1,150 results on '"Scholl, S"'
Search Results
2. Automated classification of granular bainite and polygonal ferrite by electron backscatter diffraction verified through local structural and mechanical analyses
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Jentner, R. M., Tsai, S. P., Welle, A., Scholl, S., Srivastava, K., Best, J. P., Kirchlechner, C., and Dehm, G.
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- 2023
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3. Interaction of alkaline and acid treatment on the removal of proteinaceous mineral-enriched dairy fouling from UHT treatment
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Schnöing, L., Wiese, H., Tran, T.T., Schuten, H.J., van Asselt, A.J., Augustin, W., and Scholl, S.
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- 2024
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4. Local strength of bainitic and ferritic HSLA steel constituents understood using correlative electron microscopy and microcompression testing
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Jentner, R.M., Scholl, S., Srivastava, K., Best, J.P., Kirchlechner, C., and Dehm, G.
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- 2023
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5. Unsupervised clustering of nanoindentation data for microstructural reconstruction: Challenges in phase discrimination
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Jentner, R.M., Srivastava, K., Scholl, S., Gallardo-Basile, F.J., Best, J.P., Kirchlechner, C., and Dehm, G.
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- 2023
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6. Description of CRESST-II data
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Angloher, G., Bauer, P., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Defay, X., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Iachellini, N. Ferreiro, Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kistner, C., Kluck, H., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Mancuso, M., Münster, A., Pagliarone, C., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Puig, R., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Tanzke, A., Thi, H. H. Trinh, Türkoǧlu, C., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
In Phase 2 of CRESST-II 18 detector modules were operated for about two years (July 2013 - August 2015). Together with this document we are publishing data from two detector modules which have been used for direct dark-matter searches. With these data-sets we were able to set world-leading limits on the cross section for spin-independent elastic scattering of dark matter particles off nuclei. We publish the energies of all events within the acceptance regions for dark-matter searches. In addition, we also publish the energies of the events within the electron-recoil band. This data set can be used to study interactions with electrons of CaWO$_4$. In this document we describe how to use these data sets. In particular, we explain the cut-survival probabilities required for comparisons of models with the data sets., Comment: Text unchanged to v2, new ancillary files added containing simulated data for the sensitivity projections of CRESST-III phase 2 with 1 tonne day exposure, additional information may be found in anc/Proj_CRESST-III-Phase2_README.txt
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- 2017
7. New Limits on Double Electron Capture of $^{40}$Ca and $^{180}$W
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Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bauer, P., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Ciemniak, C., Defay, X., Deuter, G., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Iachellini, N. Ferreiro, Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Huff, P., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Kluck, H., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Münster, A, Pagliarone, C., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Tanzke, A., Tretyak, V., Thi, H. H. Trinh, Türkoğlu, C., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
We analyzed low-background data from the CRESST-II experiment with a total net exposure of 730 kg days to extract limits on double electron capture processes. We established new limits for $^{40}$Ca with $T_{1/2}^{2v2K}>9.9\times10^{21}$ y and $T_{1/2}^{0v2EC}>1.4\times10^{22}$ y and for $^{180}$W with T$_{1/2}^{2v2K}>3.1\times10^{19}$ y and $T_{1/2}^{0v2EC}>9.4\times10^{18}$ y at 90% CL. Depending on the process, these values improve the currently best limits by a factor of $\sim$1.4-30.
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- 2016
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8. Combining immunotherapy with an epidrug in squamous cell carcinomas of different locations: rationale and design of the PEVO basket trial
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de Guillebon, E., Jimenez, M., Mazzarella, L., Betsou, F., Stadler, P., Peták, I., Jeannot, E., Chanas, L., Servant, N., Marret, G., Duso, B.A., Legrand, F., Kornerup, K.N., Bernhart, S.H., Balogh, G., Dóczi, R., Filotás, P., Curigliano, G., Bièche, I., Guérin, J., Dirner, A., Neuzillet, C., Girard, N., Borcoman, E., Larbi Chérif, L., Tresca, P., Roufai, D.B., Dupain, C., Scholl, S., André, F., Fernandez, X., Filleron, T., Kamal, M., and Le Tourneau, C.
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- 2021
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9. Alkaline cleaning of ultra-high temperature dairy fouling in a laminar flow regime
- Author
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Schnöing, L., Shahnazari, R.N., Hohlen, I., van Asselt, A.J., Augustin, W., and Scholl, S.
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- 2021
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10. A White Paper on keV Sterile Neutrino Dark Matter
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Adhikari, R., Agostini, M., Ky, N. Anh, Araki, T., Archidiacono, M., Bahr, M., Baur, J., Behrens, J., Bezrukov, F., Dev, P. S. Bhupal, Borah, D., Boyarsky, A., de Gouvea, A., Pires, C. A. de S., de Vega, H. J., Dias, A. G., Di Bari, P., Djurcic, Z., Dolde, K., Dorrer, H., Durero, M., Dragoun, O., Drewes, M., Drexlin, G., Düllmann, Ch. E., Eberhardt, K., Eliseev, S., Enss, C., Evans, N. W., Faessler, A., Filianin, P., Fischer, V., Fleischmann, A., Formaggio, J. A., Franse, J., Fraenkle, F. M., Frenk, C. S., Fuller, G., Gastaldo, L., Garzilli, A., Giunti, C., Glück, F., Goodman, M. C., Gonzalez-Garcia, M. C., Gorbunov, D., Hamann, J., Hannen, V., Hannestad, S., Hansen, S. H., Hassel, C., Heeck, J., Hofmann, F., Houdy, T., Huber, A., Iakubovskyi, D., Ianni, A., Ibarra, A., Jacobsson, R., Jeltema, T., Jochum, J., Kempf, S., Kieck, T., Korzeczek, M., Kornoukhov, V., Lachenmaier, T., Laine, M., Langacker, P., Lasserre, T., Lesgourgues, J., Lhuillier, D., Li, Y. F., Liao, W., Long, A. W., Maltoni, M., Mangano, G., Mavromatos, N. E., Menci, N., Merle, A., Mertens, S., Mirizzi, A., Monreal, B., Nozik, A., Neronov, A., Niro, V., Novikov, Y., Oberauer, L., Otten, E., Palanque-Delabrouille, N., Pallavicini, M., Pantuev, V. S., Papastergis, E., Parke, S., Pascoli, S., Pastor, S., Patwardhan, A., Pilaftsis, A., Radford, D. C., Ranitzsch, P. C. -O., Rest, O., Robinson, D. J., da Silva, P. S. Rodrigues, Ruchayskiy, O., Sanchez, N. G., Sasaki, M., Saviano, N., Schneider, A., Schneider, F., Schwetz, T., Schönert, S., Scholl, S., Shankar, F., Shrock, R., Steinbrink, N., Strigari, L., Suekane, F., Suerfu, B., Takahashi, R., Van, N. Thi Hong, Tkachev, I., Totzauer, M., Tsai, Y., Tully, C. G., Valerius, K., Valle, J. W. F., Venos, D., Viel, M., Vivier, M., Wang, M. Y., Weinheimer, C., Wendt, K., Winslow, L., Wolf, J., Wurm, M., Xing, Z., Zhou, S., and Zuber, K.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present a comprehensive review of keV-scale sterile neutrino Dark Matter, collecting views and insights from all disciplines involved - cosmology, astrophysics, nuclear, and particle physics - in each case viewed from both theoretical and experimental/observational perspectives. After reviewing the role of active neutrinos in particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology, we focus on sterile neutrinos in the context of the Dark Matter puzzle. Here, we first review the physics motivation for sterile neutrino Dark Matter, based on challenges and tensions in purely cold Dark Matter scenarios. We then round out the discussion by critically summarizing all known constraints on sterile neutrino Dark Matter arising from astrophysical observations, laboratory experiments, and theoretical considerations. In this context, we provide a balanced discourse on the possibly positive signal from X-ray observations. Another focus of the paper concerns the construction of particle physics models, aiming to explain how sterile neutrinos of keV-scale masses could arise in concrete settings beyond the Standard Model of elementary particle physics. The paper ends with an extensive review of current and future astrophysical and laboratory searches, highlighting new ideas and their experimental challenges, as well as future perspectives for the discovery of sterile neutrinos., Comment: v2: 257 pages, 57 figures, content matches published version [JCAP01(2017)025]; over 100 authors from several different communities
- Published
- 2016
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11. Probing low WIMP masses with the next generation of CRESST detector
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The CRESST Collaboration, Angloher, G., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Iachellini, N. Ferreiro, Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kluck, H., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Münster, A., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Tanzke, A., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The purpose of this document is to describe the upgrade of the CRESST dark matter search at LNGS. The proposed strategy will allow to explore a region of the parameter space for spin-independent WIMP-nucleon elastic scattering corresponding to WIMP masses below 10GeV/c$^\text{2}$, that has not been covered by other experiments. These results can be achieved only with outstanding detector performances in terms of threshold and background. This proposal shows how CRESST can match these performance requirements, adding a unique piece of information to the dark matter puzzle. The results of this program will fix a new state-of-the-art in the low mass WIMP exploration, opening new perspectives of understanding the dark matter scenario., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2015
12. Wiped film evaporators: Segmental assessment of wetting behavior and heat transfer performance
- Author
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Jahnke, S., Jasch, K., and Scholl, S.
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- 2020
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13. A new approach to simulate the fluid dynamics in a wiped film evaporator using Modelica
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Appelhaus, D., Jasch, K., Jahnke, S., Hassani Khab Bin, H., Tegethoff, W., Köhler, J., and Scholl, S.
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- 2020
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14. Corrigendum to ‘‘Cardiac donation after circulatory death utilizing normothermic regional perfusion: The three-year vanderbilt experience’’ [The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation 43 (2024) S121]
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Pasrija, C., primary, DeBose-Scarlett, A., additional, Petrovic, M., additional, Bommareddi, S., additional, Absi, T., additional, Siddiqi, H., additional, Amancherla, K., additional, Brinkley, D., additional, Lindenfeld, J., additional, Menachem, J., additional, Ooi, H., additional, Pedrotty, D., additional, Punnoose, L., additional, Rali, A., additional, Sacks, S., additional, Wigger, M., additional, Zalawadiya, S., additional, DeVries, S., additional, Keck, C., additional, Scholl, S., additional, Lepore, A., additional, Warhoover, M., additional, Schlendorf, K., additional, Shah, A., additional, and Trahanas, J., additional
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- 2024
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15. Cardiac Donation After Circulatory Death Utilizing Normothermic Regional Perfusion: The Three-Year Vanderbilt Experience
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Pasrija, C., primary, DeBose-Scarlett, A., additional, Mark, P., additional, Bommareddi, S., additional, Absi, T., additional, Siddiqi, H., additional, Amancherla, K., additional, Brinkley, D., additional, Lindenfeld, J., additional, Menachem, J., additional, Ooi, H., additional, Pedrotty, D., additional, Punnoose, L., additional, Rali, A., additional, Sacks, S., additional, Wigger, M., additional, Zalawadiya, S., additional, DeVries, S., additional, Keck, C., additional, Scholl, S., additional, Lepore, A., additional, Warhoover, M., additional, Schlendorf, K., additional, Shah, A., additional, and Trahanas, J., additional
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- 2024
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16. Beta/gamma and alpha backgrounds in CRESST-II Phase 2
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Strauss, R., Angloher, G., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Iachellini, N. Ferreiro, Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kluck, H., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Münster, A., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Tanzke, A., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The experiment CRESST-II aims at the detection of dark matter with scintillating CaWO$_4$ crystals operated as cryogenic detectors. Recent results on spin-independent WIMP-nucleon scattering from the CRESST-II Phase 2 allowed to probe a new region of parameter space for WIMP masses below 3 GeV/c$^2$. This sensitivity was achieved after background levels were reduced significantly. We present extensive background studies of a CaWO$_4$ crystal, called TUM40, grown at the Technische Universit\"at M\"unchen. The average beta/gamma rate of 3.51/[kg keV day] (1-40 keV) and the total intrinsic alpha activity from natural decay chains of $3.08\pm0.04$ mBq/kg are the lowest reported for CaWO$_4$ detectors. Contributions from cosmogenic activation, surface-alpha decays, external radiation and intrinsic alpha/beta emitters are investigated in detail. A Monte-Carlo based background decomposition allows to identify the origin of the majority of beta/gamma events in the energy region relevant for dark matter search., Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables
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- 2014
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17. A detector module with highly efficient surface-alpha event rejection operated in CRESST-II Phase 2
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Strauss, R., Angloher, G., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Ferreiro, N., Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kluck, H., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Münster, A., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Stanger, M., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Tanzke, A., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The cryogenic dark matter experiment CRESST-II aims at the direct detection of WIMPs via elastic scattering off nuclei in scintillating CaWO$_4$ crystals. We present a new, highly improved, detector design installed in the current run of CRESST-II Phase 2 with an efficient active rejection of surface-alpha backgrounds. Using CaWO$_4$ sticks instead of metal clamps to hold the target crystal, a detector housing with fully-scintillating inner surface could be realized. The presented detector (TUM40) provides an excellent threshold of ${\sim}\,0.60\,$keV and a resolution of $\sigma\,{\approx}\,0.090$ keV (at 2.60$\,$keV). With significantly reduced background levels, TUM40 sets stringent limits on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon scattering cross section and probes a new region of parameter space for WIMP masses below 3$\,$GeV/c$^2$. In this paper, we discuss the novel detector design and the surface-alpha event rejection in detail., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures
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- 2014
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18. Results on low mass WIMPs using an upgraded CRESST-II detector
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CRESST Collaboration, Angloher, G., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Iachellini, N. Ferreiro, Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Huff, P., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kister, C., Kluck, H., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Münster, A., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Tanzke, A., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The CRESST-II cryogenic dark matter search aims for the detection of WIMPs via elastic scattering off nuclei in CaWO$_4$ crystals. We present results from a low-threshold analysis of a single upgraded detector module. This module efficiently vetoes low energy backgrounds induced by $\alpha$-decays on inner surfaces of the detector. With an exposure of \unit[29.35]{kg live days} collected in 2013 we set a limit on spin-independent WIMP-nucleon scattering which probes a new region of parameter space for WIMP masses below \unit[3]{GeV/c$^2$}, previously not covered in direct detection searches. A possible excess over background discussed for the previous CRESST-II phase 1 (from 2009 to 2011) is not confirmed., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
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- 2014
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19. Radiopurity of CaWO$_4$ Crystals for Direct Dark Matter Search with CRESST and EURECA
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Münster, A., Sivers, M. v., Angloher, G., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Jochum, J., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Laubenstein, M., Loebell, J., Ortigoza, Y., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Puimedon, J., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Tanzke, A., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The direct dark matter search experiment CRESST uses scintillating CaWO$_4$ single crystals as targets for possible WIMP scatterings. An intrinsic radioactive contamination of the crystals as low as possible is crucial for the sensitivity of the detectors. In the past CaWO$_4$ crystals operated in CRESST were produced by institutes in Russia and the Ukraine. Since 2011 CaWO$_4$ crystals have also been grown at the crystal laboratory of the Technische Universit\"at M\"unchen (TUM) to better meet the requirements of CRESST and of the future tonne-scale multi-material experiment EURECA. The radiopurity of the raw materials and of first TUM-grown crystals was measured by ultra-low background $\gamma$-spectrometry. Two TUM-grown crystals were also operated as low-temperature detectors at a test setup in the Gran Sasso underground laboratory. These measurements were used to determine the crystals' intrinsic $\alpha$-activities which were compared to those of crystals produced at other institutes. The total $\alpha$-activities of TUM-grown crystals as low as 1.23 $\pm$ 0.06 mBq/kg were found to be significantly smaller than the activities of crystals grown at other institutes typically ranging between ~15 mBq/kg and ~35 mBq/kg., Comment: Corrected typos, results unchanged
- Published
- 2014
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20. Data publication: An approach for in situ fouling monitoring in heat exchangers using electrical impedance spectroscopy
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(0000-0002-8001-3404) Assis Dias, F., (0000-0003-0641-5867) Kryk, H., (0000-0002-6676-5263) Schleicher, E., (0009-0000-0318-3365) Nurjahan, T., (0009-0007-8275-2220) Pelz, P., (0000-0002-2555-8989) Bart, H.-J., (0000-0001-9228-8942) Harbou, E., (0000-0001-8564-9017) Scholl, S., (0000-0002-4040-0434) Jasch, K., (0000-0002-7371-0148) Hampel, U., (0000-0002-8001-3404) Assis Dias, F., (0000-0003-0641-5867) Kryk, H., (0000-0002-6676-5263) Schleicher, E., (0009-0000-0318-3365) Nurjahan, T., (0009-0007-8275-2220) Pelz, P., (0000-0002-2555-8989) Bart, H.-J., (0000-0001-9228-8942) Harbou, E., (0000-0001-8564-9017) Scholl, S., (0000-0002-4040-0434) Jasch, K., and (0000-0002-7371-0148) Hampel, U.
- Abstract
The dataset presented in this study is focused on the in situ monitoring of organic fouling in a plate heat exchanger using electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). The primary objective was to accurately determine the thickness of fouling layers that develop over time during heat exchanger operation. The experiments were conducted using an impedance analyzer (Sciospec ISX-3) configured in a four-terminal setup with two electrodes. The counter and reference electrodes were connected to a probe positioned at the top of the chamber, while the working and sensing electrodes were connected to the heating plate of the heat exchanger. This configuration allowed for the precise measurement of impedance across the fouling layer. The amplitude of the excitation signal was set to 1 V (rms). This value was chosen to maintain linearity at high frequencies and to ensure a high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The impedance spectra were recorded across a frequency range of 10 Hz to 2 MHz. The spectrum included 50 measurement points that were logarithmically spaced within this range to capture detailed impedance characteristics across different frequencies. Impedance data were sampled at a rate of 45 mHz, and measurements were collected over a duration of approximately 600 minutes, allowing for continuous monitoring of the fouling development process. The raw data consists of impedance measurements, reflecting changes in the electrical properties of the fouling layer as it accumulates on the heat exchanger surfaces. The data points in the spectrum provide insights into the relationship between fouling thickness and impedance across various frequencies, which is critical for developing models to predict fouling behavior in heat exchangers.This dataset is valuable for researchers and engineers interested in non-invasive fouling monitoring techniques, offering a foundation for improving heat exchanger efficiency through real-time fouling detection and characterization.
- Published
- 2024
21. Energy-Dependent Light Quenching in CaWO$_4$ Crystals at mK Temperatures
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Strauss, R., Angloher, G., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Canonica, L., Carli, W., Ciemniak, C., Erb, A., Feilitzsch, F. v., Gorla, P., Gütlein, A., Hagn, H., Hauff, D., Hellgartner, D., Jochum, J., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Loebell, J., Münster, A., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schieck, J., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Tanzke, A., Uffinger, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., and Zöller, A.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Scintillating CaWO$_4$ single crystals are a promising multi-element target for rare-event searches and are currently used in the direct Dark Matter experiment CRESST (Cryogenic Rare Event Search with Superconducting Thermometers). The relative light output of different particle interactions in CaWO$_4$ is quantified by Quenching Factors (QFs). These are essential for an active background discrimination and the identification of a possible signal induced by weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). We present the first precise measurements of the QFs of O, Ca and W at mK temperatures by irradiating a cryogenic detector with a fast neutron beam. A clear energy dependence of the QF of O and, less pronounced, of Ca was observed for the first time. Furthermore, in CRESST neutron-calibration data a variation of the QFs among different CaWO$_4$ single crystals was found. For typical CRESST detectors the QFs in the region-of-interest (10-40$\,$keV) are $QF_O^{ROI}=(11.2{\pm}0.5)\,$%, $QF_{Ca}^{ROI}=(5.94{\pm}0.49)\,$% and $QF_W^{ROI}=(1.72{\pm}0.21)\,$%. The latest CRESST data (run32) is reanalyzed using these fundamentally new results on light quenching in CaWO$_4$ having moderate influence on the WIMP analysis. Their relevance for future CRESST runs and for the clarification of previously published results of direct Dark Matter experiments is emphasized., Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2014
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22. Akute Leukämien: Fortschritte auf allen Gebieten
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Scholl, S., Eich, H., and Höffken, K.
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- 2022
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23. The CRESST II Dark Matter Search
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Stodolsky, Leo, Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Deuter, G., Feilitzsch, F. v., Hauff, D., Huff, P., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Lanfranchi, J. C., Pfister, S., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Proebst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schaeffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Sivers, M. v., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Tanzke, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., and Zoeller, A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Direct Dark Matter detection with cryodetectors is briefly discussed, with particular mention of the possibility of the identification of the recoil nucleus. Preliminary results from the CREEST II Dark Matter search, with 730 kg-days of data, are presented. Major backgrounds and methods of identifying and dealing with them are indicated., Comment: Talk at DSU workshop, ITP Beijing, Oct. 2011. 9 figures, 2 tables
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- 2012
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24. Results from 730 kg days of the CRESST-II Dark Matter Search
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Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Huff, P., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Reindl, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., von Sivers, M., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauß, R., Tanzke, A., Usherov, I., Wawoczny, S., Willers, M., and Zöller, A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The CRESST-II cryogenic Dark Matter search, aiming at detection of WIMPs via elastic scattering off nuclei in CaWO$_4$ crystals, completed 730 kg days of data taking in 2011. We present the data collected with eight detector modules, each with a two-channel readout; one for a phonon signal and the other for coincidently produced scintillation light. The former provides a precise measure of the energy deposited by an interaction, and the ratio of scintillation light to deposited energy can be used to discriminate different types of interacting particles and thus to distinguish possible signal events from the dominant backgrounds. Sixty-seven events are found in the acceptance region where a WIMP signal in the form of low energy nuclear recoils would be expected. We estimate background contributions to this observation from four sources: 1) "leakage" from the e/\gamma-band 2) "leakage" from the \alpha-particle band 3) neutrons and 4) Pb-206 recoils from Po-210 decay. Using a maximum likelihood analysis, we find, at a high statistical significance, that these sources alone are not sufficient to explain the data. The addition of a signal due to scattering of relatively light WIMPs could account for this discrepancy, and we determine the associated WIMP parameters., Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures
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- 2011
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25. Status of the CRESST Dark Matter Search
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Schmaler, J., Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Brown, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Huff, P., Imber, J., Ingleby, S., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Lang, R. F., Malek, M., McGowan, R., Mikhailik, V. B., Pantic, E., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Tolhurst, A. J. B., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The CRESST experiment aims for a detection of dark matter in the form of WIMPs. These particles are expected to scatter elastically off the nuclei of a target material, thereby depositing energy on the recoiling nucleus. CRESST uses scintillating CaWO4 crystals as such a target. The energy deposited by an interacting particle is primarily converted to phonons which are detected by transition edge sensors. In addition, a small fraction of the interaction energy is emitted from the crystals in the form of scintillation light which is measured in coincidence with the phonon signal by a separate cryogenic light detector for each target crystal. The ratio of light to phonon energy permits the discrimination between the nuclear recoils expected from WIMPs and events from radioactive backgrounds which primarily lead to electron recoils. CRESST has shown the success of this method in a commissioning run in 2007 and, since then, further investigated possibilities for an even better suppression of backgrounds. Here, we report on a new class of background events observed in the course of this work. The consequences of this observation are discussed and we present the current status of the experiment., Comment: Proceedings of the 13th International Workshop on Low Temperature Detectors, 4 pages, 3 figures
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- 2009
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26. Composite CaWO4 Detectors for the CRESST-II Experiment
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Kiefer, M., Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Brown, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Huff, P., Imber, J., Ingleby, S., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kimmerle, M., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Lang, R. F., Malek, M., McGowan, R., Mikhailik, V. B., Pantic, E., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Tolhurst, A. J. B., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
CRESST-II, standing for Cryogenic Rare Events Search with Superconducting Thermometers phase II, is an experiment searching for Dark Matter. In the LNGS facility in Gran Sasso, Italy, a cryogenic detector setup is operated in order to detect WIMPs by elastic scattering off nuclei, generating phononic lattice excitations and scintillation light. The thermometers used in the experiment consist of a tungsten thin-film structure evaporated onto the CaWO4 absorber crystal. The process of evaporation causes a decrease in the scintillation light output. This, together with the need of a big-scale detector production for the upcoming EURECA experiment lead to investigations for producing thermometers on smaller crystals which are glued onto the absorber crystal. In our Run 31 we tested composite detectors for the first time in the Gran Sasso setup. They seem to produce higher light yields as hoped and could provide an additional time based discrimination mechanism for low light yield clamp events., Comment: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Workshop on Low Temperature Detectors 4 pages, 9 figures
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- 2009
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27. Scintillator Non-Proportionality and Gamma Quenching in CaWO4
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Lang, R. F., Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Brown, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Huff, P., Imber, J., Ingleby, S., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Malek, M., McGowan, R., Mikhailik, V. B., Pantic, E., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Tolhurst, A. J. B., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We measure and explain scintillator non-proportionality and gamma quenching of CaWO4 at low energies and low temperatures. Phonons that are created following an interaction in the scintillating crystal at temperatures of 15mK are used for a calorimetric measurement of the deposited energy, and the scintillation light is measured with a separate cryogenic light detector. Making use of radioactivity intrinsic to the scintillating crystal, the scintillator non-proportionality is mapped out to electron energies <5keV. The observed behavior is in agreement with a simple model based on Birks' law and the stopping power dE/dx for electrons. We find for Birks' constant $k_B=(18.5\pm0.7)$nm/keV in CaWO4. Gamma lines allow a measurement of the reduced light yield of photons with respect to electrons, as expected in the presence of scintillator non-proportionality. In particular, we show that gamma-induced events in CaWO4 give only about 90 percent of the light yield of electrons, at energies between 40keV and 80keV., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures
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- 2009
28. Electron and Gamma Background in CRESST Detectors
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Lang, R. F., Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Brown, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Huff, P., Imber, J., Ingleby, S., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Majorovits, B., Malek, M., McGowan, R., Mikhailik, V. B., Pantic, E., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Tolhurst, A. J. B., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The CRESST experiment monitors 300g CaWO_4 crystals as targets for particle interactions in an ultra low background environment. In this paper, we analyze the background spectra that are recorded by three detectors over many weeks of data taking. Understanding these spectra is mandatory if one wants to further reduce the background level, and allows us to cross-check the calibration of the detectors. We identify a variety of sources, such as intrinsic contaminations due to primordial radioisotopes and cosmogenic activation of the target material. In particular, we detect a 3.6keV X-ray line from the decay of 41-Ca with an activity of (26\pm4)\mu Bq, corresponding to a ratio 41-Ca/40-Ca=(2.2\pm0.3)\times10^{-16}., Comment: 7 pages, 12 figures
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- 2009
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29. Discrimination of Recoil Backgrounds in Scintillating Calorimeters
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Lang, R. F., Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Brown, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Huff, P., Imber, J., Ingleby, S., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Malek, M., McGowan, R., Mikhailik, V. B., Pantic, E., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Pröbst, F., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schäffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Tolhurst, A. J. B., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The alpha decay of $\n{{}^{210}Po}$ is a dangerous background to rare event searches. Here, we describe observations related to this alpha decay in the Cryogenic Rare Event Search with Superconducting Thermometers (CRESST). We find that lead nuclei show a scintillation light yield in our $\n{CaWO_4}$ crystals of $0.0142\pm0.0013$ relative to electrons of the same energy. We describe a way to discriminate this source of nuclear recoil background by means of a scintillating foil, and demonstrate its effectiveness. This leads to an observable difference in the pulse shape of the light detector, which can be used to tag these events. Differences in pulse shape of the phonon detector between lead and electron recoils are also extracted, opening the window to future additional background suppression techniques based on pulse shape discrimination in such experiments., Comment: 5 pages, 9 figures
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- 2009
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30. Neutron Scattering Facility for Characterization of CRESST and EURECA Detectors at mK Temperatures
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Lanfranchi, J. -C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., von Feilitzsch, F., Gütlein, A., Hagn, H., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kimmerle, M., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Rau, W., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Scholl, S., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
CRESST (Cryogenic Rare Event Search with Superconducting Thermometers) is an experiment located at the Gran Sasso underground laboratory and aimed at the direct detection of dark matter in the form of WIMPs. The setup has just completed a one year commissioning run in 2007 and is presently starting a physics run with an increased target mass. Scintillating $\mathrm{CaWO_4}$ single crystals, operated at temperatures of a few millikelvin, are used as target to detect the tiny nuclear recoil induced by a WIMP. The powerful background identification and rejection of $\alpha$, e$^{-}$ and $\gamma$ events is realized via the simultaneous measurement of a phonon and a scintillation signal generated in the $\mathrm{CaWO_4}$ crystal. However, neutrons could still be misidentified as a WIMP signature. Therefore, a detailed understanding of the individual recoil behaviour in terms of phonon generation and scintillation light emission due to scattering on Ca, O or W nuclei, respectively, is mandatory. The only setup which allows to perform such measurements at the operating temperature of the CRESST detectors has been installed at the Maier-Leibnitz-Accelerator Laboratory in Garching and is presently being commissioned. The design of this neutron scattering facility is such that it can also be used for other target materials, e.g. $\mathrm{ZnWO_4}$, $\mathrm{PbWO_4}$ and others as foreseen in the framework of the future multitarget tonne-scale experiment EURECA (European Underground Rare Event Calorimeter Array)., Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, To appear in the proceedings of CryoScint08 (http://cryoscint08.in2p3.fr), Univ. Lyon 1, France, June 6th 2008, P. Di Stefano (IPN Lyon) and F. Petricca (MPP Munich) eds
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- 2008
31. Commissioning Run of the CRESST-II Dark Matter Search
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Angloher, G., Bauer, M., Bavykina, I., Bento, A., Brown, A., Bucci, C., Ciemniak, C., Coppi, C., Deuter, G., von Feilitzsch, F., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Huff, P., Imber, J., Ingleby, S., Isaila, C., Jochum, J., Kiefer, M., Kimmerle, M., Kraus, H., Lanfranchi, J. -C., Lang, R. F., Majorovits, B., Malek, M., McGowan, R., Mikhailik, V. B., Pantic, E., Petricca, F., Pfister, S., Potzel, W., Proebst, F., Rau, W., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Sailer, C., Schaeffner, K., Schmaler, J., Scholl, S., Seidel, W., Stodolsky, L., Tolhurst, A. J. B., Usherov, I., and Westphal, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The CRESST cryogenic direct dark matter search at Gran Sasso, searching for WIMPs via nuclear recoil, has been upgraded to CRESST-II by several changes and improvements.We present the results of a commissioning run carried out in 2007. The basic element of CRESST-II is a detector module consisting of a large (~ 300 g) CaWO_4 crystal and a very sensitive smaller (~ 2 g) light detector to detect the scintillation light from the CaWO_4.Information from light-quenching factor studies allows the definition of a region of the energy-light yield plane which corresponds to tungsten recoils. A neutron test is reported which supports the principle of using the light yield to identify the recoiling nucleus. Data obtained with two detector modules for a total exposure of 48 kg-days are presented. Judging by the rate of events in the "all nuclear recoils" acceptance region the apparatus shows a factor ~ten improvement with respect to previous results, which we attribute principally to the presence of the neutron shield. In the "tungsten recoils" acceptance region three events are found, corresponding to a rate of 0.063 per kg-day. Standard assumptions on the dark matter flux, coherent or spin independent interactions,then yield a limit for WIMP-nucleon scattering of 4.8 \times 10^{-7}pb, at M{WIMP} ~50 GeV., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figs No essential changes in content. Minor errors corrected. Sentence added at end of introduction concerning increased sensitivity. Best limit on plots at M=50 GeV. Text labelling of candidate events corrected
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- 2008
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32. Letter of Intent for Double-CHOOZ: a Search for the Mixing Angle Theta13
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Ardellier, F., Barabanov, I., Barriere, J. C., Bauer, M., Bezrukov, L., Buck, C., Cattadori, C., Courty, B., Cribier, M., Dalnoki-Veress, F., Danilov, N., de Kerret, H., Di Vacri, A., Etenko, A., Fallot, M., Grieb, Ch., Goeger, M., Guertin, A., Kirchner, T., Krylov, Y. S., Kryn, D., Hagner, C., Hampel, W., Hartmann, F. X., Huber, P., Jochum, J., Lachenmaier, T., Lasserre, Th., Lendvai, Ch., Lindner, M., Marie, F., Martino, J., Mention, G., Milsztajn, A., Meyer, J. P., Motta, D., Oberauer, L., Obolensky, M., Pandola, L., Potzel, W., Schoenert, S., Schwan, U., Schwetz, T., Scholl, S., Scola, L., Skorokhvatov, M., Sukhotin, S., Letourneau, A., Vignaud, D., von Feilitzsch, F., Winter, W., and Yanovich, E.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Tremendous progress has been achieved in neutrino oscillation physics during the last few years. However, the smallness of the $\t13$ neutrino mixing angle still remains enigmatic. The current best constraint comes from the CHOOZ reactor neutrino experiment $\s2t13 < 0.2$ (at 90% C.L., for $\adm2=2.0 10^{-3} \text{eV}^2$). We propose a new experiment on the same site, Double-CHOOZ, to explore the range of $\s2t13$ from 0.2 to 0.03, within three years of data taking. The improvement of the CHOOZ result requires an increase in the statistics, a reduction of the systematic error below one percent, and a careful control of the cosmic ray induced background. Therefore, Double-CHOOZ will use two identical detectors, one at $\sim$150 m and another at 1.05 km distance from the nuclear cores. The plan is to start data taking with two detectors in 2008, and to reach a sensitivity of 0.05 in 2009, and 0.03 in 2011., Comment: 102 pages, 9 chapters, 3 appendix. 43 figures
- Published
- 2004
33. A New 76Ge Double Beta Decay Experiment at LNGS
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Abt, I., Altmann, M., Bakalyarov, A., Barabanov, I., Bauer, C., Bellotti, E., Belyaev, S. T., Bezrukov, L., Brudanin, V., Buettner, C., Bolotsky, V. P., Caldwell, A., Cattadori, C., Clement, H., Di Vacri, A., Eberth, J., Egorov, V., Grigoriev, G., Gurentsov, V., Gusev, K., Hampel, W., Heusser, G., Hofmann, W., Jochum, J., Junker, M., Kiko, J., Kirpichnikov, I. V., Klimenko, A., Knoepfle, K. T., Kornoukhov, V. N., Laubenstein, M., Lebedev, V., Liu, X., Nemchenok, I., Pandola, L., Sandukovsky, V., Schoenert, S., Scholl, S., Schwingenheuer, B., Simgen, H., Smolnikov, A., Tikhomirov, A., Vasenko, A. A., Vasiliev, S., Weisshaar, D., Yanovich, E., Yurkowski, J., Zhukov, S., and Zuzel, G.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
This Letter of Intent has been submitted to the Scientific Committee of the INFN Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS) in March 2004. It describes a novel facility at the LNGS to study the double beta decay of 76Ge using an (optionally active) cryogenic fluid shield. The setup will allow to scrutinize with high significance on a short time scale the current evidence for neutrinoless double beta decay of 76Ge using the existing 76Ge diodes from the previous Heidelberg-Moscow and IGEX experiments. An increase in the lifetime limit can be achieved by adding more enriched detectors, remaining thereby background-free up to a few 100 kg-years of exposure., Comment: 67 pages, 19 eps figures, 17 tables, gzipped tar file
- Published
- 2004
34. Magnetic Moments of Baryons with a Single Heavy Quark
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Scholl, S. and Weigel, H.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We calculate the magnetic moments of heavy baryons with a single heavy quark in the bound-state approach. In this approach the heavy baryons is considered as a heavy meson bound in the field of a light baryon. The light baryon field is represented as a soliton excitation of the light pseudoscalar and vector meson fields. For these calculations we adopt a model that is both chirally invariant and consistent with the heavy quark spin symmetry. We gauge the model action with respect to photon field in order to extract the electromagnetic current operator and obtain the magnetic moments by computing pertinent matrix elements of this operator between the bound state wavefunctions. We compare our predictions for the magnetic moments with results of alternative approaches for the description of heavy baryon properties., Comment: 18 pages Latex, one figure (eps), reference reorganized
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- 2003
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35. Magnetic Moments of Baryons with a Heavy Quark
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Weigel, H. and Scholl, S.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We compute magnetic moments of baryons with a heavy quark in the bound state approach for heavy baryons. In this approach the heavy baryon is considered as a heavy meson bound to a light baryon. The latter is represented as a soliton excitation of light meson fields. We obtain the magnetic moments by sandwiching pertinent components of the electromagnetic current operator between the bound state wave--functions. We extract this current operator from the coupling to the photon field after extending the action to be gauge invariant., Comment: Talk presented by HW at MRST'03 (Joe-Fest), Syracuse, NY, May 2003, 12 pages, uses AIP style files. Ref. added
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- 2003
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36. Continuous high-pressure operation of a pharmaceutically relevant Krapcho dealkoxycarbonylation reaction
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Rehbein, M. C., Wolters, J., Kunick, C., and Scholl, S.
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- 2019
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37. Long-term survival of sorafenib-treated FLT3-ITD–positive acute myeloid leukaemia patients relapsing after allogeneic stem cell transplantation
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Metzelder, S.K., Schroeder, T., Lübbert, M., Ditschkowski, M., Götze, K., Scholl, S., Meyer, R.G., Dreger, P., Basara, N., Fey, M.F., Salih, H.R., Finck, A., Pabst, T., Giagounidis, A., Kobbe, G., Wollmer, E., Finke, J., Neubauer, A., and Burchert, A.
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- 2017
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38. SURGICAL STAGING PRIOR TO CHEMORADIATION IS BENEFICIAL FOR SURVIVAL IN PATIENTS WITH HIGH STAGE CERVICAL CANCER: EP1217
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Kenter, G, Popovic, M, Alran, S, Fourchotte, V, Dureau, S, Mandic, A, Zijlmans, H, Hillemans, P, Lecuru, F, Ngo, C, Wimberger, P, Rouzier, R, Kamal, M, Scholl, S, and Consortium, RAIDs
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- 2019
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39. 205 PI3K-epigenetic ‘metagene’ alterations were associated with PFS but appear independent of FIGO-2018 stage in cervival patients enrolled in the prospective european bioraids study
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Scholl, S, Rouzier, R, Fourchotte, V, Kenter, G, Popovic, M, Dureau, S, and Kamal, M
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- 2019
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40. Kennzahlenbasierte Beschreibung von Tropfenmitriss flashender Feeds und Tropfenabscheidern für Realstoffsysteme
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Jasch, K., (0000-0002-4373-849X) Döß, A., (0000-0002-6218-0989) Schubert, M., (0000-0003-0641-5867) Kryk, H., (0000-0002-7371-0148) Hampel, U., Scholl, S., Jasch, K., (0000-0002-4373-849X) Döß, A., (0000-0002-6218-0989) Schubert, M., (0000-0003-0641-5867) Kryk, H., (0000-0002-7371-0148) Hampel, U., and Scholl, S.
- Abstract
Die Reduktion oder weitgehende Vermeidung von Tropfen bzw. deren Abscheidung sind häufig auftretende Fragestellungen während Auslegung, Betrieb oder Revamps von Trennkolonnen. Der Mitriss von Tropfen durch die Dampfphase wirkt der bereits eingetragenen Trennleistung erheblich entgegen und beeinträchtigt die Energie¬effizienz des Verfahrens, die Produktqualität oder auch den Betrieb nachgeschalteter Apparate. Eine effiziente Tropfenabscheidung trägt daher wesentlich zur Einsparung energetischer und stofflicher Ressourcen bei. Dies erfordert eine möglichst genaue Vorhersage der auftretenden Tropfenspektren in Trennkolonnen und deren Mitriss. Flashende Feeds sind wesentlich an der Entstehung von Tropfen in Trennkolonnen beteiligt, wobei konsolidierte Kenntnisse über entstehende Tropfengrößen- und -spektren sowie dominierende Einflussfaktoren fehlen. Ein Druckabfall unter den Sättigungsdruck des Feedgemisches führt zunächst zu einem metastabilen Zustand des überhitzten Fluids. In Folge lokaler Verdampfungs-vorgänge stellt sich ein thermodynamischer Gleichgewichtszustand im Zweiphasen¬gebiet ein. Derartige Vorgänge sind in fast allen Rückläufen in thermischen Trennkolonnen, Feeds mit kryogenen Medien oder Kolonnen mit mechanischer Brüdenkompression zur Wärmeintegration vertreten. Abhängig von Massenstrom, Überhitzung, Stoffwerten des Fluides und geometrischen Randbedingungen kommt es aufgrund der schlagartigen Druckabsenkung zu einem explosionsartigen Zerfall des metastabilen Flüssigkeitsstrahls, bei dem sich thermodynamische Instabilitäten, wie Keimbildung, Blasenwachstum und -zerfall, und fluiddynamische Beanspruchung überlagern. Erhebliche Tropfenströme sind die Folge. Dabei ist unklar, welchen Einfluss stoffliche, anlagentechnische und betriebliche Bedingungen auf die entstehende Tropfenanzahl, deren Größenspektrum und Abtrennbarkeit haben. Hier besteht ein erhebliches Interesse seitens der Anlagenbetreiber und -ausrüster, Beschrei¬bungsgrundlagen zur Abscheidung von
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- 2023
41. Extended Heat Loss and Temperature Analysis of Three Linear Fresnel Receiver Designs
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Hofer, A., Cuevas, F., Heimsath, A., Nitz, P., Platzer, W.J., and Scholl, S.
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- 2015
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42. Comparison of Two Different (Quasi-) Dynamic Testing Methods for the Performance Evaluation of a Linear Fresnel Process Heat Collector
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Hofer, A., Büchner, D., Kramer, K., Fahr, S., Heimsath, A., Platzer, W.J., and Scholl, S.
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- 2015
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43. The electron capture in 163Ho experiment – ECHo
- Author
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Gastaldo, L., Blaum, K., Chrysalidis, K., Day Goodacre, T., Domula, A., Door, M., Dorrer, H., Düllmann, Ch. E., Eberhardt, K., Eliseev, S., Enss, C., Faessler, A., Filianin, P., Fleischmann, A., Fonnesu, D., Gamer, L., Haas, R., Hassel, C., Hengstler, D., Jochum, J., Johnston, K., Kebschull, U., Kempf, S., Kieck, T., Köster, U., Lahiri, S., Maiti, M., Mantegazzini, F., Marsh, B., Neroutsos, P., Novikov, Yu. N., Ranitzsch, P. C. O., Rothe, S., Rischka, A., Saenz, A., Sander, O., Schneider, F., Scholl, S., Schüssler, R. X., Schweiger, Ch., Simkovic, F., Stora, T., Szücs, Z., Türler, A., Veinhard, M., Weber, M., Wegner, M., Wendt, K., and Zuber, K.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Value pricing of surface coatings for mitigating heat exchanger fouling
- Author
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Gomes da Cruz, L., Ishiyama, E.M., Boxler, C., Augustin, W., Scholl, S., and Wilson, D.I.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Thermische Verfahrenstechnik
- Author
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Mersmann, A., Scholl, S., Grote, Karl-Heinrich, editor, and Feldhusen, Jörg, editor
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. EURECA Conceptual Design Report
- Author
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Angloher, G., Armengaud, E., Augier, C., Benoit, A., Bergmann, T., Blümer, J., Broniatowski, A., Brudanin, V., Camus, P., Cazes, A., Chapellier, M., Coron, N., Cox, G.A., Cuesta, C., Danevich, F.A., Jésus, M. De, Dumoulin, L., Eitel, K., Erb, A., Ertl, A., Feilitzsch, F. von, Filosofov, D., Fourches, N., García, E., Gascon, J., Gerbier, G., Ginestra, C., Gironnet, J., Giuliani, A., Gros, M., Gütlein, A., Hauff, D., Henry, S., Heuermann, G., Jochum, J., Jokisch, S., Juillard, A., Kister, C., Kleifges, M., Kluck, H., Korolkova, E.V., Kozlov, V.Y., Kraus, H., Kudryavtsev, V.A., Lanfranchi, J.-C., Loaiza, P., Loebell, J., Machulin, I., Marnieros, S., Martínez, M., Menshikov, A., Münster, A., Navick, X.-F., Nones, C., Ortigoza, Y., Pari, P., Petricca, F., Potzel, W., Povinec, P.P., Pröbst, F., Puimedón, J., Reindl, F., Robinson, M., Rolón, T., Roth, S., Rottler, K., Rozov, S., Sailer, C., Salinas, A., Sanglard, V., Sarsa, M.L., Schäffner, K., Schmidt, B., Scholl, S., Schönert, S., Seidel, W., Siebenborn, B., Sivers, M. v., Strandhagen, C., Strauß, R., Tanzke, A., Tretyak, V.I., Turad, M., Ulrich, A., Usherov, I., Veber, P., Velazquez, M., Villar, J.A., Viraphong, O., Walker, R.J., Wawoczny, S., Weber, M., Willers, M., Wüstrich, M., Yakushev, E., Zhang, X., and Zöller, A.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Controlled polymorphic transformation of continuously crystallized solid lipid nanoparticles in a microstructured device: A feasibility study
- Author
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Schoenitz, M., Joseph, S., Nitz, A., Bunjes, H., and Scholl, S.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Steigerung der Energieeffizienz von Produktionsprozessen durch innovative Wärmeübertrager: Verdampfung und Kondensation von Gemischen
- Author
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Losher, T., Deeb, M., Lu, Y., Margraf, H., Jasch, K., Lutters, N., Rehfeldt, S., Kenig, E., Klein, H., Luke, A., and Scholl, S.
- Subjects
ddc - Published
- 2022
49. Recent Results for the ECHo Experiment
- Author
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Hassel, C., Blaum, K., Goodacre, T. Day, Dorrer, H., Düllmann, Ch. E., Eberhardt, K., Eliseev, S., Enss, C., Filianin, P., Fäßler, A., Fleischmann, A., Gastaldo, L., Goncharov, M., Hengstler, D., Jochum, J., Johnston, K., Keller, M., Kempf, S., Kieck, T., Köster, U., Krantz, M., Marsh, B., Mokry, C., Novikov, Yu. N., Ranitzsch, P. C. O., Rothe, S., Rischka, A., Runke, J., Saenz, A., Schneider, F., Scholl, S., Schüssler, R. X., Simkovic, F., Stora, T., Thörle-Pospiech, P., Türler, A., Veinhard, M., Wegner, M., Wendt, K., and Zuber, K.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Kinetic investigation of the Dushman reaction at concentrations relevant to mixing studies in stirred tank reactors
- Author
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Kölbl, A., Desplantes, V., Grundemann, L., and Scholl, S.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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