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Dive into the research topics where Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos is active.

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Featured researches published by Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos.


Nature | 2010

The size of the proton

Randolf Pohl; Aldo Antognini; F. Nez; F. D. Amaro; F. Biraben; João Cardoso; D.S. Covita; A. Dax; Satish Dhawan; L.M.P. Fernandes; Adolf Giesen; Thomas Graf; T. W. Hänsch; P. Indelicato; L. Julien; Cheng-Yang Kao; Paul E. Knowles; Eric-Olivier Le Bigot; Yi-Wei Liu; José A. M. Lopes; L. Ludhova; Cristina M. B. Monteiro; F. Mulhauser; Tobias Nebel; Paul Rabinowitz; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; L.A. Schaller; Karsten Schuhmann; Catherine Schwob; D. Taqqu

The proton is the primary building block of the visible Universe, but many of its properties—such as its charge radius and its anomalous magnetic moment—are not well understood. The root-mean-square charge radius, rp, has been determined with an accuracy of 2 per cent (at best) by electron–proton scattering experiments. The present most accurate value of rp (with an uncertainty of 1 per cent) is given by the CODATA compilation of physical constants. This value is based mainly on precision spectroscopy of atomic hydrogen and calculations of bound-state quantum electrodynamics (QED; refs 8, 9). The accuracy of rp as deduced from electron–proton scattering limits the testing of bound-state QED in atomic hydrogen as well as the determination of the Rydberg constant (currently the most accurately measured fundamental physical constant). An attractive means to improve the accuracy in the measurement of rp is provided by muonic hydrogen (a proton orbited by a negative muon); its much smaller Bohr radius compared to ordinary atomic hydrogen causes enhancement of effects related to the finite size of the proton. In particular, the Lamb shift (the energy difference between the 2S1/2 and 2P1/2 states) is affected by as much as 2 per cent. Here we use pulsed laser spectroscopy to measure a muonic Lamb shift of 49,881.88(76) GHz. On the basis of present calculations of fine and hyperfine splittings and QED terms, we find rp = 0.84184(67) fm, which differs by 5.0 standard deviations from the CODATA value of 0.8768(69) fm. Our result implies that either the Rydberg constant has to be shifted by −110 kHz/c (4.9 standard deviations), or the calculations of the QED effects in atomic hydrogen or muonic hydrogen atoms are insufficient.


Science | 2013

Proton Structure from the Measurement of 2S-2P Transition Frequencies of Muonic Hydrogen

Aldo Antognini; F. Nez; Karsten Schuhmann; F. D. Amaro; F. Biraben; João Cardoso; D.S. Covita; A. Dax; Satish Dhawan; Marc Diepold; L.M.P. Fernandes; Adolf Giesen; Andrea L. Gouvea; Thomas Graf; T. W. Hänsch; P. Indelicato; L. Julien; Cheng-Yang Kao; P. Knowles; F. Kottmann; Eric-Olivier Le Bigot; Yi-Wei Liu; José A. M. Lopes; L. Ludhova; Cristina M. B. Monteiro; F. Mulhauser; Tobias Nebel; Paul Rabinowitz; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; L.A. Schaller

Proton Still Too Small Despite a protons tiny size, it is possible to measure its radius based on its charge or magnetization distributions. Traditional measurements of proton radius were based on the scattering between protons and electrons. Recently, a precision measurement of a line in the spectrum of muonium—an atom consisting of a proton and a muon, instead of an electron—revealed a radius inconsistent with that deduced from scattering studies. Antognini et al. (p. 417; see the Perspective by Margolis) examined a different spectral line of muonium, with results less dependent on theoretical analyses, yet still inconsistent with the scattering result; in fact, the discrepancy increased. A precision spectroscopic measurement of the proton radius indicates a growing discrepancy with respect to scattering results. [Also see Perspective by Margolis] Accurate knowledge of the charge and Zemach radii of the proton is essential, not only for understanding its structure but also as input for tests of bound-state quantum electrodynamics and its predictions for the energy levels of hydrogen. These radii may be extracted from the laser spectroscopy of muonic hydrogen (μp, that is, a proton orbited by a muon). We measured the 2S1/2F=0-2P3/2F=1 transition frequency in μp to be 54611.16(1.05) gigahertz (numbers in parentheses indicate one standard deviation of uncertainty) and reevaluated the 2S1/2F=1-2P3/2F=2 transition frequency, yielding 49881.35(65) gigahertz. From the measurements, we determined the Zemach radius, rZ = 1.082(37) femtometers, and the magnetic radius, rM = 0.87(6) femtometer, of the proton. We also extracted the charge radius, rE = 0.84087(39) femtometer, with an order of magnitude more precision than the 2010-CODATA value and at 7σ variance with respect to it, thus reinforcing the proton radius puzzle.


Science | 2016

Laser spectroscopy of muonic deuterium

Randolf Pohl; F. Nez; L.M.P. Fernandes; F. D. Amaro; F. Biraben; João Cardoso; D. S. Covita; A. Dax; Satish Dhawan; Marc Diepold; Adolf Giesen; Andrea L. Gouvea; Thomas Graf; T. W. Hänsch; P. Indelicato; L. Julien; Paul E. Knowles; F. Kottmann; Eric-Olivier Le Bigot; Yi-Wei Liu; José A. M. Lopes; L. Ludhova; Cristina M. B. Monteiro; F. Mulhauser; Tobias Nebel; Paul Rabinowitz; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; L.A. Schaller; Karsten Schuhmann; Catherine Schwob

The deuteron is too small, too The radius of the proton has remained a point of debate ever since the spectroscopy of muonic hydrogen indicated a large discrepancy from the previously accepted value. Pohl et al. add an important clue for solving this so-called proton radius puzzle. They determined the charge radius of the deuteron, a nucleus consisting of a proton and a neutron, from the transition frequencies in muonic deuterium. Mirroring the proton radius puzzle, the radius of the deuteron was several standard deviations smaller than the value inferred from previous spectroscopic measurements of electronic deuterium. This independent discrepancy points to experimental or theoretical error or even to physics beyond the standard model. Science, this issue p. 669 The charge radius of the deuteron is several standard deviations smaller than the previously accepted value. The deuteron is the simplest compound nucleus, composed of one proton and one neutron. Deuteron properties such as the root-mean-square charge radius rd and the polarizability serve as important benchmarks for understanding the nuclear forces and structure. Muonic deuterium μd is the exotic atom formed by a deuteron and a negative muon μ–. We measured three 2S-2P transitions in μd and obtain rd = 2.12562(78) fm, which is 2.7 times more accurate but 7.5σ smaller than the CODATA-2010 value rd = 2.1424(21) fm. The μd value is also 3.5σ smaller than the rd value from electronic deuterium spectroscopy. The smaller rd, when combined with the electronic isotope shift, yields a “small” proton radius rp, similar to the one from muonic hydrogen, amplifying the proton radius puzzle.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2016

eHALOPH a Database of Salt-Tolerant Plants: Helping put Halophytes to Work

Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; Mohammed J. Al-Azzawi; James Aronson; T. J. Flowers

eHALOPH (http://www.sussex.ac.uk/affiliates/halophytes/) is a database of salt-tolerant plants-halophytes. Records of plant species tolerant of salt concentrations of around 80 mM sodium chloride or more have been collected, along with data on plant type, life form, ecotypes, maximum salinity tolerated, the presence or absence of salt glands, photosynthetic pathway, antioxidants, secondary metabolites, compatible solutes, habitat, economic use and whether there are publications on germination, microbial interactions and mycorrhizal status, bioremediation and of molecular data. The database eHALOPH can be used in the analysis of traits associated with tolerance and for informing choice of species that might be used for saline agriculture, bioremediation or ecological restoration and rehabilitation of degraded wetlands or other areas.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013

Beam studies of the segmented resistive WELL: a potential thin sampling element for digital hadron calorimetry

L. Arazi; C.D.R. Azevedo; A. Breskin; S. Bressler; L. Moleri; Hugo Natal da Luz; E. Oliveri; M. Pitt; Adam Rubin; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; J.F.C.A. Veloso; Andrew White

Thick Gas Electron Multipliers (THGEMs) have the potential of constituting thin, robust sampling elements in Digital Hadron Calorimetry (DHCAL) in future colliders. We report on recent beam studies of new single- and double-THGEM-like structures; the multiplier is a Segmented Resistive WELL (SRWELL) - a single-faced THGEM in contact with a segmented resistive layer inductively coupled to readout pads. Several 10 10 cm 2 configurations with a total thickness of 5-6 mm (excluding electronics) with 1 cm 2 pads coupled to APV-SRS readout were investigated with muons and pions. Detection e ciencies in the 98% range were recorded with average pad-multiplicity of 1.1. The resistive anode resulted in e cient discharge damping, with potential drops of a few volts; discharge probabilities were 10 7 for muons and 10 6 for pions in the double-stage configuration, at rates of a few kHz/cm 2 . Further optimization work and research on larger detectors are underway.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1989

Novel techniques for designing gas proportional scintillation counters for x-ray spectrometry

Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; T.H.V.T. Dias; Santiago D.A. Reyes Cortes; C.A.N. Conde

Abstract A xenon-filled gas proportional scintillation counter for X-ray spectrometry using low-cost designing techniques is described. This detector has a basic energy resolution of 8.3% for 5.9 keV photons. X-ray fluorescence spectra are presented for a variety of samples.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2011

The size of the proton and the deuteron

R. Pohl; F. D. Amaro; Aldo Antognini; F. Biraben; João Cardoso; D.S. Covita; A. Dax; Satish Dhawan; L.M.P. Fernandes; Adolf Giesen; Thomas Graf; T. W. Hänsch; P. Indelicato; L. Julien; Cheng-Yang Kao; Paul E. Knowles; Eric-Olivier Le Bigot; Yi-Wei Liu; José A. M. Lopes; L. Ludhova; Cristina M. B. Monteiro; F. Mulhauser; Tobias Nebel; F. Nez; Paul Rabinowitz; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; L.A. Schaller; Karsten Schuhmann; Catherine Schwob; D. Taqqu

We have recently measured the 2S1/2F=1 − 2P3/2F = 2 energy splitting in the muonic hydrogen atom μp to be 49881.88 (76) GHz. Using recent QED calculations of the fine-, hyperfine, QED and finite size contributions we obtain a root-mean-square proton charge radius of rp = 0.84184 (67) fm. This value is ten times more precise, but 5 standard deviations smaller, than the 2006 CODATA value of rp = 0.8768 (69) fm. The source of this discrepancy is unknown. Using the precise measurements of the 1S-2S transition in regular hydrogen and deuterium and our value of rp we obtain improved values of the Rydberg constant, R∞ = 10973731.568160 (16) m−1and the rms charge radius of the deuteron rd = 2.12809 (31) fm.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2006

The XENON dark matter search: status of XENON10

E. Aprile; Karl-Ludwig Giboni; S. Kamat; K. Ni; B K Singh; M. Yamashita; R.J. Gaitskell; P. Sorensen; L. de Viveiros; R. Gomez; U. Oberlack; P. Shagin; A. Bolozdynya; E. Dahl; J. Kwong; T. Shutt; J. Angle; L. Baudis; A. Manalaysay; J Orboeck; R. Hasty; A. Manzur; D. N. McKinsey; A. Bernstein; N. Madden; C. Winant; F. Arneodo; A. Ferella; J A Matias Lopes; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos

The XENON experiment searches for dark matter particles called WIMPs using liquid xenon (LXe) as the active target. The detector is a 3D position sensitive Time Projection Chamber optimized to simultaneously measure the ionization and scintillation produced by a recoil event of energy as low as 16 keV. The distinct ratio of the two signals for nuclear recoils arising from WIMPs and neutrons and for electron recoils from the dominant gamma-ray background determines its event-by-event discrimination. With 1 ton of LXe distributed in ten identical modules, the proposed XENON1T experiment will achieve a sensitivity more than a factor of thousand beyond current limits. A phased program will test a 10 kg detector (XENON10) followed by a 100 kg (XENON100) one as unit module for the XENON1T scale experiment. We review the progress of the XENON R & D phase before presenting the status of XENON10. The experiment will be based at the Gran Sasso Underground Laboratory and is expected to start data taking in early 2006.


Physical Review A | 2013

Lifetime and population of the 2S state in muonic hydrogen and deuterium

Marc Diepold; F. D. Amaro; Aldo Antognini; F. Biraben; João Cardoso; D. S. Covita; A. Dax; Satish Dhawan; L.M.P. Fernandes; Adolf Giesen; Andrea L. Gouvea; Thomas Graf; T. W. Hänsch; P. Indelicato; L. Julien; Cheng-Yang Kao; Paul E. Knowles; F. Kottmann; Eric-Olivier Le Bigot; Yi-Wei Liu; José A. M. Lopes; L. Ludhova; Cristina M. B. Monteiro; F. Mulhauser; Tobias Nebel; F. Nez; Paul Rabinowitz; Joaquim M. F. Dos Santos; L.A. Schaller; Karsten Schuhmann

Radiative deexcitation (RD) of the metastable 2S state of muonic protium and deuterium atoms has been observed. In muonic protium, we improve the precision on lifetime and population (formation probability) values for the short-lived {\mu}p(2S) component, and give an upper limit for RD of long-lived {\mu}p(2S) atoms. In muonic deuterium at 1 hPa, 3.1 +-0.3 % of all stopped muons form {\mu}d(2S) atoms. The short-lived 2S component has a population of 1.35 +0.57 -0.33 % and a lifetime of {\tau}_short({\mu}d) = 138 +32 -34 ns. We see evidence for RD of long-lived {\mu}d(2S) with a lifetime of {\tau}_long({\mu}d) = 1.15 +0.75 -0.53 {\mu}s. This is interpreted as formation and decay of excited muonic molecules.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Improved x-ray detection and particle identification with avalanche photodiodes

Marc Diepold; L.M.P. Fernandes; Jorge Machado; Pedro Amaro; Marwan Abdou-Ahmed; F. D. Amaro; Aldo Antognini; F. Biraben; Tzu-Ling Chen; D. S. Covita; A. Dax; Beatrice Franke; Sandrine Galtier; Andrea L. Gouvea; Johannes Götzfried; Thomas Graf; T. W. Hänsch; M. Hildebrandt; P. Indelicato; L. Julien; K. Kirch; A. Knecht; F. Kottmann; Julian J. Krauth; Yi-Wei Liu; Cristina M. B. Monteiro; F. Mulhauser; Boris Naar; Tobias Nebel; F. Nez

Avalanche photodiodes are commonly used as detectors for low energy x-rays. In this work, we report on a fitting technique used to account for different detector responses resulting from photoabsorption in the various avalanche photodiode layers. The use of this technique results in an improvement of the energy resolution at 8.2 keV by up to a factor of 2 and corrects the timing information by up to 25 ns to account for space dependent electron drift time. In addition, this waveform analysis is used for particle identification, e.g., to distinguish between x-rays and MeV electrons in our experiment.

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F. Nez

PSL Research University

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A. Dax

Paul Scherrer Institute

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