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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

MCNPX Simulations for Neutron Cross Section Measurements

Tesinsky, Milan January 2010 (has links)
<p>This thesis presents MCNPX simulations of the SCANDAL set-up used at the Theodor Svedberg Laboratory for neutron scattering cross-section measurements. The thesis describes processes and data important for the upcoming off-line data analysis. In the experiment, neutrons scattered off the target are converted to protons which are stopped in scintillator crystals. The results of presented simulations include a description of the proton spectra in dependence of the neutron-to-proton conversion angle, calculation of the hit position gates and a study of the converter describing the role of its chemical composition and also the role of other plastic scintillator on the proton spectra.</p> / QC 20100520
2

Cross Section for the 165/Ho (n, 2n) 164/Ho Reaction at 15.6 MeV

Lear, Richard D. 08 1900 (has links)
It was the purpose of this investigation to bring together the ideas and procedures involved in the measurement of (n, 2n) reaction cross sections. Some of the inherent properties of the material under investigation (Holium) are involved in determining these relationships.
3

FHBS calculation of ionized electron angular and energy distribution following the p+H collision at 20 keV

Fu, Jun 15 November 2004 (has links)
A Finite Hilbert Basis Set (FHBS) method to calculate the angular and energy distribution of ejected electrons in an ion-atom collision is presented. This method has been applied to the p + H collision at 20 keV impact energy. An interference effect between the exit channels, where electrons are guided out of the collision region by both the residual target proton and the projectile proton, is discovered. Experimental data appears to confirm this result.
4

Determination of Differential Cross Sections from Sliced Fluorescence Image Experiment in the Bulb Environment

Li, Yu-chi 02 July 2010 (has links)
"none"
5

FHBS calculation of ionized electron angular and energy distribution following the p+H collision at 20 keV

Fu, Jun 15 November 2004 (has links)
A Finite Hilbert Basis Set (FHBS) method to calculate the angular and energy distribution of ejected electrons in an ion-atom collision is presented. This method has been applied to the p + H collision at 20 keV impact energy. An interference effect between the exit channels, where electrons are guided out of the collision region by both the residual target proton and the projectile proton, is discovered. Experimental data appears to confirm this result.
6

Assessing cotton maturity from fiber cross-section measurements

Guo, Xiaowen, active 2013 26 March 2014 (has links)
The previous Fiber Image Analysis System (FIAS-I) is not reliable enough to detect fibers, especially for the immature fibers. It yields a systematic bias in the maturity distribution. Furthermore, the maturity distributions are often assumed to be normal without any normality tests in many previous studies, and those distributions are commonly measured by a sole parameter, e.g., the mean maturity value. In fact, those statistical inferences on cotton maturity may not be valid when cotton maturity does not follow a normal distribution. In light of the complexity of maturity distributions, the sole-parameter approach does not appear to be reliable and rational to rank the maturity among different samples. In this thesis, modified algorithms are made in the previous Fiber Image Analysis System (FIAS-I) to improve the number and accuracy of detected cross-sections and reduce the bias on immature fiber. The normality of cotton maturity distributions are analyzed through multiple parameters and patterns of cotton maturity distributions, and the experimental results on the cross section images selected from seven cotton varieties are displayed. Finally, several normality tests are introduced, and the Box-Cox transformation is applied to the maturity distribution, which makes the comparisons among the mean maturity feasible. / text
7

A compact fast-neutron producing target for high resolution crosss section measurements /

Flaška, Marek. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Technische Universiteit Delft, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 121-124).
8

High accuracy measurement of the 238U(n,γ) cross section at the CERN n_TOF facility

Wright, Tobias James January 2014 (has links)
The radiative capture cross section of a highly pure (99.999%), 6.125(2) grams 238U sample ((9.56±05)e-4 atoms/barn) has been measured in the 185 m flight path at the CERN neutron time-of-flight facility n_TOF in the energy range 0.3 eV-20 keV. The Total Absorption Calorimeter (TAC) detection system, an array of 40 BaF2 crystals, was used utilising the total absorption technique, where all the γ-rays from the capture cascades are detected. These data have undergone careful background subtraction, with special care being given to the background originating from neutrons scattered by the 238U sample. Pile-up and dead-time effects have been corrected for using an innovative correction method valid for variable high count rates within a complex detection system such as the TAC. The resulting capture yield has an uncertainty of up to 2.2% below 5 keV and up to 3.7% between 5 and 20 keV, in line with the accuracy requested in the NEA High Priority Request List. A resonance analysis has been performed up to 5 keV with the code SAMMY. Between 5 and 20 keV, the cross section is treated as unresolved and averaged. The results confirm the excellent quality of the most recent nuclear data evaluations within quoted uncertainties and suggest some improvements. In particular, these TAC data suggest a 2% increase in the average cross section in the energy range 2-9 keV and a 5% reduction in the energy range 9-20 keV.
9

MCNPX Simulations for Neutron Cross Section Measurements

Tesinsky, Milan January 2010 (has links)
This thesis presents MCNPX simulations of the SCANDAL set-up used at the Theodor Svedberg Laboratory for neutron scattering cross-section measurements. The thesis describes processes and data important for the upcoming off-line data analysis. In the experiment, neutrons scattered off the target are converted to protons which are stopped in scintillator crystals. The results of presented simulations include a description of the proton spectra in dependence of the neutron-to-proton conversion angle, calculation of the hit position gates and a study of the converter describing the role of its chemical composition and also the role of other plastic scintillator on the proton spectra. / QC 20100520
10

Measurement of Compton Scattering Cross Section at a few GeV Electron Energy

Ye, Li 10 August 2018 (has links)
Electron Compton scattering is the best known fundamental QED process, however, a precision measurement of its cross section for a beam energy above 1 GeV has been lacking up to now. An updated high precision measurement of the neutral pion lifetime via the Primakoff effect (PrimEx-II) experiment was performed in Hall B of Jefferson Lab in 2010. The experiment used small angle coherent photoproduction of πO's in the Coulomb field of a nucleus, i.e. the Primakoff effect, to determine the lifetime with a precision of less than $1.5%. It therefore requires thorough understanding of the underlying systematic uncertainties. To facilitate that data for well known electromagnetic processes were taken concurrently with the photoproduction data. This analysis pertains to measuring the Compton scattering cross section, which occurs with similar kinematics to the primary process. The combination of the well established theory for this process with large collected statistics allowed to extract this cross section with high precision in an energy region of 4-5 GeV for 12C and 28Si targets. The results of this analysis will be presented.

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