gibt Hinweise auf einen neuen Zustand hadronischer Materie --- das Quark-Gluon Plasma. Dieses zeichnet sich durch eine zumindest partielle Aufhebung des confinements aus, welches besagt, dass keine freien Quarks beochtbar sind.
Aus einer Beschreibung der experimentellen Daten mit relativistischer Hydrodynamik folgen weitere Eigenschaften. So geht das in einer Schwerionenkollision erzeugte Quark-Gluon Plasma nach sehr kurzer Zeit, etwa 1 fm/c, in ein zumindest lokales thermisches Gleichgewicht über. Durch die Lorentzkontraktion der beiden Schwerionen erwartet man, dass der Zustand direkt nach der Kollision durch eine Impulsanisotropie in der transversal-longitudinalen Ebene bestimmt wird. Somit setzt das Erreichen eines thermischen Gleichgewichts zunächst eine Isotropisierung voraus. Bisherige Studien haben gezeigt, dass gluonische Moden bei dieser Isotropisierung durch Verursachung einer chromo-Weibel Instabilität eine entscheidende Rolle spielen.
Weiterhin verhält sich das Quark-Gluon Plasma wie eine fast perfekte Flüssigkeit. Eine Berücksichtigung dissipativer Terme in der hydrodynamischen Beschreibung erfordert das Hinzufügen weiterer Terme zu den entsprechenden Bewegungsgleichungen. Diese sind proportional zu Transportkoeffizienten, welche durch die zugrunde liegende mikroskopische Theorie festgelegt sind.
Diese Theorie ist Quantenchromodynamik. Sie beschreibt die starke Wechselwirkung der Quarks und Gluonen und ist ein fundamentaler Baustein des Standardmodells der Teilchenphysik. Da im Regelfall Prozesse der starken Wechselwirkung nichtperturbativ sind, beschreiben wir QCD unter Verwendung einer Gitterregularisierung. Diese beruht auf einer Diskretisierung der vierdimensionalen Euklidischen Raumzeit durch einen Hyperkubus mit periodischen Randbedingungen und ermöglicht ein Lösen der QCD mit numerischen Methoden. Allerdings ist die Anwendung der Gittereichtheorie auf Systeme im thermischen Gleichgewicht beschränkt und kann somit keine Prozesse beschreiben, die auf Echtzeit basieren.
Transportkoeffizienten entsprechen Proportionalitätskoeffizienten, die die Relaxation einer Flüssigkeit oder eben eines Quark-Gluon Plasmas von einer kleinen Störung beschreiben. Damit sind sie unmittelbar mit der Zeit verknüpft. Über Kubo-Formeln lassen sie sich jedoch mit Gleichgewichtserwartungswerten retardierter Korrelatoren verknüpfen und werden so in Gitter QCD zugänglich.
In der vorliegenden Dissertation berechnen wir den Transportkoeffizienten κ in Gittereichtheorie für das Yang-Mills Plasma. Dabei nutzen wir aus, dass dieser Transportkoeffizient eine triviale analytische Fortsetzung vom retardierten zum Euklidischen Korrelator besitzt, welcher direkt in Gittereichtheorie zugänglich ist. Es ist die erste nichtperturbative Berechnung eines Transportkoeffizienten in QCD ohne weitere Annahmen, wie die Maximum Entropie Methode oder Ansätze, zu treffen.
Tuning and optimization of the field distribution for 4-rod radio frequency quadrupole linacs
(2014)
In this thesis, the tuning process of the 4-rod Radio Frequency Quadrupole has been analyzed and a theory for the prediction of the tuning plate's influence on the longitudinal voltage distribution was developed together with RF design options for the optimization of the fringe fields.
The basic principles of the RFQ's particle dynamics and resonant behavior are introduced in the theory part of this thesis. All studies that are presented are based on the work on four RFQs of recent linac projects. These RFQs are described in one chapter. Here, the projects are introduced together with details about the RFQ parameters and performance. In the meantime two of these RFQs are in full operation at NSCL at MSU and FNAL. One is operating in the test phase of the MedAustron Cancer Therapy Center and the fourth one for LANL is about to be built. The longitudinal voltage distribution has been studied in detail with a focus on the influence of the RF design with tuning elements and parameters like the electrodes overlap or the distance between stems. The theory for simulation methods for the field flatness that were developed as part of this thesis, as well as its simulation with CST MWS have been analyzed and compared to measurements. The lumped circuit model has proven to predict results with an accuracy that can be used in the tuning process of 4-rod RFQs. Together with results from the tuning studies, the studies on the fringe fields of the 4-rod structure lead to a proposal for a 4-rod RFQ model with an improved field distribution in the transverse and longitudinal electric field.
Fast nuclei are ionizing radiation which can cause deleterious effects to irradiated cells. The modelling of the interactions of such ions with matter and the related effects are very important to physics, radiobiology, medicine and space science and technology. A powerful method to study the interactions of ionizing radiation with biological systems was developed in the field of microdosimetry. Microdosimetry spectra characterize the energy deposition to objects of cellular size, i.e., a few micrometers.
In the present thesis the interaction of ions with tissue-like media was investigated using the Monte Carlo model for Heavy-Ion Therapy (MCHIT) developed at the Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies. MCHIT is a Geant4-based application intended to benchmark the physical models of Geant4 and investigate the physical properties of therapeutic ion beams. We have implemented new features in MCHIT in order to calculate microdosimetric quantities characterizing the radiation fields of accelerated nucleons and nuclei. The results of our Monte Carlo simulations were compared with recent experimental microdosimetry data.
In addition to microdosimetry calculations with MCHIT, we also investigated the biological properties of ion beams, e.g. their relative biological effectiveness (RBE), by means of the modified Microdosimetric-Kinetic model (MKM). The MKM uses microdosimetry spectra in describing cell response to radiation. MCHIT+MKM allowed us to study the physical and biological properties of ion beams. The main results of the thesis are as follows:
MCHIT is able to describe the spatial distribution of the physical dose in tissue-like media and microdosimetry spectra for ions with energies relevant to space research and ion-beam cancer therapy; MCHIT+MKM predicts a reduction of the biological effectiveness of ions propagating in extended medium due to nuclear fragmentation reactions; We predicted favourable biological dose-depth profiles for monoenergetic helium and lithium beams similar to the one for carbon beam. Well-adjusted biological dose distributions for H-1, He-4, C-12 and O-16 with a very flat spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP) plateau were calculated with MCHIT+MKM; MCHIT+MKM predicts less damage to healthy tissues in the entrance channel for SOBP He-4 and C-12 beams compared to H-1 and O-16 ones. No definitive advantages for oxygen ions with respect to carbon were found.
The PhD addresses the feasibility of reconstructing open charm mesons with the Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment, which will be installed at the FAIR accelerator complex at Darmstadt/Germany. The measurements will be carried out by means of a dedicated Micro Vertex Detector (MVD), which will be equipped with CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS). The feasibility of reconstructing the particles with a proposed detector setup was studied.
To obtain conclusive results, the properties of a MAPS prototype were measured in a beam test at the CERN-SPS accelerator. Based on the results achieved, a dedicated simulation software for the sensors was developed and implemented into the software framework of CBM (CBMRoot). Simulations on the reconstruction of D0-mesons were carried out. It is concluded that the reconstruction of those particles is possible.
The PhD introduces the physics motivation of doing open charm measurements, represents the results of the measurements of MAPS and introduces the innovative simulation model for those sensors as much as the concept and results of simulations of the D0 reconstruction.
Low-energy effective models for two-flavor quantum chromodynamics and the universality hypothesis
(2014)
Die Untersuchung der Natur auf extremen Längenskalen hat seit jeher zu bahnbrechenden Einsichten und Innovationen geführt. Insbesondere zu unserem heutigen Verständnis, dass Nukleonen (Protonen und Neutronen) aus Quarks zusammengesetzt sind, die infolge der starken Wechselwirkung, vermittelt durch Gluonenaustausch, gebunden sind. Mit dem Aufkommen des Quarkmodells wurde bald die Quantenchromodynamik (QCD) erfolgreich in der Beschreibung vieler messbarer Eigenschaften der starken Wechselwirkung. Um es mit Goethe zu sagen: mit den modernen Hochenergie-Beschleuniger-Experimenten wird versucht unser Verständnis davon zu verbessern, was die Welt im Innersten zusammenhält. Am Large Hadron Collider (LHC) werden beispielsweise Protonen derart beschleunigt und miteinander zur Kollision gebracht, dass bislang unerreichte Energiedichten auftreten, infolge derer Temperatur und baryochemisches Potential Werte annehmen, die mit denen des frühen Universums vergleichbar sind. Es gibt sowohl theoretische als auch experimentelle Hinweise darauf, dass hadronische Materie mit zunehmender Temperatur und/oder zunehmendem baryochemischen Potentials einen Phasenübergang durchläuft, hin zu einem exotischen Zustand, der als Quark-Gluon-Plasma bekannt ist. Dieser Übergang wird begleitet von einem sogenannten chiralen Übergang. Es ist eine wichtige Frage, ob es sich bei diesem chiralen Übergang um einen echten Phasenübergang (von erster bzw. zweiter Ordnung) handelt, oder ob ein sogenannter crossover vorliegt. Einige Resultate deuten auf einen crossover für verschwindendes baryochemisches Potential und einen Phasenübergang erster Ordnung für verschwindende Temperatur hin, lassen jedoch noch keinen endgültigen Schluss zu, ob dies tatsächlich der Realität entspricht. Wenn ja, so liegt die Annahme nahe, dass ein kritischer Endpunkt existiert, an dem der chirale Übergang von zweiter Ordnung ist. In der Tat existiert ein kritischer Endpunkt in einigen theoretischen Zugängen zur Beschreibung des chiralen Phasenübergangs, deren Aussagekraft seit jeher lebhaft diskutiert wird. Ein zentrales Ziel des zukünftigen CBM-Experiments an der GSI in Darmstadt ist es, die Existenz im Experiment zu überprüfen.
In der Nähe des QCD-(Phasen)übergangs ist es die Abwesenheit jeglicher perturbativer Entwicklungsparameter, die exakte analytische Berechnungen verbietet. Das gleiche gilt für realistische effektive Modelle für QCD. Nichtperturbative Methoden sind daher unverzichtbar für die Untersuchung des QCD-Phasendiagramms. Zu den populärsten dieser Zugänge gehören Gitter-QCD, Resummierungsverfahren, der Dyson-Schwinger-Formalismus, sowie die Funktionale Renormierungsgruppe (FRG). All diese Methoden ergänzen sich gegenseitig und werden zum Teil auch miteinander kombiniert. Eine der Stärken der FRG-Methode ist, dass sie nicht nur erfolgreich auf effektive Modelle angewendet werden kann, sondern auch auf QCD selbst. Für letztere Ab-Initio-Rechnungen sind die aus effektiven Modellen für QCD gewonnenen Resultate von grossem Wert.
Der Schwerpunkt der vorliegenden Arbeit liegt auf der Fragestellung von welcher Ordnung der chirale Phasenübergang im Fall von genau zwei leichten Quarksorten ist. Problemstellungen wie die Suche nach einer Antwort auf die Frage nach den Bedingungen für die Existenz eines Phasenübergangs zweiter Ordnung, die Bestimmung der Universalitätsklasse in diesem Fall etc. erfordern Wissen aus verschiedenen Gebieten.
Kapitel 1 besteht aus einer allgemeinen Einleitung.
In Kapitel 2 stellen wir zunächst einige allgemeine Aspekte von Phasenübergängen dar, die von besonderer Relevanz für das Verständnis des Renormierungsgruppen-Zugangs zu ebendiesen sind. Unser Fokus liegt hierbei auf einer kritischen Untersuchung der Universalitätshypothese. Insbesondere die Rechtfertigung des linearen Sigma-Modells als effektive Theorie für den chiralen Ordnungsparameter beruht auf der Gültigkeit selbiger.
Kapitel 3 beschäftigt sich mit dem chiralen Phasenübergang von einem allgemeinen Standpunkt aus. Wir ergünzen wohlbekannte Fakten durch eine detaillierte Diskussion der sogenannten O(4)-Hypothese. Die Überprüfung der Gültigkeit selbiger wird schließlich in Kapitel 6 und 7 in Angriff genommen.
In Kapitel 4 stellen wir die von uns benutzte FRG-Methode vor. Außerdem diskutieren wir den Zusammenhang zwischen effektiven Theorien für QCD und der QCD selbst.
Kapitel 5 behandelt ein mathematisches Thema, das für alle unserer Untersuchungen unabdingbar ist, nämlich die systematische Konstruktion polynomialer Invarianten zu einer gegebenen Symmetrie. Wir präsentieren einen einfachen, jedoch neuartigen, Algorithmus für die praktische Konstruktion von Invarianten einer gegebenen polynomialen Ordnung.
Kapitel 6 widmet sich Renormierungsgruppen-Studien einer Reihe dimensional reduzierter Theorien. Von zentralem Interesse ist hierbei das lineare Sigma-Modell, insbesondere in Anwesenheit der axialen Anomalie. Es stellt sich heraus, dass die Fixpunkt-Struktur des letzteren vergleichsweise kompliziert ist und ein tieferes Verständnis der zugrundeliegenden Methode sowie ihrer Annahmen erfordert. Dies führt uns zu einer sorgfältigen Analyse der Fixpunkt-Struktur von Modellen verschiedenster Symmetrien. Im Zusammenhang mit der Untersuchung des Einflusses von Vektor- und Axial-Vektor-Mesonen stoßen wir hierbei auf eine neue Universalitä}tsklasse.
Während wenig Spielraum für die Wahl der Symmetriegruppe der effektiven Theorie für den chiralen Ordnungsparameter besteht, ist die Identifizierung der Ordnungsparameter-Komponenten mit den relevanten mesonischen Freiheitsgraden hochgradig nichttrivial. Diese Wahl entspricht der Wahl einer Darstellung der Gruppe und kann zur Zeit nicht eindeutig aus der QCD hergeleitet werden. Es ist daher unerlässlich, verschiedene Möglichkeiten auszutesten. Eine wohlbekannte Wahl besteht darin, das Pion und seinen chiralen Partner, das Sigma-Meson, der O(4)-Darstellung für SU(2)_A x SU(2)_V zuzuordnen, welche einen Phasenübergang zweiter Ordnung erlaubt. Dieses Szenario ist jedoch nur dann sinnvoll, wenn nahe der kritischen Temperatur alle anderen Mesonen entsprechend schwer sind. Im Fall von genau zwei leichten Quarkmassen erfordert dies eine hinreichend große Anomaliestärke. Berücksichtigt man zusätzlich zum Pion und Sigma-Meson auch das Eta-Meson und das a_0-Meson, liefern unsere derzeitigen expliziten Rechnungen keinen Nachweis für die Existenz eines Phasenübergang zweiter Ordnung. Stattdessen spricht die Abwesenheit eines physikalischen (hinsichtlich der Massen) infrarot-stabilen Fixpunktes für einen fluktuationsinduzierten Phasenübergang erster Ordnung. Dieses Ergebnis ist auch zu erwarten (jedoch nicht impliziert), allein durch die Existenz zweier quadratischer Invarianten. Es besteht jedoch immer noch eine hypothetische Chance auf einen Phasenübergang zweiter Ordnung in der SU(2)_A x U(2)_V -Universalitätsklasse. Dies wäre der Fall, wenn der entsprechende von uns gefundene unphysikalische infrarot-stabile Fixpunkt physikalisch werden sollte in höherer Trunkierungsordnung. Interessanterweise finden wir bei endlicher Temperatur für gewisse Parameter einen Phasenübergang zweiter Ordnung. Es ist unklar, ob diese Wahl der Parameter in den Gültigkeitsbereich der dimensional reduzierten Theorie fällt.
Erst vor kurzem (Ende September 2013) wurde die Existenz eines infrarot-stabilen U(2)_A x U(2)_V-symmetrischen Fixpunkts durch Pelissetto und Vicari verifiziert (die zugehörige anomale Dimension ist mit 0.12 angegeben). Dieses Resultat war sehr
überraschend, da für zwei leichte Quarksorten und abwesende Anomalie ein Phasenübergang erster Ordnung relativ gesichert erschien, insbesondere durch die Epsilon-Entwicklung. Offensichtlich versagt letztere jedoch im Limes D=3, also für drei räumliche Dimensionen, da lediglich Fixpunkte gefunden werden können, die auch nahe D=4 existieren. Inspiriert durch diesen wichtigen Fund führen wir eine FRG-Fixpunktstudie in lokaler Potential-Näherung und hoher Trunkierungsordnung (bis zu zehnter Ordnung in den Feldern) durch. Die Stabilitätsanalyse besitzt jedoch leider keine Aussagekraft, da die Stabilitätsmatrix für den Gaußschen Fixpunkt marginale Eigenwerte besitzt. Wir sind überzeugt davon, dass dies nicht mehr der Fall ist, wenn man über die lokale Potential-Näherung hinausgeht und eine nichtverschwindende anomale Dimension zulässt. Die bisherigen Resultate verdeutlichen die Limitierungen der lokalen Potential-Näherung und der Epsilon-Entwicklung, auf denen unsere Untersuchungen zur Universalitätshypothese in weiten Teilen beruhen. Systematische Untersuchungen der Fixpunktstruktur von Modellen mit acht Ordnungsparameter-Komponenten wurden in der Literatur im Rahmen der Epsilon-Entwicklung durchgeführt und im Rahmen dieser Dissertation innerhalb der lokalen Potential-Näherung. Die meisten der Vorhersagen der Epsilon-Entwicklung konnten bestätigt werden, einige hingegen werden in Frage gestellt durch das Auftauchen marginaler Stabilitätsmatrix-Eigenwerte.
Einige wichtige Fragestellungen können nicht im Rahmen einer dimensional reduzierten Theorie behandelt werden, da die explizite Temperaturabhängigkeit in diesem Fall eliminiert wurde.
Insbesondere ist es in diesem Fall nicht möglich, die Stärke eines Phasenübergangs erster Ordnung vorherzusagen, da diese von Observablen (Meson-Massen und die Pion-Zerfallskonstante im Vakuum) abhängen, an die man bei verschwindender Temperatur fitten muss. Dieser Umstand führt uns zu solchen FRG-Studien, in denen die Temperatur als expliziter Parameter verbleibt.
Ein beträchtlicher Teil der für die vorliegende Dissertation zur Verfügung stehenden Arbeitszeit wurde darauf verwendet, eigene Implementierungen geeigneter Algorithmen zur numerischen Lösung der auftretenden partiellen Differentialgleichungen zu finden. Exemplarische Routinen (welche ausschließlich wohlbekannte Methoden nutzen) sind in einem Anhang zur Verfügung gestellt. Das Hauptziel der vorliegenden Arbeit, die Anwendung auf effektive Modelle für QCD, wird in Kapitel 7 präsentiert. Unsere (vorläufigen) FRG-Studien des linearen Sigma-Modells mit axialer Anomalie bei nichtverschwindender Temperatur erlauben verschiedene Szenarien. Sowohl einen extrem schwach ausgeprägten, als auch einen sehr deutlichen Phasenübergang erster Ordnung, ganz abhängig von der Wahl der Ultraviolett-Abschneideskala und oben genannter Parameter. Sogar ein Phasenübergang zweiter Ordnung scheint möglich für gewisse Parameterwerte. Um verlässliche Schlussfolgerungen zu ziehen, sind weitere Untersuchungen nötig und bereits im Gange. In Kapitel 7 verifizieren wir außerdem bereits bekannte numerische Resultate für das Quark-Meson-Modell.
This thesis is structured into 7 chapters:
• Chapter 2 gives an overview of the ultrashort high intensity laser interaction with matter. The laser interaction with an induced plasma is described, starting from the kinematics of single electron motion, followed by collective electron effects and the ponderamotive motion in the laser focus and the plasma transparency for the laser beam. The three different mechanisms prepared to accelerate and propagate electrons through matter are discussed. The following indirect acceleration of protons is explained by the Target Normal Sheath Acceleration (TNSA) mechanism. Finally some possible applications of laser accelerated protons are explained briefly.
• Chapter 3 deals with the modeling of geometry and field mapping of magnetic lens. Initial proton and electron distributions, fitted to PHELIX measured data are generated, a brief description of employed codes and used techniques in simulation is given, and the aberrations at the solenoid focal spot is studied.
• Chapter 4 presents a simulation study for suggested corrections to optimize the proton beam as a later beam source. Two tools have been employed in these suggested corrections, an aperture placed at the solenoid focal spot as energy selection tool, and a scattering foil placed in the proton beam to smooth the radial energy beam profile correlation at the focal spot due to chromatic aberrations. Another suggested correction has been investigated, to optimize the beam radius at the focal spot by lens geometry controlling.
• Chapter 5 presents a simulation study for the de-neutralization problem in TNSA caused by the fringing fields of pulsed magnetic solenoid and quadrupole. In this simulation, we followed an electrostatic model, wherethe evolution of both, self and mutual fields through the pulsed magnetic solenoid could be found, which is not the case in the quadrupole and only the growth of self fields could be found. The field mapping of magnetic elements is generated by the Matlab program, while the TraceWin code is employed to study the tracking through magnetic elements.
• Chapter 6 describes the PHELIX laser parameters at GSI with chirp pulse amplification technique (CPA), and Gafchromic Radiochromic film RCF) as a spatial energy resolver film detector. The results of experiments with laser proton acceleration, which were performed in two experimental areas at GSI (Z6 area and PHELIX Laser Hall (PLH)), are presented in section 6.3.
• Chapter 7 includes the main results of this work, conclusions and gives a perspective for future experimental activities.
Studies on the focusing performance of a Gabor lens depending on nonneutral plasma properties
(2013)
The concept of the Gabor lens goes back to an idea by Dennis Gabor, who proposed a magnetron-type trap as an effective diverging lens for electron beams (collecting lens for positive ion beams).
Electrons confined inside the lens volume by orthogonal magnetic and electric fields, create an electric space charge field that causes a radial symmetric focusing force on an ion beam passing through the lens volume.
Since the beginning of the 1990s, a new design of this lens type as well as numerical models to describe the confined plasma cloud have been developed at the Institute for Applied Physics (IAP, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt).
Thanks to an improved understanding of the plasma confinement as a function of the external fields, two lenses have successfully been tested for low beam currents and remain in operation.
In the scope of this work, the performance of a prototype Gabor lens for the transport of intense, i.e. space charge dominated ion beams, was investigated at the High Current Test Injector (HOSTI) of GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH for the first time.
To ensure an optimal focusing performance of the Gabor lens a homogeneous and stable electron confinement is required. Therefore, new non-interceptive diagnostic methods were developed to investigate the parameters and state of the confined nonneutral plasma column as a function of the external fields.
An essential part of the studies was the time-resolved diagnostic of an occurring plasma instability and the determination of the electron temperature via optical spectroscopy. The latter necessitated the detailed investigation of atomic excitation as well as the measurement of optical-emission cross sections.
A comparison of the results from both experiments i.e. the beam transport measurements at GSI and the diagnostic experiments performed at IAP concerning the plasma state, gave first indications of possible interaction processes between the nonneutral plasma and the ion beam.
In this thesis hard probes are studied in the partonic transport model BAMPS (Boltzmann Approach to MultiParton Scatterings). Employing Monte Carlo techniques, this model describes the 3+1 dimensional evolution of the quark gluon plasma phase in ultra-relativistic heavy-ion collisions by propagating all particles in space and time and carrying out their collisions according to the Boltzmann equation. Since hard probes are produced in hard processes with a large momentum transfer, the value of the running coupling is small and their interactions should be describable within perturbative QCD (pQCD). This work focuses on open heavy flavor, but also addresses the suppression of light parton jets, in particular to highlight differences due to the mass. For light partons, radiative processes are the dominant contribution to their energy loss. For heavy quarks, we show that also binary interactions with a running coupling and an improved Debye screening matched to hard-thermal-loop calculations play an important role. Furthermore, the impact of the mass in radiative interactions, prominently named the dead cone effect, and the interplay with the Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal (LPM) effect are studied in great detail. Since the transport model BAMPS has access to all medium properties and the space time information of heavy quarks, it is the ideal tool to study the dissociation and regeneration of J/psi mesons, which is also investigated in this thesis.
Heterodyne array receivers are employed in radio astronomy to reduce the observing time needed for mapping extended sources. One of the main factors limiting the amount of pixels in terahertz receivers is the difficulty of generating a sufficient amount of local oscillator power. Another challenge is efficient diplexing and coupling of local oscillator and signal power to the detectors. These problems are attacked in this dissertation by proposing the application of two vacuum electronic terahertz amplifier types for the amplification of the LO-signal and by introducing a new method for finding the defects in a quasioptical diplexer.
A traveling wave tube (TWT) design based on a square helix slow wave structure (SWS) at 825 GHz is introduced. It exhibits a simulated small-signal gain of 18.3 dB and a 3-dB bandwidth of 69 GHz. In order to generate LO-power at even higher frequencies, the operation of an 850-GHz square helix TWT as a frequency doubler has been studied. A simulated conversion efficiency of 7% to 1700 GHz, comparable with the state-of-art solid-state doublers, has been achieved for an input power of 25 mW.
The other amplifier type discussed in this work is a 1-THz cascade backward wave amplifier based on a double corrugated waveguide SWS. Specifically, three input/output coupler types between a rectangular waveguide and the SWS are presented. The structures have been realized with microfabrication, and the results of loss measurements at 1 THz will be shown.
Diplexing of the LO- and signal beams is often performed with a Martin-Puplett interferometer. Misalignment and deformation of the quasioptical components causes the polarization state of the output signal to be incorrect, which leads to coupling losses. A ray-tracing program has been developed for studying the influence of such defects. The measurement results of the diplexer of a multi-pixel terahertz receiver operated at the APEX telescope have been analyzed with the program, and the results are presented. The program allows the quasioptical configuration of the diplexer to be corrected in order to obtain higher receiver sensitivity.
In this thesis, Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) interferometry is used together with the Ultrarelativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) to analyse the time and space structure of heavy-ion collisions.
The first chapter after the introduction gives an overview of the different types of models used in the field of heavy-ion collisions and a introduction of the UrQMD model in more detail. The next chapter explains the basics of Hanbury-Brown-Twiss correlations, including azimuthally sensitive HBT (asHBT).
Results section:
4. Charged Multiplicities from UrQMD
5. Formation time via HBT from pp collisions at LHC
6. HBT analysis of Pb+Pb collisions at LHC energies
7. HBT scaling with particle multiplicity
8. Compressibility from event-by-event HBT
9. Tilt in non-central collisions
10. Shape analysis of strongly-interacting systems
11. Measuring a twisted emission geometry
This thesis covers the standard integrated HBT analyses, extracting the Pratt-Bertsch radii, at LHC energies. The analyses at these energies showed a too soft expansion in UrQMD probably related to the absence of a partonic phase in UrQMD. The most promising results in this thesis at these energies are the restriction of the formation time to a value smaller than 0.8 fm/c and furthermore, the results from the asHBT analyses. In simulations of non-central heavy-ion collisions at energies of Elab= 6, 8 and 30 AGeV the validity of the formulae to calculate the tilt angle via asHBT has been checked numerically, even for the case of non-Gaussian, flowing sources. On this basis has been developed and test in the course of this thesis that allows to measure a scale dependent tilt angle experimentally. The signal should be strongest at FAIR energies.
Spin waves in yttrium-iron garnet has been the subject of research for decades. Recently the report of Bose-Einstein condensation at room temperature has brought these experiments back into focus. Due to the small mass of quasiparticles compared to atoms for example, the condensation temperature can be much higher. With spin-wave quasiparticles, so-called magnons, even room temperature can be reached by externally injecting magnons. But also possible applications in information technologies are of interest. Using excitations as carriers for information instead of charges delivers a much more efficient way of processing data. Basic logical operations have already been realized. Finally the wavelength of spin waves which can be decreased to nanoscale, gives the opportunity to further miniaturize devices for receiving signals for example in smartphones.
For all of these purposes the magnon system is driven far out of equilibrium. In order to get a better fundamental understanding, we concentrate in the main part of this thesis on the nonequilibrium aspect of magnon experiments and investigate their thermalization process. In this context we develop formalisms which are of general interest and which can be adopted to many different kinds of systems.
A milestone in describing gases out of equilibrium was the Boltzmann equation discovered by Ludwig Boltzmann in 1872. In this thesis extensions to the Boltzmann equation with improved approximations are derived. For the application to yttrium-iron garnet we describe the thermalization process after magnons were excited by an external microwave field.
First we consider the Bose-Einstein condensation phenomena. A special property of thin films of yttrium-iron garnet is that the dispersion of magnons has its minimum at finite wave vectors which leads to an interesting behavior of the condensate. We investigate the spatial structure of the condensate using the Gross-Pitaevskii equation and find that the magnons can not condensate only at the energy minimum but that also higher Fourier modes have to be occupied macroscopically. In principle this can lead to a localization on a lattice in real space.
Next we use functional renormalization group methods to go beyond the perturbation theory expressions in the Boltzmann equation. It is a difficult task to find a suitable cutoff scheme which fits to the constraints of nonequilibrium, namely causality and the fluctuation-dissipation theorem when approaching equilibrium. Therefore the cutoff scheme we developed for bosons in the context of our considerations is of general interest for the functional renormalization group. In certain approximations we obtain a system of differential equations which have a similar transition rate structure to the Boltzmann equation. We consider a model of two kinds of free bosons of which one type of boson acts as a thermal bath to the other one. Taking a suitable initial state we can use our formalism to describe the dynamics of magnons such that an enhanced occupation of the ground state is achieved. Numerical results are in good agreement with experimental data.
Finally we extend our model to consider also the pumping process and the decrease of the magnon particle number till thermal equilibrium is reached again. Additional terms which explicitly break the U(1)-symmetry make it necessary to also extend the theory from which a kinetic equation can be deduced. These extensions are complicated and we therefore restrict ourselves to perturbation theory only. Because of the weak interactions in yttrium-iron garnet this provides already good results.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden mikroskopische Studien zur Äquilibrierung von partonischer und hadronischer Materie im Rahmen einer Nichtgleichgewichts-Transporttheorie durchgeführt, die sowohl hadronische als partonische Freiheitsgrade enthält und den Übergang zwischen beiden Phasen dynamisch beschreibt. Des Weiteren wurden die thermischen Eigenschaften des Gleichgewichtszustandes der stark wechselwirkenden Materie untersucht, insbesondere Fluktuationen in der Teilchenzahl wie auch höhere Momente von Observablen und deren Verhältnisse. Besonderes Interesse galt dabei den Transportkoeffizienten wie Scher- und Volumenviskosität sowie der elektrischen Leitfähigkeit.
Die Methode der Nichtgleichgewichts-Green'schen Funktionen - initiiert von Schwinger sowie Kadanoff und Baym - wurde vorgestellt um hochenergetische Kern-Kern Kollisionen zu beschreiben. Weiterhin wurde der Schwinger-Keldysh Formalismus benutzt um im Sinne einer Zweiteilchen-irrediziblen Näherung (2PI) die Dynamik von 'resummierten' Propagatoren und Kopplungen in konsistenter Weise zu beschreiben. Des Weiterhin wurden generalisierte Transportgleichungen auf der Basis der Kadanoff-Baym Gleichungen (in Phasenraumdarstellung) abgeleitet und ein Testteilchenverfahren zur Lösung dieser Gleichungen vorgestellt. Damit wurde der formale Rahmen der Parton-Hadron-String Dynamik (PHSD) abgesteckt.
Das PHSD Transportmodell wurde sodann für die Lösung der expliziten Fragestellungen in dieser Arbeit verwendet. Die 'Eingangsgrößen' des Modells wurden in Kapitel 3 aufgeführt. Weiterhin wurde aufgezeigt, dass das Transportmodell alle Phasen einer relativistischen Schwerionenkollision konsistent beschreibt, d.h. angefangen von den primären harten Stoßprozessen und der Bildung von 'Strings' zur Formierung einer partonischen Phase, den Wechselwirkungen in dieser Phase sowie die
dynamische Beschreibung der Hadronisierung. Weiterhin enthält das Modell zudem die hadronischen Endzustandswechselwirkungen bis zum Ausfrieren der hadronischen Freiheitsgrade bei geringer Dichte. ...
Ziel dieser Arbeit war, die Reaktion von biologischen Gewebeproben auf dünn- und dicht-ionisierende Strahlung zu evaluieren. Dafür wurden die Gewebeproben konventioneller Röntgenstrahlung sowie einem ausgedehnten 12C-Ionen Bragg-Peak ausgesetzt. Zur Bestrahlung der biologischen Proben mit 12C wurde mit dem GSI-eigenen Simulationsprogramm TRiP98 ein Tiefendosisprofil eines ausgedehnten Bragg-peaks erstellt. Ein weiteres Ziel dieser Arbeit war, dieses Tiefendosisprofil mit drei anderen Simulationsprogrammen (ATIMA, MCHIT, TRIM) zu reproduzieren und zu vergleichen.
ATIMA und TRIM sind allgemeine Programme für den Energieverlust von Ionen in Materie. Sie können das von TRiP98 berechnetet Tiefendosisprofil nur ungenügend reproduzieren, da sie aufgrund fehlender Fragmentierung ein linear ansteigendes Tiefendosisprofil berechnen. Das Monte Carlo-Programm MCHIT, welches speziell für die Wechselwirkung von Ionen mit Materie in medizinischer Anwendung entwickelt wurde, zeigt die beste Übereinstimmung mit der TRiP98-Referenzkurve. Bis auf eine leicht höhere Durchschnittsdosis um 0.1 Gy konnte das Tiefendosisprofil nahezu exakt reproduziert werden.
Die biologischen Proben bestanden aus Schnittkulturen gesunder Maus-Lebern und Explantatkulturen gesunder Maus-Pankreata, um Nebenwirkungen ionisierender Strahlen abzuschätzen. Zusätzlich wurde die Reaktion auf 12C-Bestrahlung in neoplastischem Lebergewebe transgener c-myc/TGF-α Mäuse mit induzierbarem Lebertumor bestimmt. Um eine mögliche Tageszeitabhängigkeit der Gewebereaktion auf die Bestrahlung zu untersuchen, wurden die Schnitt- und Explantatkulturen zu zwei unterschiedlichen Tageszeiten präpariert: zur Mitte des subjektiven Tages und zur Mitte der subjektiven Nacht.
Die Präparate wurden für mehrere Tage auf einer Membran an einer Grenzschicht von Flüssigkeit und Luft kultiviert. Leber- und Pankreaskulturen gesunder C3H wildtyp Mäuse wurden mit einer Dosis von 2 Gy, 5 Gy oder 10 Gy Röntgenstrahlen bestrahlt. Leber- und Pankreaskulturen transgener Mäuse wurden mit ausgedehnten C-Ionen Bragg Peaks gleicher Dosen bestrahlt. Als Kontrolle dienten unbestrahlte Proben. Alle Proben wurden 1 h bzw. 24 h nach der Bestrahlung fixiert und immunhistochemisch auf Marker für Proliferation (Ki67), Apoptose (Caspase3) und DNA- Doppelstrangbrüche (γH2AX) untersucht.
Während die Pankreas-Präparate im Hinblick auf die untersuchten Parameter leider keine auswertbaren Ergebnisse ergaben, zeigten die untersuchten Parameter im gesunden Lebergewebe deutliche Tag-Nacht Unterschiede: die Proliferationsrate war zur Mitte des subjektiven Tages signifikant höher als zur Mitte der subjektiven Nacht. Umgekehrt waren die Raten für DNA-Doppelstrangbrüche zur Mitte der subjektiven Nacht signifikant erhöht. Diese Tag-Nacht Unterschiede ließen sich in neoplastischem Lebergewebe nicht nachweisen. Unabhängig von der Art und Dosis, hatte die Bestrahlung im gesunden Lebergewebe keinen Einfluss auf die untersuchten Parameter. In neoplastischem Lebergewebe hingegen wird die Rate an DNA-Doppelstrangbrüchen durch eine Bestrahlung dosisabhängig erhöht.
Die Auswirkungen ionisierender Strahlen auf das circadiane Uhrwerk wurden in Gewebeproben transgener Per2luc-Mäuse überprüft. Per2luc-Mäuse exprimieren das Enzym Luziferase unter der Kontrolle des Promoters von Per2, einem wichtigen Bestandteil des circadianen Uhrwerks. Daher erlaubt die Analyse dieser Tiere, den circadianen Rhythmus des molekularen Uhrwerks in Leber und anderen Geweben durch Messung der Luziferase-Aktivität in Echtzeit aufzuzeichnen. Wie in Leber- und Nebennierenkulturen dieser Tiere gezeigt werden konnte, führten ioniserende Strahlen dosisabhängig zu einem Phasenvorsprung des circadianen Uhrwerks.
Die Ergebnisse erlauben die Schlussfolgerung, dass ionisierende Strahlen das circadiane Uhrwerk verstellen, Proliferation und Apoptose in gesundem Lebergewebe jedoch kaum beeinflussen.
Das Gehirn ist die wohl komplexeste Struktur auf Erden, die der Mensch erforscht. Es besteht aus einem riesigen Netzwerk von Nervenzellen, welches in der Lage ist eingehende sensorische Informationen zu verarbeiten um daraus eine sinnvolle Repräsentation der Umgebung zu erstellen. Außerdem koordiniert es die Aktionen des Organismus um mit der Umgebung zu interagieren. Das Gehirn hat die bemerkenswerte Fähigkeit sowohl Informationen zu speichern als auch sich ständig an ändernde Bedingungen anzupassen, und zwar über die gesamte Lebensdauer. Dies ist essentiell für Mensch oder Tier um sich zu entwickeln und zu lernen. Die Grundlage für diesen lebenslangen Lernprozess ist die Plastizität des Gehirns, welche das riesige Netzwerk von Neuronen ständig anpasst und neu verbindet. Die Veränderungen an den synaptischen Verbindungen und der intrinsischen Erregbarkeit jedes Neurons finden durch selbstorganisierte Mechanismen statt und optimieren das Verhalten des Organismus als Ganzes. Das Phänomen der neuronalen Plastizität beschäftigt die Neurowissenschaften und anderen Disziplinen bereits über mehrere Jahrzehnte. Dabei beschreibt die intrinsische Plastizität die ständige Anpassung der Erregbarkeit eines Neurons um einen ausbalancierten, homöostatischen Arbeitsbereich zu gewährleisten. Aber besonders die synaptische Plastizität, welche die Änderungen in der Stärke bestehender Verbindungen bezeichnet, wurde unter vielen verschiedenen Bedingungen erforscht und erwies sich mit jeder neuen Studie als immer komplexer. Sie wird durch ein komplexes Zusammenspiel von biophysikalischen Mechanismen induziert und hängt von verschiedenen Faktoren wie der Frequenz der Aktionspotentiale, deren Timing und dem Membranpotential ab und zeigt außerdem eine metaplastische Abhängigkeit von vergangenen Ereignissen. Letztlich beeinflusst die synaptische Plastizität die Signalverarbeitung und Berechnung einzelner Neuronen und der neuronalen Netzwerke.
Der Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit ist es das Verständnis der biologischen Mechanismen und deren Folgen, die zu den beobachteten Plastizitätsphänomene führen, durch eine stärker vereinheitlichte Theorie voranzutreiben.Dazu stelle ich zwei funktionale Ziele für neuronale Plastizität auf, leite Lernregeln aus diesen ab und analysiere deren Konsequenzen und Vorhersagen.
Kapitel 3 untersucht die Unterscheidbarkeit der Populationsaktivität in Netzwerken als funktionales Ziel für neuronale Plastizität. Die Hypothese ist dabei, dass gerade in rekurrenten aber auch in vorwärtsgekoppelten Netzwerken die Populationsaktivität als Repräsentation der Eingangssignale optimiert werden kann, wenn ähnliche Eingangssignale eine möglichst unterschiedliche Repräsentation haben und dadurch für die nachfolgende Verarbeitung besser unterscheidbar sind. Das funktionale Ziel ist daher diese Unterscheidbarkeit durch Veränderungen an den Verbindungsstärke und der Erregbarkeit der Neuronen mithilfe von lokalen selbst-organisierten Lernregeln zu maximieren. Aus diesem funktionale Ziel lassen sich eine Reihe von Standard-Lernenregeln für künstliche neuronale Netze gemeinsam abzuleiten.
Kapitel 4 wendet einen ähnlichen funktionalen Ansatz auf ein komplexeres, biophysikalisches Neuronenmodell an. Das Ziel ist eine spärliche, stark asymmetrische Verteilung der synaptischen Stärke, wie sie auch bereits mehrfach experimentell gefunden wurde, durch lokale, synaptische Lernregeln zu maximieren. Aus diesem funktionalen Ansatz können alle wichtigen Phänomene der synaptischen Plastizität erklärt werden. Simulationen der Lernregel in einem realistischen Neuronmodell mit voller Morphologie erklären die Daten von timing-, raten- und spannungsabhängigen Plastizitätsprotokollen. Die Lernregel hat auch eine intrinsische Abhängigkeit von der Position der Synapse, welche mit den experimentellen Ergebnissen übereinstimmt. Darüber hinaus kann die Lernregel ohne zusätzliche Annahmen metaplastische Phänomene erklären. Dabei sagt der Ansatz eine neue Form der Metaplastizität voraus, welche die timing-abhängige Plastizität beeinflusst. Die formulierte Lernregel führt zu zwei neuartigen Vereinheitlichungen für synaptische Plastizität: Erstens zeigt sie, dass die verschiedenen Phänomene der synaptischen Plastizität als Folge eines einzigen funktionalen Ziels verstanden werden können. Und zweitens überbrückt der Ansatz die Lücke zwischen der funktionalen und mechanistische Beschreibungsweise. Das vorgeschlagene funktionale Ziel führt zu einer Lernregel mit biophysikalischer Formulierung, welche mit etablierten Theorien der biologischen Mechanismen in Verbindung gebracht werden kann. Außerdem kann das Ziel einer spärlichen Verteilung der synaptischen Stärke als Beitrag zu einer energieeffizienten synaptischen Signalübertragung und optimierten Codierung interpretiert werden.
Diese Dissertation stellt die systematische Einbeziehung von Eichkorrekturen in die Theorie der thermischen Leptogenese vor, welche eine Erklärung für die Frage nach dem Ursprung der Materie in unserem Universum bereitstellt.
Geht man vom weithin anerkannten Urknallmodell aus, so müsste hierbei zu gleichen Teilen Materie sowie Antimaterie entstanden sein. Aufgrund von Annihilationsprozessen sollte demnach die gesamte Materie zerstrahlt sein und ein leeres Universum zurückbleiben. Da dies aber nicht der Fall ist, stellt sich die Frage, wie das Ungleichgewicht zwischen Materie und Antimaterie entstehen konnte. Der Wert der Asymmetrie lässt sich mit Hilfe von Experimenten sehr genau bestimmen. Für eine systematische theoretische Beschreibung dieser Problematik stellte A. Sacharow drei Bedingungen auf: 1. die Verletzung der Baryonenzahl, 2. die Verletzung der Invarianz von Ladungskonjugation C sowie der Zusammensetzung von Ladungskonjugation und Parität CP sowie 3. eine Abweichung vom thermischen Gleichgewicht.
Da das Urknallmodell und das Standardmodell der Teilchenphysik nicht in der Lage sind, diese Asymmetrie zu beschreiben, beschäftigt sich die vorliegende Dissertation mit der Theorie der thermischen Leptogenese, welche statt von einer ursprünglichen Baryonenasymmetrie von einer Leptonenasymmetrie ausgeht. Zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt wird diese dann mittels Sphaleron-Prozesse, welche die Baryonenzahl verletzen, in eine Baryonenasymmetrie übertragen. Hierzu werden neue Teilchen zum Standardmodell hinzugefügt: schwere Majorana-Neutrinos. Diese zerfallen im thermischen Nichtgleichgewicht CP-verletzend in die bekannten Standardmodell-Leptonen und Higgs-Teilchen.
In dieser Arbeit wird eine hierarchische Anordnung der drei schweren Neutrinomassen betrachtet. Dies hat zur Folge, dass zwei der drei Majorana-Neutrinos ausintegriert werden können und eine effektive Theorie aufgestellt werden kann. Dieses Modell wird auch vanilla leptogenesis genannt und im Folgenden verwendet.
Die Dissertation ist wie folgt gegliedert. Die einleitenden Betrachtungen sind Gegenstand der Kapitel 1 und 2. Dort werden weiterhin andere Modelle zur Lösung des Problems der Baryonenasymmetrie kurz vorgestellt. Die thermische Leptogenese wird eingeführt und der See-saw-Mechanismus sowie die CP-Asymmetrie genauer beschrieben. Am Ende des Kapitels wird der klassische Ansatz für Leptogenese über Boltzmann Gleichungen präsentiert.
In Kapitel 3 werden die Grundlagen für Quantenfeldtheorien im Nichtgleichgewicht eingeführt. Die wichtigsten Definitionen im Falle des thermischen Gleichgewichts werden gegeben, anschließend findet sich die Verallgemeinerung auf Nichtgleichgewichtszustände. Die Bewegungsgleichungen, die sogenannten Kadanoff-Baym-Gleichungen, werden im Folgenden sowohl für skalare Teilchen als auch für Fermionen gelöst.
Kapitel 4 stellt die Notwendigkeit der Einbeziehung von Eichkorrekturen im Kontext der thermischen Leptogenese vor. Durch die Definition einer Leptonenzahlmatrix lässt sich die Asymmetrie durch die Kadanoff-Baym Gleichung für Leptonen umschreiben. Da der Vergleich von Boltzmann und Kadanoff-Baym Gleichungen im letzten Teil dieses Kapitels Unterschiede im Zeitverhalten zeigt, werden im Kadanoff-Baym Ansatz thermische Standardmodell-Breiten des Higgsfeldes und der Leptonen per Hand eingeführt. Mit dieser naiven Erweiterung erhält man ein gleiches Verhalten für die Leptonenzahlmatrix, lokal in der Zeit wie die Lösung der Boltzmann Gleichung. Eine systematische Einführung von Standardmodellkorrekturen für thermische Leptogenese ist daher unumgänglich, weshalb im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertation von Grund auf Eichkorrekturen der Diagramme, die zur Asymmetrie führen, berücksichtigt werden.
Die vier für diese Arbeit wichtigen Skalenbereich bedingen zwei Resummationsschemata, Hard Thermal Loop (HTL) und Collinear Thermal Loop (CTL), welche in Kapitel 5 vorgestellt werden. Dies führt schließlich auf zwei Differenzialgleichungen für die Berechnung der thermischen Produktionsrate des Majorana-Neutrinos, welche in Kapitel 6 numerisch weiter ausgewertet werden.
In Kapitel 7 erfolgt zunächst eine naive Berechnung aller eichkorrigierter 3-Schleifen-Diagramme, die zu den beiden die Asymmetrie verursachenden Diagrammen gehören. Da eine einfache Berechnung der 3-Schleifen-Diagramme nicht ausreicht, wird an dieser Stelle ein neues, zylindrisches Diagramm eingeführt, welches alle wichtigen Beiträge, insbesondere die HTL- und CTL-resummierten, enthält. Am Ende des Kapitels findet sich der erste geschlossene Ausdruck für die eichkorrigierte Leptonenzahlmatrix in führender Ordnung in allen Kopplungen.
Abschließend gibt es eine kurze Zusammenfassung und einen Ausblick in Kapitel 8. In dieser Dissertation findet sich zum ersten Mal ein systematischer Zugang zur Berücksichtigung aller Eichwechselwirkungen in der Theorie der thermischen Leptogenese. Ein geschlossener Ausdruck für die eichkorrigierte Leptonenasymmetrie konnte vorgestellt werden.
In der nuklearen Astrophysik sind Experimente mit hochgeladenen Radionukliden von großer Bedeutung. Diese exotischen Nuklide können in Schwerionenbeschleunigeranlagen hergestellt und in Speicherringen gespeichert werden. Momentan existieren weltweit zwei Anlagen, die solche Experimente ermöglichen: das GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH in Darmstadt und das Institut für moderne Physik (IMP) in Lanzhou, China. Da die Ausbeute dieser Nuklide gering ist, werden zerstörungsfreie Nachweismethoden in den Speicherringen verwendet. Diese machen von den Methoden der Spektralanalyse Gebrauch. Nicht nur die geringe Ausbeute, sondern auch die kurze Lebensdauer dieser Nuklide stellen hohe Anforderungen an die Sensitivität und Geschwindigkeit dieser Detektoren.
Eine übliche Methode ist die Verwendung kapazitiver Schottky-Sonden. Eine solche Sonde ist seit 1991 an der GSI im Speicherring ESR im Einsatz. Um die Empfindlichkeit zu erhöhen, kann man Mikrowellenkavitäten als resonante Pickups verwenden. Die von den Teilchen induzierten elektromagnetischen Felder können resonante Moden im Resonator anregen. Die Geometrie des Pickups und das verwendete Material spielen eine wesentliche Rolle in der Gestaltung der Feldbilder. Die resultierenden Signale, auch Schottky Signale genannt, werden mittels einer Antenne ausgekoppelt und anschliessend an einen Spektrumanalysator angeschlossen. Für die Analyse der gespeicherten Daten können verschiedene Methoden der Spektralschätzung wie z.B. das Multi-Taper angewendet werden. Nachdem eine externe Kalibrierung durchgeführt worden ist, kann das Pickup auch als ein Stromsensor verwendet werden.
Diese Arbeit befasst sich mit der Theorie, dem Aufbau und ersten Anwendungen eines neuen resonanten Pickups, das im Jahr 2010 in den Speicherring ESR eingebaut und in mehreren Experimenten erfolgreich eingesetzt wurde. Ein ähnliches Pickup wurde im Jahr 2011 in den CSRe im IMP Lanzhou eingebaut. Einzelne Schwerionen mit 400 MeV pro Nukleon wurden erfolgreich mit dem GSI-Pickup nachgewiesen. Das Pickup wird regelmässig in Speicherringexperimenten eingesetzt. Ähnliche Experimente sind für CSRe in Lanzhou geplant.
Detailed knowledge of reaction mechanisms is key to understanding chemical, biological, and biophysical processes. For many reasons, it is desirable to comprehend how a reaction proceeds and what influences the reaction rate and its products.
In biophysics, reaction mechanisms provide insight into enzyme and protein function, the reason why they are so efficient, and what determines their reaction rates. They also reveal the relationship between the function of a protein and its structure and dynamics.
In chemistry, reaction mechanisms are able to explain side products, solvent effects, and the stereochemistry of a product. They are also the basis for potentially optimizing reactions with respect to yield, enhancing the stereoselectivity, or for modifying reactions in order to obtain other related products.
A key step to investigate reaction mechanisms is the identification and characterization of intermediates, which may be reactive, short-lived, and therefore only weakly populated. Nowadays, the structures of those can in most cases only be hypothesized based on products, side products, and isolable intermediates, because intermediates with a life time of less than a few microseconds are not accessible with the commonly used techniques for structure determination such as X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy.
In this thesis, two-dimensional infrared (2D-IR) spectroscopy is shown to be a powerful complement to the existing techniques for structure determination in solution. 2D-IR spectroscopy uses a femtosecond laser setup to investigate interactions between vibrations - analogous to 2D-NMR, which investigates the interactions between spins. Its ultrafast time resolution makes 2D-IR spectroscopy particularly well suited for the two topics investigated in this thesis: Structure Determination of Reactive Intermediates and Conformational Dynamics of Proteins.
Structure Determination of Reactive Intermediates: The focus of this thesis is using polarization-dependent 2D-IR (P2D-IR) spectroscopy for structure determination of N-crotonyloxazolidinone (referred to as 1), a small organic compound with a chiral oxazolidinone, known as Evans auxiliary, and its reactive complexes with the Lewis acids SnCl4 and Mg(ClO4)2. Chiral oxazolidinones in combination with Lewis acids have frequently been used in stereoselective synthesis for over 30 years. Nevertheless, the detailed mechanisms are in many cases xvi ABSTRACT still mere hypotheses and have not yet been experimentally proven. By accurately measuring the angles between the transition dipole moments in the molecules using an optimized P2D-IR setup and comparing the results to DFT calculations, the conformation of 1 and the conformation and coordination of the main complexes with SnCl4 and Mg(ClO4)2 are unequivocally identified and analyzed in depth. Structural details, such as a slight twist in the solution structure of 1, are detected using P2D-IR spectroscopy; these cannot be inferred from NMR spectroscopy or DFT calculations. In addition to the main Lewis acid complexes, complexes in low concentration are detected and tentatively assigned to different conformations and complexation geometries. The knowledge of those structures is essential for rationalizing the observed stereoselectivities. Additionally, a method is introduced that enables structure determination of molecules in complex mixtures and even in the presence of molecules with similar spectral properties and in high concentration. This work sets the stage for future studies of other substrate-catalyst complexes and reaction intermediates for which the structure determination has not been possible to date.
Conformational Dynamics of Proteins: Exchange 2D-IR spectroscopy allows the investigation of fast dynamics without disturbing the equilibrium of the exchanging species. It is therefore well suited to investigate fast dynamics of proteins and to reveal the speed limit of those. The temperature dependence of the conformational dynamics between the myoglobin substates A1 and A3 in equilibrium is analyzed. The various substates of myoglobin can be detected with FTIR spectroscopy, if carbon monoxide is bound to the heme. From previous studies it is known that the exchange rates at room temperature are in the picosecond time range, well suited to be investigated by 2D-IR spectroscopy. In the temperature range between 0 °C and 40 °C only a weak temperature dependence of the exchange rate in the myoglobin mutant L29I is observed in the present study. The exchange rate approximately doubles from 15 ns-1 at 0 °C to 31 ns-1 at 40 °C. It turned out that the conformational dynamics correlates linearly with the solvent viscosity, which itself is temperature dependent. Comparing our results to measurements at cryogenic temperatures, the linear relation between exchange time constant for this process and the viscosity is shown for the temperature range between -100 °C and 40 °C (corresponding to a viscosity change of 14 orders of magnitude). Thus, it is proven that the dynamics of the conformational switching are mainly determined by solvent dynamics, i.e., the protein dynamics are slaved to the solvent dynamics. This is the first time slaving is observed for such fast processes (in the picosecond time range). The observation implies a long-range structural rearrangement between the myoglobin substates A1 and A3. In addition, the exchange for other mutants and wild type myoglobin is analyzed qualitatively and found to agree with the conclusions drawn from L29I myoglobin.
In this thesis, various aspects on the theoretical description of ultracold bosonic atoms in optical lattices are investigated. After giving a brief introduction to the fundamental concepts of BECs, atomic physics, interatomic interactions and experimental procedures in chapter (1), we derive the Bose-Hubbard model from first principles in chapter (2). In this chapter, we also introduce and discuss a technique to efficiently determine Wannier states, which, in contrast to current techniques, can also be extended to inhomogeneous systems. This technique is later extended to higher dimensional, non-separable lattices in chapter (5). The many-body physics and phases of the Bose-Hubbard is shortly presented in chapter (3) in conjunction with Gutzwiller mean-field theory, and the recently devised projection operator approach. We then return to the derivation of an improved microscopic many-body Hamiltonian, which contains higher band contributions in the presence of interactions in chapter (4). We then move on to many-particle theory. To demonstrate the conceptual relations required in the following chapter, we derive Bogoliubov theory in chapter (5.3.4) in three different ways and discuss the connections. Furthermore, this derivation goes beyond the usual version discussed in most textbooks and papers, as it accounts for the fact, that the quasi-particle Hamiltonian is not diagonalizable in the condensate and the eigenvectors have to be completed by additional vectors to form a basis. This leads to a qualitatively different quasi-particle Hamiltonian and more intricate transformation relations as a result. In the following two chapters (7, 8), we derive an extended quasi-particle theory, which goes beyond Bogoliubov theory and is not restricted to weak interactions or a large condensate fraction. This quasi-particle theory naturally contains additional modes, such as the amplitude mode in the strongly interacting condensate. Bragg spectroscopy, a momentum-resolved spectroscopic technique, is introduced and used for the first experimental detection of the amplitude mode at finite quasi-momentum in chapter (9). The closely related lattice modulation spectroscopy is discussed in chapter (10). The results of a time-dependent simulation agree with experimental data, suggesting that also the amplitude mode, and not the sound mode, was probed in these experiments. In chapter (11) the dynamics of strongly interacting bosons far from equilibrium in inhomogeneous potentials is explored. We introduce a procedure that, in conjunction with the collapse and revival of the condensate, can be used to create exotic condensates, while particularly focusing on the case of a quadratic trapping potential. Finally, in chapter (12), we turn towards the physics of disordered systems derive and discuss in detail the stochastic mean-field theory for the disordered Bose-Hubbard model.
The study of systems whose properties are governed by electronic correlations is a corner stone of modern solid-state physics. Often, such systems feature unique and distinct properties like Mott metal-insulator transitions, rich phase diagrams, and high sensitivity to subtle changes in the applied conditions. Whereas the standard approach to electronic structure calculations, density functional theory (DFT), is able to address the complexity of real-world materials but is known to have serious limitations in the description of correlations, the dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) has become an established method for the treatment of correlated fermions, first on the level of minimal models and later in combination with DFT, termed LDA+DMFT.
This thesis presents theoretical calculations on different materials exhibiting correlated physics, where we aim at covering a range in terms of systems --from rather weakly correlated to strongy correlated-- as well as in terms of methods, from DFT calculations to combined LDA+DMFT calculations. We begin with a study on a selection of iron pnictides, a recently discovered family of high-temperature superconductors with varying degree of correlation strength, and show that their magnetic and optical properties can be assessed to some degree within DFT, despite the correlated nature of these systems. Next, extending our analysis to the inclusion of correlations in the framework of LDA+DMFT, we discuss the electronic structure of the iron pnictide LiFeAs which we find to be well described by Fermi liquid theory with regard to many of its properties, yet we see distinct changes in its Fermi surface upon inclusion of correlations. We continue the study of low-energy properties and specifically Fermi surfaces on two more iron pnictides, LaFePO and LiFeP, and predict a topology change of their Fermi surfaces due to the effect of correlations, with possible implications for their superconducting properties. In our last study, we close the circle by presenting LDA+DMFT calculations on an organic molecular crystal on the verge of a Mott metal-insulator transition; there, we find the spectral and optical properties to display signatures of strong electronic correlations beyond Fermi liquid theory.
With the increasing energies and intensities of heavy-ion accelerator facilities, the problem of an excessive activation of the accelerator components caused by beam losses becomes more and more important. Numerical experiments using Monte Carlo transport codes are performed in order to assess the levels of activation. The heavy-ion versions of the codes were released approximately a decade ago, therefore the verification is needed to be sure that they give reasonable results. Present work is focused on obtaining the experimental data on activation of the targets by heavy-ion beams. Several experiments were performed at GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung. The interaction of nitrogen, argon and uranium beams with aluminum targets, as well as interaction of nitrogen and argon beams with copper targets was studied. After the irradiation of the targets by different ion beams from the SIS18 synchrotron at GSI, the γ-spectroscopy analysis was done: the γ-spectra of the residual activity were measured, the radioactive nuclides were identified, their amount and depth distribution were detected. The obtained experimental results were compared with the results of the Monte Carlo simulations using FLUKA, MARS and SHIELD. The discrepancies and agreements between experiment and simulations are pointed out. The origin of discrepancies is discussed. Obtained results allow for a better verification of the Monte Carlo transport codes, and also provide information for their further development. The necessity of the activation studies for accelerator applications is discussed. The limits of applicability of the heavy-ion beam-loss criteria were studied using the FLUKA code. FLUKA-simulations were done to determine the most preferable from the radiation protection point of view materials for use in accelerator components.
A new era in experimental nuclear physics has begun with the start-up of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN and its dedicated heavy-ion detector system ALICE. Measuring the highest energy density ever produced in nucleus-nucleus collisions, the detector has been designed to study the properties of the created hot and dense medium, assumed to be a Quark-Gluon Plasma.
Comprised of 18 high granularity sub-detectors, ALICE delivers data from a few million electronic channels of proton-proton and heavy-ion collisions.
The produced data volume can reach up to 26 GByte/s for central Pb–Pb
collisions at design luminosity of L = 1027 cm−2 s−1 , challenging not only the data storage, but also the physics analysis. A High-Level Trigger (HLT) has been built and commissioned to reduce that amount of data to a storable value prior to archiving with the means of data filtering and compression without the loss of physics information. Implemented as a large high performance compute cluster, the HLT is able to perform a full reconstruction of all events at the time of data-taking, which allows to trigger, based on the information of a complete event. Rare physics probes, with high transverse momentum, can be identified and selected to enhance the overall physics reach of the experiment.
The commissioning of the HLT is at the center of this thesis. Being deeply embedded in the ALICE data path and, therefore, interfacing all other ALICE subsystems, this commissioning imposed not only a major challenge, but also a massive coordination effort, which was completed with the first proton-proton collisions reconstructed by the HLT. Furthermore, this thesis is completed with the study and implementation of on-line high transverse momentum triggers.
We compute the phase and the modulus of an energy- and pressure-free, composite, adjoint, and
inert field φ in an SU(2) Yang-Mills theory at large temperatures. This field is physically relevant in describing part of the ground-state structure and the quasiparticle masses of excitations. The field φ possesses nontrivial S1-winding on the group manifold S3. Even at asymptotically high temperatures, where the theory reaches its Stefan-Boltzmann limit, the field φ, though strongly power suppressed, is conceptually relevant: its presence resolves the infrared problem of thermal perturbation theory.
The main purpose of the Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) located in the central barrel of ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) is electron identification for separation from pions at momenta pt > 1 GeV/c, since in this momentum range the measurements of the specific energy loss (dE/dx) of the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) is no longer sufficient. Furthermore, it provides a fast trigger for high transverse momentum charged particles (pt > 3 GeV/c) and makes a significant contribution to the optimization of the tracking of reaction products in heavy-ion collisions. Its whole setup comprises 18 supermodules out of which 13 are presently operational and mounted cylindrically around the beam axis of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). A supermodule contains either 30 or 24 chambers, each consisting of a radiator for transition radiation creation, a drift and an amplifying region followed by the read-out electronics. In total, the TRD is an array of 522 chambers operated with about 28 m3 of a Xe-CO2 [85-15%] gas mixture. During the work of this thesis, the testing, commissioning, operation and maintenance of detector parts, the gas system and its online quality monitor, improvements on the detector control user-interface and studies about a new pre-trigger module for data read-out have been accomplished. The TRD gas system mixes, distributes and circulates the operational gas mixture through the detector. Its overall optimization has been achieved by minimizing gas leakage, surveying, controlling, maintaining and continuously improving it as well as designing and carrying out upgrades. Gas quality monitors of the type \GOOFIE" (Gas prOportional cOunter For drIfting Electrons) can be used in gaseous detectors as on-line monitors of the electron drift velocity, gain and gas properties. One of these devices has been implemented within the TRD gas system, while another one surveys the gas of the TPC. Both devices had to be adapted to the specific needs of the detectors, were under constant surveillance and control, and needed to be further developed on both hardware and software side. To improve the operation of the TRD, modifications on its DCS software (Detector Control System) used for monitoring, controlling, operating, regulating and configuring of hardware and computing devices have been carried out. The DCS is designed to enable an operator to interact with equipment through user interfaces that display the information from the system. The main focus of this work was laid on the optimization of the usability and design of the user interface. The front-end electronics of the TRD require an early start signal (\pre-trigger") from the fast forward detectors or the Time-Of-Flight detector during the running periods. The realization of a new hardware concept for the read-out of the TRD pre-trigger system has been studied and first tests were performed. This new module called PIMDDL (Pre-trigger Interface Module Detector Data Link) is meant to acquire all data necessary to simulate and predict the full pre-trigger functionality, and to verify its proper operation. Furthermore, it shall provide all functionalities of the so-called Control Box Bottom as well as keep the functionalities of the already existing PIM (Pre-trigger Interface Module) in order to combine and replace these two modules in the future.
Quarkonia are very promising probes to study the quark-gluon plasma. The essential baseline for measurements in heavy-ion collisions is high-precision data from proton-proton interactions. However, the basic mechanisms of quarkonium hadroproduction are still being debated. The most common models, the Color-Singlet Model, the non-relativistic QCD approach and the Color-Evaporation Model, are able to describe most of the available cross-section data, despite of their conceptual differences. New measures, such as the polarization, and data at a new energy regime are crucial to test the competing models. Another issue is an eventual interplay between the production process of a quarkonium state and the surrounding pp event. Current Monte Carlo event generators treat the hard scattering independently from the rest of the so-called underlying event. The investigation of possible correlations with the pp event might be very valuable for a detailed understanding of the production processes. ALICE ist the dedicated heavy-ion experiment at the LHC. Its design has been optimized for high-precision measurements in very high track densities and down to low transverse momenta. ALICE is composed of various different detectors at forward and at central rapidities. The most important detectors for this study are the Inner Tracking System and the Time Projection Chamber, allowing to reconstruct and identify electron candidate tracks within eta < 0.9. The Transition Radiation Detector has not been utilized at this stage of the analysis; however, it will strongly improve the particle identification and provide a dedicated trigger in the upcoming beam periods. ...
The intriguing effects of electroweak induced parity violation (PV) in molecules have yet to be observed, but experiments on molecular PV promise to provide fascinating insights. They potentially offer a novel testing ground for the low energy sector of the standard model and, in addition, a successful measurement of PV differences between the two enantiomers of a chiral molecule could promote a deeper understanding of molecular chirality, by essentially establishing a new link between particle physics and biochemistry. A key challenge in the design of such experiments is the identification of suitable molecules, which in turn requires widely applicable computational schemes for the prediction of PV experimental signals. To this end, a quasirelativistic density functional theory approach to the calculation of PV effects in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of chiral molecules has been developed and implemented during the course of this thesis. It includes relativistic as well as electron--correlation effects and has been used extensively in the screening of molecules possibly suited for a first observation of molecular PV. Some relevant compound classes have been identified, but none of their selected representatives are predicted to exhibit PV NMR frequency shifts that can be detected under current experimental restrictions. In order to advance the design of molecules which exhibit particularly large PV signals in experiments, systematic effects on PV NMR frequency splittings such as scaling with nuclear charge, conformational dependence and the impact of atomic substitution around the NMR active nucleus have been studied. Previously predicted scaling laws were confirmed and it was determined that the environment of the NMR active nucleus, both in terms of conformation and atomic composition, can be tuned to increase PV frequency shifts by several orders of magnitude. In addition to molecules suited for NMR experiments, a fascinating chiral actinide compound was studied with regard to PV frequency shifts in vibrational spectra. This compound displays the largest such shift ever predicted for an existing molecule, which lies well within the attainable experimental resolution. The challenge now lies in making it compatible with current experimental setups.
In der modernen Festkörperphysik spielen elektronisch stark korrelierte Systeme mit ihrem komplexen Vielteilchenverhalten eine zentrale Rolle. Insbesondere das Wechselspiel zwischen thermischen und Quantenfluktuationen in den Ladungs- und Spinfreiheitsgraden führt zur Entstehung verschiedenster neuartiger Grundzustände.
Die vorliegende Dissertation „Ultrasonic and Magnetic Investigations in frustrated Lowdimensional Spin Systems“ beschäftigt sich mit den besonderen physikalischen Eigenschaften niedrig dimensionaler Spinsysteme. Diese Materialklasse, die auch zu den stark korrelierten Systemen zählt, wird seit vielen Jahren intensiv sowohl experimentell als auch theoretisch untersucht. Auf theoretischer Seite sind die niedrigdimensionalen Spinsysteme besonders interessant, da sie als Modellsysteme die exakte Beschreibung des Grundzustandes und des Anregungsspektrums ermöglichen. Von experimenteller Seite ist es in den letzten Jahrzehnten gelungen, verschiedenste Materialklassen niedrigdimensionaler Spinsysteme zu synthetisieren.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden die grundlegenden Theorien und physikalischen Konzepte niedrigdimensionaler Spinsysteme diskutiert. Insbesondere auch die Spin-Phonon-Wechselwirkung dieser Materialien, die für die hier beobachteten elastischen Anomalien verantwortlich ist. Weiterhin wird auch das elastische Verhalten bei magnetischen Phasenübergängen beschrieben.
Da die Ultraschallexperimente einen Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit bilden, wird der Versuchsaufbau zur phasenempfindlichen Detektion von Schallgeschwindigkeit und Ultraschalldämfung ausführlich beschrieben. Diese Messmethode ist ideal zur Untersuchung der Spin-Phonon Wechselwirkung geeignet.
The subject of this thesis aimed at a better understanding of the spectacular X-ray burst. The most likely astrophysical site is a very dense neutron star, which accretes H/He-rich matter from a close companion. While falling towards the neutron star, the matter is heated up and a thermonuclear runaway is ignited. The exact description of this process is dominated by the properties of a few proton-rich radioactive isotopes, which have a low interaction probability, hence a high abundance.
The topic of this thesis was therefore an investigation of the short-lived, proton-rich isotopes 31Cl and 32Ar. The Coulomb dissociation method is the modern technique of choice. Excitations with energies up to 20 MeV can be induced by the Lorentz contracted Coulomb field of a lead target. At the GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH in Darmstadt, Germany, a Ar beam was accelerated to an energy of 825 AMeV and fragmented in a beryllium target. The fragment separator was used to select the desired isotopes with a remaining energy of 650 AMeV. They were subsequently directed onto a 208 Pb target in the ALAND/LAND setup. The measurement was performed in inverse kinematics. All reaction products were detected and inclusive and exclusive measurements of the respective Coulomb dissociation cross sections were possible.
During the analysis of the experiment, it was possible to extract the energy-differential excitation spectrum of 31Cl, and to constrain astrophysically important parameters for the time-reversed 30S(p,γ)31Cl reaction. A single resonance at 0.443(37) MeV dominates the stellar reaction rate, which was also deduced and compared to previous calculations.
The integrated Coulomb dissociation cross section of this resonance was determined to 15(6) mb. The astrophysically important one- and two-proton emission channels were analyzed for 32Ar and energy-differential excitation spectra could be derived. The integrated Coulomb dissociation cross section for two proton emission were determined with two different techniques. The inclusive measurement yields a cross section of 214(29stat)(20sys) mb, whereas the exclusive reconstruction results in a cross section of 226(14stat)(23sys) mb. Both results are in very good agreement. The Coulomb dissociation cross section for the one-proton emission channel is extracted solely from the exclusive measurement and is 54(8stat)(6sys) mb.
Furthermore, the development of the Low Energy Neutron detector Array (LENA) for the upcoming R3B setup is described. The detector will be utilized in charge-exchange reactions to detect the low-energy recoil neutrons from (p,n)-type reactions. These reaction studies are of particular importance in the astrophysical context and can be used to constrain half lifes under stellar conditions. In the frame of this work, prototypes of the detector were built and successfully commissioned in several international laboratories.
The analysis was supported by detailed simulations of the detection characteristics.
In this thesis I use effective models to investigate the properties of QCD-like theories at nonzero temperature and baryon chemical potential. First I construct a PNJL model using a lattice spin model with nearestneighbor interactions for the gauge sector and four-fermion interactions for the quarks in (pseudo)real representations of the gauge group. Calculating the phase diagram in the plane of temperature and quark chemical potential in QCD with adjoint quarks, it is qualitatively confirmed that the critical temperature of the chiral phase transition is much higher than the deconfinement transition temperature. At a chemical potential equal to half of the diquark mass in the vacuum, a diquark Bose–Einstein condensation (BEC) phase transition occurs. In the two-color case, a Ginzburg–Landau expansion is used to study the tetracritical behavior around the intersection point of the deconfinement and BEC transition lines which are both of second order. A compact expression for the expectation value of the Polyakov loop in an arbitrary representation of the gauge group is obtained for any number of colors, which allows us to study Casimir scaling at both nonzero temperature and chemical potential. Subsequently I study the thermodynamics of two-color QCD (QC2D) at high temperature and/or density using ZQCD, a dimensionally reduced superrenormalizable effective theory, formulated in terms of a coarse grained Wilson line. In the absence of quarks, the theory is required to respect the Z2 center symmetry, while the effects of quarks of arbitrary masses and chemical potentials are introduced via soft Z2 breaking operators. Perturbative matching of the effective theory parameters to the full theory is carried out explicitly, and it is argued how the new theory can be used to explore the phase diagram of two-color QCD.
Thermal expansion measurements provide a sensitive tool for exploring a material's thermodynamic
properties in condensed matter physics as they provide useful information
on the electronic, magnetic and lattice properties of a material. In this thesis, thermal
expansion measurements have been carried out both at ambient-pressure and under hydrostatic
pressure conditions. From the materials point of view, the spin-liquid candidate
Kappa-(BEDT-TTF) 2 Cu 2(CN)3 has been studied extensively as a function of temperature and
magnetic field. Azurite, Cu 3 (CO 3) 2 (OH) 2 - a realization of a one-dimensional distorted
Heisenberg chain is also studied both at ambient and hydrostatic pressure to demonstrate
the proper functioning of the newly built setup "thermal expansion under pressure". ...
Seit Anbeginn der Festkörperphysik ist die Frage, warum manche Materialien metallisch sind, andere dagegen isolierend, von zentraler Bedeutung. Eine erste Erklärung wurde durch die Bändertheorie [23, 44] gegeben. Die Elektronen sind dem periodischen Potential der Rumpfatome ausgesetzt, wodurch ein Energiespektrum bestehend aus Bändern erzeugt wird und die Füllung dieser Bänder bestimmt die Leitungseigenschaften des Festkörpers. ...
Interacting ultracold gases in optical lattices: non-equilibrium dynamics and effects of disorder
(2012)
This dissertation aims at giving a theoretical description of various applications of ultracold gases. A particular focus is cast upon the dynamical evolution of bosonic condensates in non-equilibrium by means of the time-dependent Gutzwiller method. Ground state properties of strongly interacting fermionic atoms in box and speckle disordered lattices are investigated via real-space dynamical mean-field theory. ...
The miniaturization of electronics is reaching its limits. Structures necessary to build integrated circuits from semiconductors are shrinking and could reach the size of only a few atoms within the next few years. It will be at the latest at this point in time that the physics of nanostructures gains importance in our every day life. This thesis deals with the physics of quantum impurity models. All models of this class exhibit an identical structure: the simple and small impurity only has few degrees of freedom. It can be built out of a small number of atoms or a single molecule, for example. In the simplest case it can be described by a single spin degree of freedom, in many quantum impurity models, it can be treated exactly. The complexity of the description arises from its coupling to a large number of fermionic or bosonic degrees of freedom (large meaning that we have to deal with particle numbers of the order of 10^{23}). An exact treatment thus remains impossible. At the same time, physical effects which arise in quantum impurity systems often cannot be described within a perturbative theory, since multiple energy scales may play an important role. One example for such an effect is the Kondo effect, where the free magnetic moment of the impurity is screened by a "cloud" of fermionic particles of the quantum bath.
The Kondo effect is only one example for the rich physics stemming from correlation effects in many body systems. Quantum impurity models, and the oftentimes related Kondo effect, have regained the attention of experimental and theoretical physicists since the advent of quantum dots, which are sometimes also referred to as as artificial atoms. Quantum dots offer a unprecedented control and tunability of many system parameters. Hence, they constitute a nice "playground" for fundamental research, while being promising candidates for building blocks of future technological devices as well.
Recently Loss' and DiVincenzo's p roposal of a quantum computing scheme based on spins in quantum dots, increased the efforts of experimentalists to coherently manipulate and read out the spins of quantum dots one by one. In this context two topics are of paramount importance for future quantum information processing: since decoherence times have to be large enough to allow for good error correction schemes, understanding the loss of phase coherence in quantum impurity systems is a prerequisite for quantum computation in these systems. Nonequilibrium phenomena in quantum impurity systems also have to be understood, before one may gain control of manipulating quantum bits.
As a first step towards more complicated nonequilibrium situations, the reaction of a system to a quantum quench, i.e. a sudden change of external fields or other parameters of the system can be investigated. We give an introduction to a powerful numerical method used in this field of research, the numerical renormalization group method, and apply this method and its recent enhancements to various quantum impurity systems.
The main part of this thesis may be structured in the following way:
- Ferromagnetic Kondo Model,
- Spin-Dynamics in the Anisotropic Kondo and the Spin-Boson Model,
- Two Ising-coupled Spins in a Bosonic Bath,
- Decoherence in an Aharanov-Bohm Interferometer.
The study of meson production in proton-proton collisions in the energy range
up to one GeV above the production threshold provides valuable information about
the nature of the nucleon-nucleon interaction. Theoretical models describe the interaction
between nucleons via the exchange of mesons. In such models, different
mechanisms contribute to the production of the mesons in nucleon-nucleon collisions.
The measurement of total and differential production cross sections provide information
which can help in determining the magnitude of the various mechanisms.
Moreover, such cross section information serves as an input to the transport calculations
which describe e.g. the production of e+e− pairs in proton- and pion-induced
reactions as well as in heavy ion collisions.
In this thesis, the production of ω and η mesons in proton-proton collisions at 3.5
GeV beam energy was studied using the High Acceptance DiElectron Spectrometer
(HADES) installed at the Schwerionensynchrotron (SIS 18) at the Helmholtzzenturm
f¨ur Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt.
About 80 000 ω mesons and 35 000 η mesons were reconstructed. Total production
cross sections of both mesons were determined. Furthermore, the collected statistics
allowed for extracting angular distributions of both mesons as well as performing
Dalitz plot studies.
The ω and η mesons were reconstructed via their decay into three pions (π+π−π0)
in the exclusive reaction pp −→ ppπ+π−π0. The charged particles were identified
via their characteristic energy loss, via the measurement of their time of flight and
momentum, or using kinematics.
The neutral pion was reconstructed using the missing mass method. A kinematic
fit was applied to improve the resolution and to select events in which a π0 was
produced.
The correction of measured yields for the effects of spectrometer acceptance was done
as a function of four variables (two invariant masses and two angles). Systematic
studies of the acceptance for different input distributions were performed.
The measured yields were normalized to the number of measured events of elastic
scattering. Systematic errors due to the methods of the data analysis and the
background subtraction were investigated.
Production angular distributions of ω and η mesons were measured. Both mesons
exhibit a slightly anisotropic angular distribution.
The Dalitz plot of ω meson production shows indications of resonant production.
However, the deviation of the distribution from the one expected by phase space
simulations is not large.
The Dalitz plot of η meson production shows a signal of the production via the
N(1535) resonance, The contribution of N(1535) to the production was quantified
to be about 47%. The angular distribution of η mesons does not show significant
differences between resonant and non resonant production.
The total production cross section of ω mesons in the reaction pp −→ ppω was
determined to be 106.5 ± 0.9 (stat) ± 7.9 (sys) [μb] where stat indicates statistical
error and sys indicates systematic error, while that of η mesons was determined to
be 136.9 ± 0.9 (stat) ± 10.1 (sys) [μb] in the reaction pp −→ ppη
The objective of this work is twofold. First, we explore the performance of the density functional theory (DFT) when it is applied to solids with strong electronic correlations, such as transition metal compounds. Along this direction, particular effort is put into the refinement and development of parameterization techniques for deriving effective models on a basis of DFT calculations. Second, within the framework of the DFT, we address a number of questions related to the physics of Mott insulators, such as magnetic frustration and electron-phonon coupling (Cs2CuCl4 and Cs2CuBr4), high-temperature superconductivity (BSCCO) and doping of Mott insulators (TiOCl). In the frustrated antiferromagnets Cs2CuCl4 and Cs2CuBr4, we investigate the interplay between strong electronic correlations and magnetism on one hand and electron-lattice coupling on the other as well as the effect of this interplay on the microscopic model parameters. Another object of our investigations is the oxygen-doped cuprate superconductor BSCCO, where nano-scale electronic inhomogeneities have been observed in scanning tunneling spectroscopy experiments. By means of DFT and many-body calculations, we analyze the connection between the structural and electronic inhomogeneities and the superconducting properties of BSCCO. We use the DFT and molecular dynamic simulations to explain the microscopic origin of the persisting under doping Mott insulating state in the layered compound TiOCl.
Nanotechnology is a rapidly developing branch of science, which is focused on the study of phenomena at the nanometer scale, in particular related to the possibilities of matter manipulation. One of the main goals of nanotechnology is the development of controlled, reproducible, and industrially transposable nanostructured materials.
The conventional technique of thin-film growth by deposition of atoms, small atomic clusters and molecules on surfaces is the general method, which is often used in nanotechnology for production of new materials. Recent experiments show, that patterns with different morphology can be formed in the course of nanoparticles deposition process on a surface. In this context, predicting of the final architecture of the growing materials is a fundamental problem worth studying.
Another factor, which plays an important role in industrial applications of new materials, is the question of post-growth stability of deposited structures. The understanding of the post-growth relaxation processes would give a possibility to estimate the lifetime of the deposited material depending on the conditions at which the material was fabricated. Controllable post-growth manipulations with the architecture of deposited structures opens new path for engineering of nanostructured materials.
The task of this thesis is to advance understanding mechanisms of formation and post-growth evolution of nanostructured materials fabricated by atomic clusters deposition on a surface. In order to achieve this goal the following main problems were addressed:
1. The properties of isolated clusters can significantly differ from those of analogous clusters occurring on a solid surface. The difference is caused by the interaction between the cluster and the solid. Therefore, the understanding of structural and dynamical properties of an atomic cluster on a surface is a topic of intense interest from the scientific and technological point of view. In the thesis, stability, energy, and geometry of an atomic cluster on a solid surface were studied using a liquid drop approach which takes into account the cluster-solid interaction. Geometries of the deposited clusters are compared with those of isolated clusters and the differences are discussed.
2. The formation scenarios of patterns on a surface in the course of the process of cluster deposition depend strongly on the dynamics of deposited clusters. Therefore, an important step towards predicting pattern morphology is to study dynamics of a single cluster on a surface. The process of cluster diffusion on a surface was modeled with the use of classical molecular dynamics technique, and the diffusion coefficients for the silver nanoclusters were obtained from the analysis of trajectories of the clusters. The dependence of the diffusion coefficient on the system’s temperature and cluster-surface interaction was established. The results of the calculations are compared with the available experimental results for the diffusion coefficient of silver clusters on graphite surface.
3. The methods of classical molecular dynamics cannot be used for modeling the self-assembly processes of atomic clusters on a surface, because these processes occur on the minutes timescale, what would require an unachievable computer resource for the simulation. Based on the results of molecular dynamics simulations for a single cluster on a surface a Monte-Carlo based approach has been developed to describe the dynamics of the self-assembly of nanoparticles on a surface. This method accounts for the free particle diffusion on a surface, aggregation into islands and detachment from these islands. The developed method is allowed to study pattern formation of structures up to thousands nm, as well as the stability of these structures. Developed method was implemented in MBN Explorer computer package.
4. The process of the pattern formation on a surface was modeled for several different scenarios. Based on the analysis of results of simulations was suggested a criterion, which can be used to distinguish between different patterns formed on a surface, for example: between fractals or compact islands.This criteria can be used to predict the final morphology of a growing structure.
5. The post-growth evolution of patterns on a surface was also analyzed. In particular, attention in the thesis is payed to a systematical theoretical analysis of the post-growth processes occurring in nanofractals on a surface. The time evolution of fractal morphology in the course of the post-growth relaxation was analyzed, the results of these calculations were compared with experimental data available for the post-growth relaxation of silver cluster fractals on graphite substrate.
All the aforementioned problems are discussed in details in the thesis.