5 results on '"Ruggero Vaglio"'
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2. The 6th European Conference on Applied Superconductivity (EUCAS 2003)
- Author
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Ruggero Vaglio and Gordon Donaldson
- Subjects
Political science ,Materials Chemistry ,Metals and Alloys ,Ceramics and Composites ,Library science ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Engineering physics - Abstract
This special issue of Superconductor Science and Technology contains papers presented at the 6th European Conference on Applied Superconductivity (EUCAS), which was held in Sorrento, Italy, 14--18 September 2003. This important biennial event followed previous successful meetings held in Gottingen, Germany; Edinburgh, Scotland; Eindhoven, the Netherlands; Sitges (Barcelona), Spain; and Copenhagen, Denmark. Following tradition, this EUCAS conference focused on the role of superconductivity in bridging various aspects of research with a variety of concrete advanced applications. EUCAS 2003 attracted about 1000 participants from all around the world with large participation from non-European countries. This conference benefited the worldwide superconductivity community tremendously as scientists operating internationally were able to share their knowledge and experience with one another. We are grateful to all those who submitted papers to the Conference Proceedings, which will be published in an Institute of Physics Conference Series, and also to those who contributed to this special issue. Unfortunately we could not consider every one of the large number of papers submitted to this issue and we express our regret to those whose work could not be included.
- Published
- 2004
3. Evidence for thermal boundary resistance effects on superconducting radiofrequency cavity performances
- Author
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Vincenzo Palmieri, Ruggero Vaglio, Sergey Stark, and Antonio Alessandro Rossi
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Superconductivity ,Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Liquid helium ,Thermal resistance ,Metals and Alloys ,Lambda point ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Condensed Matter Physics ,law.invention ,chemistry ,law ,Materials Chemistry ,Ceramics and Composites ,Interfacial thermal resistance ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Lambda point refrigerator ,Superfluid helium-4 ,Helium - Abstract
The majority of the literature on superconducting cavities for particle accelerators concentrates on the interaction of a radiofrequency (RF) electromagnetic field with a superconductor cooled in liquid helium, generally either at a fixed temperature of 4.2 K or 1.8 K, basing the analysis of experimental results on the assumption that the superconductor is at the same temperature as the infinite reservoir of liquid helium. Only a limited number of papers have extended their analysis to the more complex overall system composed of an RF field, a superconductor and liquid helium. Only a few papers have analyzed, for example, the problem of the Kapitza resistance, i.e. the thermal boundary resistance between the superconductor and the superfluid helium. Among them, the general conclusion is that the Kapitza resistance, one of the most controversial and less understood topics in physics, is generally negligible, or not relevant for the performance enhancement of cavities. In our work presented here, studying the performance of 6 GHz niobium (Nb) test cavities, we have discovered and studied a new effect consisting of an abrupt change in the surface resistance versus temperature at the superfluid helium lambda transition T?. This abrupt change (or ?jump?) clearly appears when the RF measurement of a cavity is performed at constant power rather than at a constant field. We have correlated this jump to a change in the thermal exchange regime across the lambda transition, and, through a simple thermal model and further reasonable assumptions, we have calculated the thermal boundary resistance between niobium and liquid helium in the temperature range between 4.2 K and 1.8 K. We find that the absolute values of the thermal resistance both above and below the lambda point are fully compatible with the data reported in the literature for heat transfer to pool boiling helium I (HeI) above T? and for the Kapitza interface resistance (below T?) between a polished metal surface and superfluid HeII. Finally, based on the well-documented evidence that the surface status of metal to liquid helium influences the heat exchange towards the fluid, and specifically the Kapitza resistance below T?, we have tested an anodization process external to the cavity, comparing the performances of the cavity before and after external anodization. The tests were done without breaking the vacuum inside the cavity or modifying the inner superconducting layer in any way, and were repeated on different samples. The results show that when the cavity is externally anodized, both the Q-factor and the maximum accelerating field increase. Again, when the oxide layer is removed, the Q-factor shifts towards a lower level and the maximum accelerating field is also reduced.
- Published
- 2014
4. Memorial to Professor Antonio Barone
- Author
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Ruggero Vaglio, Francesco Tafuri, and Giampiero Pepe
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Physics ,Josephson effect ,Battle ,Advisory committee ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Metals and Alloys ,Macroscopic quantum phenomena ,Art history ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Left behind ,Long period ,Materials Chemistry ,Ceramics and Composites ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,High energy resolution ,Archetype ,media_common - Abstract
Antonio Barone prematurely passed away on 4 December 2011 at the age of 72, after a one-year battle with cancer. He left behind his wife Sveva and his two sons, Alberto and Livio. Antonio was Professor Emeritus at the University of Napoli Federico II, where he had been teaching for about 40 years. The initial research activity of Antonio was in the field of nuclear physics. In this context, almost 45 years ago, the Ge 'Lithium drift' semiconductor detectors represented a novelty, due to the high energy resolution enabled by those devices. Superconductors stimulated new approaches to radiation detection and this motivated Antonio's interest towards superconductivity. Following the birth of the Laboratorio di Cibernetica of the CNR in 1967 he was given the opportunity to work on a joint USA–Italy project (University of Wisconsin, Madison and CNR Naples) in the field of superconductivity on the peculiar subject of the superconductive 'Neuristors'. His research activity on Josephson junctions opened up a wide variety of very stimulating subjects in which he was deeply involved, ranging from the soliton propagation in 'long' Josephson structures to fluctuations phenomena, from light-sensitive junctions and proximity effect to the development of innovative superconducting devices. The strong interaction of Antonio with the Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics of the Academy of Sciences in Moscow, characterizes a long period of his research activity with a precious merging of theoretical and experimental aspects. This body of work converged into the famous monograph on the 'Physics and Applications of the Josephson Effect', written in collaboration with Gianfranco Paterno in 1982. This rapidly became the reference text for the Josephson effect, as documented by thousands of citations and the fact that it was translated into Russian, Japanese and Chinese. In 1983 Antonio was awarded the highest academic title of 'Doctor of the Physical-Mathematical Sciences' by the Academy of Sciences in Moscow, and later the coveted Kapitza Prize. The discovery of high-Tc superconductors (HTS) offered new problems and perspectives. Antonio and his group significantly contributed by reporting original results on the 'archetype' high-Tc Josephson junctions. His studies on unconventional superconductivity, first developed for 'p-wave' superconductors, had great impact and were very influential on the d-wave experiments on HTS compounds, and later on the physics of HTS Josephson junctions. Macroscopic quantum phenomena and particle detectors are the keywords and the logical paths to recall several relevant contributions from Antonio scattered over more than 40 years of activity. Topics of his interest ranged from the fundamentals of macroscopic quantum tunnelling to barrier penetration in non stationary fields, to finally a project encompassing a wider vision of macroscopic quantum phenomena in unconventional systems. He has filled very important positions of scientific management in Italy and participated in many international committees. He chaired (with R Vaglio) the very successful EUCAS 2003 conference in Sorrento, Italy. He has significantly contributed to the popularization of superconductivity as a professor, as a researcher and as a manager. All scientists that had the privilege to deal with him remember Antonio as a real gentleman of science and life, a man of vision and perspective. The local Organizing Committee and the International Advisory Committee of EUCAS 2013 have dedicated the Session 'Junctions and Squids' to the memory of Professor Antonio Barone1. 1A longer version of this memorial has also been published on the Istituto SPIN-CNR website (www.spin.cnr.it/index.php/barone).
- Published
- 2014
5. The 6th European Conference on Applied Superconductivity (EUCAS 2003)
- Author
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Donaldson, Ruggero Vaglio and Gordon, primary
- Published
- 2004
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