Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2006 Texas Section APS/AAPT/SPS Joint Spring Meeting
Thursday–Saturday, March 23–25, 2006; San Angelo, Texas
Session POS: Poster Session |
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Room: UC 2nd Floor Hallway/Gallery, 10:00am-3:00pm |
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POS.00001: Local Structure and Motional Properties of Positively Charged Muonium in Gallium Phosphide (SPS) |
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POS.00002: Writing of a GEANT4 simulation of E906 at FNAL Main Injector (SPS) |
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POS.00003: Evidence for spin exchange with free carriers for muonium in n-type 4H SiC (SPS) |
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POS.00004: Level 2 Filtering for the PHENIX Experiment at RHIC (SPS) |
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POS.00005: Hardware Upgrades to Improve Muon Tracking on Phenix (SPS) |
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POS.00006: Combined Photometry and Spectroscopy of Globular Cluster Tidal Stream (SPS) |
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POS.00007: Finite-Difference Beam Propagation Modeling for Lasers in Ocular Tissues Thornley Jobe, Raylon Yow, Dhiraj Sardar, Robert Thomas A finite-difference solution to the non-paraxial wave equation with non-uniform arbitrary grid spacing is being constructed for the study of focused laser beam propagation in a cylindrical geometry.~ The model will incorporate thermal lensing as well as linear and nonlinear absorption effects to model beam propagation within the human eye. ~The goal of the study is to accurately predict the dynamics of retinal irradiance under conditions of non-linear propagation, with application in the establishment of infrared safe exposure limits. The poster will present a simulation of a Z-scan and comparison to experimental data. [Preview Abstract] |
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POS.00008: To the Photon Acceleration Effect Russell Moon Using the principles of the Vortex Theory, it was theorized that when a photon encounters an electromagnetic field, both the velocity and the frequency of the photon will increase. To prove this revolutionary idea an experiment was devised using a laser interferometer and two electromagnets. The electromagnets were arranged so that when the beam splitter divided the initial beam of laser light into two secondary beams; one of the two secondary beams passed back and forth between the two magnets. With the DC current to the electromagnets turned off, the two beams formed an interference pattern on the target screen. When the current to the electromagnets was suddenly turned on, the pattern fluctuated wildly until the two beams again reached a quiescent state creating a stable pattern on the screen; when the current to the electromagnets was suddenly turned off, again the pattern fluctuated wildly until it reached a quiescent state forming the initial stable pattern on the screen. It was determined that this new effect was a phenomenon created by the increasing frequency of the laser light whose velocity is increasing as it passes between the expanding electromagnetic field of the magnets. Because it is a new phenomenon in science revealing that the speed of light is not a constant but indeed can be varied, it possesses great historical significance. It is called the Photon Acceleration Effect. Although much more detailed work needs to be done investigating this new and revolutionary phenomenon in nature, it is reasonable to conclude that it was created by an increase in the frequency of the photons passing through the electromagnetic. Also, it must be stated that the discovery of this effect was predicted and discovered using the principles of the Vortex Theory. 1. . Konstantin A. Gridnev, Russell G. Moon, Victor V. Vasiliev. Experiment that discovered the Photon Acceleration Effect, Book of abstracts International Symposium on Origin of Matter and Evolution of Galaxies (OMEG05), New Horizon of Nuclear Astrophysics and Cosmology, November 8-11, 2005, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, p. 77. 2. Russell Moon, Fabian Calvo, Victor Vasiliev. About of the Conservation of Lepton Number, Bulletin of the American Physical Society \href{http://www.phys.ufl.edu/sesaps05.html}{72nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Section of the APS} November 10-12, 2005. Gainesville, Fla, USA, p. 8, BC.00008 3. R.G. Moon, V.V. Vasiliev. Explanation of the Conservation of Lepton Number, Book of abstracts 55 National Conference on Nuclear Physics, Frontiers in the Physics of Nucleus, June 28-July 1, 2005, St.-Petersburg, Russia, 2005, p. 347 [Preview Abstract] |
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