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What is the Derived Count Rate?
What is the Derived Count Rate?

... What is the Derived Count Rate? The "derived count rate" is a calculated parameter in the Zetasizer Nano software, and is representative of the scattering intensity that would be measured at the APD in the absence of the laser attenuation filter. The APD detector in the Zetasizer Nano exhibits a lin ...
Weak interactions and nonconservation of parity
Weak interactions and nonconservation of parity

Winter 14 Help Session
Winter 14 Help Session

How one cell eats another
How one cell eats another

... reinforcing L/R bonds (for engulfment irreversibility) Membrane fluctuations far from particle are not filled by actin, and can move ...
ERC-focus (English)
ERC-focus (English)

Invitation to Elementary Particles
Invitation to Elementary Particles

... field disturbances which are sufficiently small in their space extent we can picture them, with a proper caution, as point particles1 . In what follows we are not going to present the course of the QFT, neither use the QFT formalism. It is difficult subject which Ph.D. students of particle theoretical ph ...
The CMS Fast Simulation
The CMS Fast Simulation

MALE AFRICAN ELEPHANT (about 6,000 kilograms) and the
MALE AFRICAN ELEPHANT (about 6,000 kilograms) and the

HW7 solutions - Itai Cohen
HW7 solutions - Itai Cohen

Here - Winter Nuclear and Particle Physics Conference
Here - Winter Nuclear and Particle Physics Conference

SUSPENSIONS
SUSPENSIONS

... layer of adsorbed air on the surface. Thus, the particles, even high density, float on the surface of the liquid until the layer of air is displaced completely. The use of wetting agent allows removing this air from the surface and to easy penetration of the vehicle into the pores. Alcohol, glycerin ...
JLab 12 GeV upgrade (3) [C3]
JLab 12 GeV upgrade (3) [C3]

... capabilities for the study of QCD well beyond those available at existing facilities worldwide and complementary to those planned for the next generation of accelerators in Europe and Asia.” ...
Radioactivity - MrSimonPorter
Radioactivity - MrSimonPorter

... The results suggested that the positive (repulsive) charge must be concentrated at the centre of the atom. Most alpha particles do not pass close to this so pass undisturbed, only alpha particles passing very close to this small nucleus get repelled backwards (the nucleus must also be very massive f ...
Slides - Indico
Slides - Indico

... Insert v  u  2 into dt  m E  v  B  B ...
Potential Energy - McMaster University
Potential Energy - McMaster University

... In one dimension, the velocities are represented by positive or negative numbers to indicate direction. 2) Kinetic Energy is conserved: ...
Thomson`s Model of the Atom - ib
Thomson`s Model of the Atom - ib

... extremely small particles that could not be divided. -atoms from the Greek word atomos, -means “uncut” or “indivisible.” ...
Alignment and Survey - Oxford Particle Physics home
Alignment and Survey - Oxford Particle Physics home

... – We solve the Hierarchy problem – We get a motivation for the Higgs sector • But it’s more complicated than SM Higgs. – The Minimal Supersymmetric model allows the 3 forces to Unify at the GUT scale. – Requires a higgs mass less than 130 GeV/c2 (falsifiable!) ...
CMS PAS FSQ-12-005 - Laboratory of Experimental High Energy
CMS PAS FSQ-12-005 - Laboratory of Experimental High Energy

Decomposition of tetramethylsilane in laminar premixed low
Decomposition of tetramethylsilane in laminar premixed low

Document
Document

... of mass M and outer radius R, are released from rest at the start of an inclined plane of height H and length L. What are the speeds of each cylinder when they reach the bottom? Which cylinder gets to the bottom first? “Nearly-official” solution that I scanned for Winter/Spring 2002 is on next page. ...
Lecture 12 – Asymptotic freedom and the electrodynamics of quarks
Lecture 12 – Asymptotic freedom and the electrodynamics of quarks

... The "vacuum" consists of virtual particles fluctuating into and out of existence. An electron is surrounded by virtual particles which act to shield the charge as in a polarised dielectric. eg e − , e + pairs (lightest and easiest to make). Feynman diagram formalism shown as photon coupling to e − , ...
Naturalness, Hierarchy and Physics Beyond the Standard Model
Naturalness, Hierarchy and Physics Beyond the Standard Model

Fundamental Forces of Nature
Fundamental Forces of Nature

... the intermediate vector bosons, the W and the Z. Since the mass of these particles is on the order of 80 GeV, the uncertainty principle dictates a range of about 1018meters which is about 0.1% of the diameter of a proton. The weak interaction changes one flavor of quark into another. It is crucial t ...
Fundamental Forces of the atom
Fundamental Forces of the atom

... charged (W+) or negatively charged (W-), while Z is neutral (Z0). The reason why the force is weak is because these carriers are massive, about 100 times that of the weight of a proton. ...
ppt
ppt

... 2. Simulate detector response 3. Analyse simulated data as if it were real – Response to known input can be calculated – Also used in detector design • Computer intensive • Must be carefully tuned and checked Joel Goldstein, RAL ...
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ATLAS experiment



ATLAS (A Toroidal LHC ApparatuS) is one of the seven particle detector experiments (ALICE, ATLAS, CMS, TOTEM, LHCb, LHCf and MoEDAL) constructed at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), a particle accelerator at CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) in Switzerland. The experiment is designed to take advantage of the unprecedented energy available at the LHC and observe phenomena that involve highly massive particles which were not observable using earlier lower-energy accelerators. It is hoped that it will shed light on new theories of particle physics beyond the Standard Model.ATLAS is 46 metres long, 25 metres in diameter, and weighs about 7,000 tonnes; it contains some 3000 km of cable. The experiment is a collaboration involving roughly 3,000 physicists from over 175 institutions in 38 countries. The project was led for the first 15 years by Peter Jenni and between 2009 and 2013 was headed by Fabiola Gianotti. Since 2013 it has been headed by David Charlton. It was one of the two LHC experiments involved in the discovery of a particle consistent with the Higgs boson in July 2012.
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