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Featured researches published by D. J. Tedeschi.


Physical Review Letters | 2003

Observation of an Exotic S = +1 Baryon in Exclusive Photoproduction from the Deuteron

Stepan Stepanyan; K. Hicks; D. S. Carman; E. Pasyuk; R. A. Schumacher; E. Smith; D. J. Tedeschi; Luminita Todor

In an exclusive measurement of the reaction gammad-->K(+)K(-)pn, a narrow peak that can be attributed to an exotic baryon with strangeness S=+1 is seen in the K(+)n invariant mass spectrum. The peak is at 1.542+/-0.005 GeV/c(2) with a measured width of 0.021 GeV/c(2) FWHM, which is largely determined by experimental mass resolution. The statistical significance of the peak is (5.2+/-0.6)sigma. The mass and width of the observed peak are consistent with recent reports of a narrow S=+1 baryon by other experimental groups.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000

The CLAS drift chamber system

M. D. Mestayer; D. S. Carman; B. Asavapibhop; F. Barbosa; P. Bonneau; S. Christo; G. E. Dodge; T. Dooling; W.S. Duncan; S.A. Dytman; R Feuerbach; G. P. Gilfoyle; V. Gyurjyan; K. Hicks; R.S Hicks; C. E. Hyde-Wright; G. Jacobs; A. Klein; F. J. Klein; M. Kossov; S. E. Kuhn; R. Magahiz; R. W. Major; C. Martin; T McGuckin; J. W. C. McNabb; R. Miskimen; J.A. Mueller; B. B. Niczyporuk; J.E. O'Meara

Abstract Experimental Hall B at Jefferson Laboratory houses the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer, the magnetic field of which is produced by a superconducting toroid. The six coils of this toroid divide the detector azimuthally into six sectors, each of which contains three large multi-layer drift chambers for tracking charged particles produced from a fixed target on the toroidal axis. Within the 18 drift chambers are a total of 35,148 individually instrumented hexagonal drift cells. The novel geometry of these chambers provides for good tracking resolution and efficiency, along with large acceptance. The design and construction challenges posed by these large-scale detectors are described, and detailed results are presented from in-beam measurements.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Abundance and genetic damage of barn swallows from Fukushima

Andrea Bonisoli-Alquati; K. Koyama; D. J. Tedeschi; W. Kitamura; H. Sukuzi; Shanna Ostermiller; E. Arai; Anders Pape Møller; Timothy A. Mousseau

A number of studies have assessed or modeled the distribution of the radionuclides released by the accident at the Fukushima-Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP). Few studies however have investigated its consequences for the local biota. We tested whether exposure of barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) nestlings to low dose ionizing radiation increased genetic damage to their peripheral erythrocytes. We estimated external radiation exposure by using thermoluminescent dosimeters, and by measuring radioactivity of the nest material. We then assessed DNA damage by means of the neutral comet assay. In addition, we conducted standard point-count censuses of barn swallows across environmental radiation levels, and estimated their abundance and local age ratio. Radioactivity of nest samples was in the range 479–143,349 Bq kg−1, while external exposure varied between 0.15 and 4.9 mGy. Exposure to radioactive contamination did not correlate with higher genetic damage in nestlings. However, at higher levels of radioactive contamination the number of barn swallows declined and the fraction of juveniles decreased, indicating lower survival and lower reproduction and/or fledging rate. Thus, genetic damage to nestlings does not explain the decline of barn swallows in contaminated areas, and a proximate mechanism for the demographic effects documented here remains to be clarified.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2016

The Majorana Demonstrator radioassay program

N. Abgrall; I. J. Arnquist; F. T. Avignone; H. O. Back; A. S. Barabash; F. E. Bertrand; Melissa Boswell; A. W. Bradley; V. Brudanin; M. Busch; M. Buuck; D. Byram; A. S. Caldwell; Y.D. Chan; C. D. Christofferson; Pinghan Chu; C. Cuesta; J. A. Detwiler; J. A. Dunmore; Yu. Efremenko; H. Ejiri; S. R. Elliott; P. Finnerty; A. Galindo-Uribarri; V. M. Gehman; T. Gilliss; G. K. Giovanetti; J. Goett; M. P. Green; J. Gruszko

Abstract The Majorana collaboration is constructing the Majorana Demonstrator at the Sanford Underground Research Facility at the Homestake gold mine, in Lead, SD. The apparatus will use Ge detectors, enriched in isotope 76 Ge, to demonstrate the feasibility of a large-scale Ge detector experiment to search for neutrinoless double beta decay. The long half-life of this postulated process requires that the apparatus be extremely low in radioactive isotopes whose decays may produce backgrounds to the search. The radioassay program conducted by the collaboration to ensure that the materials comprising the apparatus are sufficiently pure is described. The resulting measurements from gamma-ray counting, neutron activation and mass spectroscopy of the radioactive-isotope contamination for the materials studied for use in the detector are reported. We interpret these numbers in the context of the expected background for the experiment.


Physical Review Letters | 1998

Dependence of {rvec {ital p}}{rvec {ital p}} {r_arrow} {ital pp{pi}}thinsp{sup 0} near Threshold on the Spin of the Colliding Nucleons

H.O. Meyer; J. Balewski; M. Dzemidzic; J. Doskow; R. E. Pollock; B. von Przewoski; T. Rinckel; F. Sperisen; P. Thörngren-Engblom; Mark Raymond Wolanski; W. Haeberli; B. Lorentz; F. Rathmann; B. Schwartz; T. Wise; W. W. Daehnick; R. W. Flammang; Swapan K. Saha; D. J. Tedeschi; P. V. Pancella

A polarized internal atomic hydrogen target and a stored, polarized beam are used to measure the spin-dependent total cross section Delta_sigma_T/sigma_tot, as well as the polar integrals of the spin correlation coefficient combination A_xx-A_yy, and the analyzing power A_y for pp->pp pi0 at four bombarding energies between 325 and 400 MeV. This experiment is made possible by the use of a cooled beam in a storage ring. The polarization observables are used to study the contribution from individual partial waves.


Trees-structure and Function | 2013

Tree rings reveal extent of exposure to ionizing radiation in Scots pine Pinus sylvestris

Timothy A. Mousseau; Shane M. Welch; Igor Chizhevsky; Oleg Bondarenko; G. Milinevsky; D. J. Tedeschi; Andrea Bonisoli-Alquati; Anders Pape Møller

Tree growth has been hypothesized to provide a reliable indicator of the state of the external environment. Elevated levels of background ionizing radiation may impair growth trajectories of trees by reducing the annual growth. Such effects of radiation may depend on the individual phenotype and interact with other environmental factors such as temperature and drought. We used standardized growth rates of 105 Scots pine Pinus sylvestris located near Chernobyl, Ukraine, varying in the level of background radiation by almost a factor 700. Mean growth rate was severely depressed and more variable in 1987–1989 and several other subsequent years, following the nuclear accident in April 1986 compared to the situation before 1986. The higher frequency of years with poor growth after 1986 was not caused by elevated temperature, drought or their interactions with background radiation. Elevated temperatures suppressed individual growth rates in particular years. Finally, the negative effects of radioactive contaminants were particularly pronounced in smaller trees. These findings suggest that radiation has suppressed growth rates of pines in Chernobyl, and that radiation interacts with other environmental factors and phenotypic traits of plants to influence their growth trajectories in complex ways.


European Physical Journal A | 2004

A pair polarimeter for linearly polarized high energy photons

C. W. de Jager; B. Wojtsekhowski; D. J. Tedeschi; B. Vlahovic; D. Abbott; J. Asai; G. Feldman; T. Hotta; M. Khadaker; H. Kohri; T. Matsumara; T. Mibe; Takashi Nakano; V. Nelyubin; G. Orielly; A. Rudge; P. Weilhammer; M. H. Wood; T. Yorita; R. Zegers

A high quality beam of linearly polarized photons of several GeV will become available with the coherent bremsstrahlung technique at JLab. We have developed a polarimeter which requires about two meters of the beam line, has an analyzing power of 20% and an efficiency of 0.02%. The layout and first results of a polarimeter test on the laser back-scattering photon beam at SPring-8/LEPS are presented.


Physical Review Letters | 1994

FIRST MEASUREMENT OF THE REACTION 3HE(GAMMA ,P)X WITH POLARIZED PHOTONS

C. Ruth; G. S. Adams; H. Baghaei; A. Caracappa; W. B. Clayton; A. D'Angelo; M.-A. Duval; G. Giordano; S. Hoblit; O. C. Kistner; J. M. Laget; R. Lindgren; G. Matone; L. Miceli; W. K. Mize; M. A. Moinester; A. M. Sandorfi; C. Schaerf; R. M. Sealock; L. C. Smith; P. Stoler; D. J. Tedeschi; P. K. Teng; C. E. Thorn; S. T. Thornton; K. Vaziri; C. S. Whisnant; E. J. Whinhold

The first measurement of the reaction He-3(gamma over arrow pointing right, p)X using linearly polarized photons is reported. Cross sections and beam-polarization asymmetries for theta(p)lab = 60-degrees - 100-degrees and E(gamma) - 195-304 MeV are compared with a microscopic calculation which includes one-, two-, and three-nucleon absorption mechanisms. One- and two-nucleon absorption alone fails to describe the data at low proton momenta. The inclusion of three-nucleon absorption significantly improves the comparison with the measured cross sections. However, some features of the asymmetry distributions are not explained.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2015

The Majorana Parts Tracking Database

N. Abgrall; E. Aguayo; F. T. Avignone; A. S. Barabash; F. E. Bertrand; V. Brudanin; M. Busch; D. Byram; A. S. Caldwell; Y-D. Chan; C. D. Christofferson; D. C. Combs; C. Cuesta; J. A. Detwiler; P. J. Doe; Yu. Efremenko; V. Egorov; H. Ejiri; S. R. Elliott; J. Esterline; J. E. Fast; P. Finnerty; F. M. Fraenkle; A. Galindo-Uribarri; G. K. Giovanetti; J. Goett; M. P. Green; J. Gruszko; V. E. Guiseppe; K. Gusev

The Majorana Demonstrator is an ultra-low background physics experiment searching for the neutrinoless double beta decay of 76 Ge. The Majorana Parts Tracking Database is used to record the history of components used in the construction of the Demonstrator. The tracking implementation takes a novel approach based on the schema-free database technology CouchDB. Transportation, storage, and processes undergone by parts such as machining or cleaning are linked to part records. Tracking parts provides a great logistics benefit and an important quality a ssurance reference during construction. In addition, the l ocation history of parts provides an estimate of their exposure to cosmic radiation. A web application for data entry and a radiation exposure calculator have been developed as tools for achieving the extreme radio-purity required for this rare decay search.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1998

THE REGION ONE DRIFT CHAMBER FOR THE CLAS SPECTROMETER

D. S. Carman; S.A. Dytman; R. Magahiz; M. D. Mestayer; R.A. Miskimen; J.A. Mueller; R. A. Schumacher; D. J. Tedeschi; R. Thompson; G.R. Wilkin

Abstract The Region One detector is the innermost of three nested drift chamber packages of the CLAS spectrometer at Jefferson Laboratory. This detector, with 7776 drift cells, was optimized for the CLAS toroidal magnet geometry, and consists of six wedge-shaped sectors integrated into a single unit. Each sector has thin and relatively weak aluminum endplates which support the large mechanical loads from the wire tensions and associated readout hardware. The unusual feature of the detector is its self-supporting design, wherein the wire tensions of neighboring sectors balance each other without the use of massive structural support. We discuss the design criteria, mechanical components, and assembly procedures.

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J. Gruszko

University of Washington

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C. Cuesta

University of Washington

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C. D. Christofferson

South Dakota School of Mines and Technology

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F. E. Bertrand

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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G. K. Giovanetti

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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M. Buuck

University of Washington

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V. E. Guiseppe

University of South Carolina

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