09:57:35 Good, nice. 09:57:55 Sharing screen or nice and kind of do it. This screen. Yeah. 09:57:46 Okay. So one other question I have is that, where do you put. So, so say for, we did a measurement at 20 degrees. 09:57:59 So, where do you put the cross section value. I don't think it's, it should be exactly at 20 degrees right. It should be a weighted sum over, over the whole acceptance. 09:58:13 Yes, but I mean in the simulation you have you put in some cross section right and then you multiply by the ratio of the simulation cross section by the real section or something. 09:58:23 Yeah, so, so you are right in principle you need to do either the integral or the rated or something. Yeah, but, but the ratio is almost constant over the acceptance. 09:58:35 Right, so so they both changed quickly but the ratio between the simulated one and the real one is almost constant in that range, so so the effect is very, very small. 09:58:49 Yeah, but the thing is that, and put it put. 09:58:56 But, like, I'm not talking about original I'm actually talking about the exact cedar angle or exact q square. 09:59:07 I put, like, either we need to put that arrow bar on that in the x direction, or we need to do a way to some not put it at the central central angle or the central q square, and they need to be. 09:59:24 Yeah so i. So, the Q square, I calculate estimated two square. 09:59:29 Okay. 09:59:31 And that's that's that works. 09:59:35 But again, I mean, you, you, you. I mean, you recite his data over simulation. Right. Yeah. and that ratio is. 09:59:44 It doesn't matter much, where it. 09:59:56 If you then want to apply it, so if you use that ratio for the left edge and multiply it by the angle from the left edge. Yes, this is as good so you should take the right action multiplied by the right age, I took to get a request section out. 10:00:04 Yeah, okay, over that will not change that much. Right. 10:00:09 And, I mean, so that's why it's not such a big effect but yeah it's best to to calculate the average p square. 10:00:21 Okay, cool. 10:00:19 Alright, Doc. 10:00:25 Hello. 10:00:29 Hello. Hello. Richard still in the class 12 meeting occasion. 10:00:36 I was ending so he'll join us in a minute. 10:00:39 Unless he has to leave for his doctor's appointment. 10:00:46 Right away. 10:00:49 So let's give him a minute or two. 10:00:55 Here he is. 10:00:55 Yeah. 10:00:56 I reached out to dry Bobby. 10:01:00 Young switching from blue jeans to zoom. 10:01:04 I looked over the Overleaf looks good to me. I think that was one finger missing I uploaded that. Okay, cool. 10:01:12 Yeah, looks good. I tried to pull together everything I could to have some very much appreciated. 10:01:20 Some very much appreciated. Now, I think. 10:01:23 Okay, so we should get it off, we should share it with the core group I guess that's what I would do. Yeah. 10:01:32 So, I guess, I guess if you send i mean i if i think we should I think you need to input email personal emails to do this, I believe. No, but you can go if so I can't do it because it's your but if you, if you click on Share. 10:01:46 Yeah. And then there should be an option to enable link sharing, or something like that. 10:01:55 Let me let me double check I have to open my mouth to see it. 10:02:01 It does prompts you know to add more turn on link sharing. Yeah, please ask so yeah so click on it it's, it should say, turn on Nick sharing or something and then they give you a link to edit in the link to view. 10:02:16 And if you copy that link, everybody can access it. 10:02:21 So I can just send that to dark like cord that email list and although yeah yeah okay, well, I'll try that. Yeah. 10:02:29 Okay. The most important thing is they see it before, I may have to have a couple of days to look at it before Thursday. 10:02:41 Yeah. 10:02:41 All right. 10:02:43 Okay. 10:02:43 I think everyone's here Igor wasn't going to be able to attend and effort away as well, so. 10:02:56 Amen. Anything you want to. Yes. 10:02:58 We had a meeting yesterday, a one on and talking about the plans for the future so started yesterday, and they will assume the limited regular operation so that now they can go into the, going to the spectrometer horse, and do some work. 10:03:14 And the plan for the rest of the year is that we have four weeks have been fun for the jet target dependencies that they tried to get a target working again. 10:03:24 And then in the end they hope they can be two weeks for for the algorithm measurements. So the current plan is that the set the week starting. 10:03:36 I think the September, 10 is the first week, and we'll have two more weeks during October and November 8 will be the fourth week for the bean pie. 10:03:46 And, yeah, that's the current plan and we'll see how it goes on my side, I was able to locate some more recent files for the transformation matrix was spectrometer, which has calibrated. 10:04:04 More recently, I think, 2013 resident old version I use which was from like the before 2000. So, the new transformation matrix files works great with the data, and using that I see a more, much better agreements between them, simulation and data without, 10:04:28 like me, I'm trying to tweak things around like a start on the agreement is great at the first time. 10:04:37 The agreement is great at the first trial. And now I'm just working like I'm just repeating all the process of analyzing the data using this new transformation matrix file. And I think I will get an update of cross section pretty soon. 10:04:53 Okay, sounds good. Sounds good. 10:04:57 Okay. Anything else on your have anything. 10:05:03 No, that's, that's all, I think. 10:05:25 Okay. 10:05:25 These scheduled for the Tupac stuffs been has been fixed. As I reported earlier. 10:05:15 15 to 28. So, November. 10:05:22 One small possible upgrade is I found a thinner reflective foil from 3am that has been used by some other groups. So I requested a sample of it, and it's it's thinner I just want to make sure it can bend with tight corners around the crystal and then 10:05:50 I'll order it, and 10:05:56 reroute the crystals in preparation for shipping and September. 10:06:02 So this will reduce the thickness from each crystal been sort of 21 millimeters. 10:06:12 Right now the crystal itself is 20 millimeters, with the wrapping that comes out of 21 millimeters. The way we're doing it now, but this would reduce it down to 20.14, roughly. 10:06:28 So, The Rock is about four times thinner. 10:06:35 So, will battle allow us to get the crystals a little bit more tightly packed, which I assume is better. 10:06:47 Anyway, so I'll do that. Um. 10:06:51 Other than that, not much new on T Beck's. 10:06:56 We have the 10:07:01 cheap x maybe the Monte Carlo median was mass on Monday, and the capex meeting will be next week on Thursday. 10:07:20 Yeah, one other thing, a visa, do you want to say anything about the analysis you've been doing. 10:07:29 So, I mean, I send this to you one question eaten. 10:07:34 So, I was so in the date days beam in 2009. We were also looking. 10:07:49 We were also changing the position of the beam, which was hitting the central crystal. So it became centered in the center and then move it in steps of four millimeters. 10:08:02 To the left, or east whatever this means and up. 10:08:05 So, and ok I see clear, clear like changes in number of events, depending on the position of the beam in the, in the center of Greece though, and it would be now interested so this is why I send it also to eternal and Keon to see if one can now use this 10:08:30 was the name of the this machine learning, analysis made in route by young student to like See if you can see the difference from from the simulation and the measurement measure it. 10:08:48 and the measurement. So 10:08:53 that's it now. 10:08:56 Yeah and you is your student able to do that. 10:09:18 Unless you have a student you're referring to because right now I don't have one. This was Johnson Tucci, okay yeah so he's he's at least one for the summer. Okay, okay. I mean, but you have these scripts or whatever how this looks like. 10:09:22 I mean, but you have these creeps or whatever how this looks like. I mean, you can compare it to some extent to measurement. Yeah, so we will will will dig through our archives and get out his his analysis and we can compare compare the data to the simulation 10:09:38 when we shift things by. 10:09:40 So I did, only the analysis with QCD because their behave all men Christos, I think it doesn't have it has no sense to do it for the, for the digitized. 10:09:53 Yeah, no, I agree. 10:09:55 And I think this would be worthwhile doing for the paper to. 10:10:00 So yeah. 10:10:03 So, okay, I thought we had chatted about doing it for a separate paper separate paper yeah this could be separate paper. Yeah. Now, that's fine. Yeah, sounds good. 10:10:15 Okay. 10:10:19 So, Doug has Richard. Yeah, yeah. So, in terms of in terms of the test running future tests running a daisy and I know you think of it mainly in terms of Tupac, which is fine but I think the EICHJ angle is probably politically important, and there was 10:10:39 a 5am three or 5am meeting that I was that I was listening to yesterday and I mean it was stated that they have picked the technology for the calorie monitor and maintain yes leader of this. 10:10:57 So, yeah, I think it would be good to talk to Tanya and client align what we do. 10:11:02 Yeah. And so in so far as we can you know politically with the IC generally or maybe at a whatever, as well as tea packs you know i'm not i'm not downgrading tea packs but I think it's just smart politically, if we can find a connection, you know. 10:11:20 Yeah, no I the the email that I that I sent to everyone on two packs that everyone should have seen. 10:11:29 I all describing the chest beam I also include sent it to Tanya is posted it posted it to the 10:11:41 electromagnetic Calla perimeter wiki page. Yep, and directed everyone to look at it so everyone in that group is aware of it. Yeah. 10:11:53 And in the article I did say that we're hoping that Tanya will have some of the ceramic glass inflators available for testing. And, yeah, no, that's great when, when the when the papers are written like on the work that Ethan and Oh yes. 10:12:19 Yeah, make sure to include sign as part of the scientific motivation, he I see. Yeah. In general, I don't know I don't know if you want to get into, Ajay specific or whatever you can certainly mention it, you should mention all the Athena core ha all 10:12:35 these been sortie or whatever. Yeah, but i think that's that's kind of smart from our from our side to do that. Yeah, I agree. 10:12:37 Thanks. 10:12:40 Yeah, and the next electromagnetic Kalorama or meeting is on Monday at 830. So, I expect. 10:12:53 Since that'll be the first meeting since I sent Tanya, the information I expect all I'll read reiterate, give a report. Yeah, and I still get some, some people from exactly collaborators Yeah absolutely. 10:13:13 Yeah. 10:13:13 Um, I also wrote, because you know another 10:13:20 sort of use for the test beam is for streaming readout. I also wrote to Marco, and to Chris Cravens, to see if they wanted to participate and provide you know a wave board from INFN, or the flash ADC to 50 from, from J lab for testing and principle we 10:13:50 can test. 10:13:52 Three readout systems in parallel. 10:13:57 Right. So, but I didn't get any response from Marco or Chris Yeah. 10:14:05 Oh, we have a streaming readout meeting on to Mondays from now. 10:14:13 So, I'll hope that my dad. Oh sorry three Mondays from now on the 12th we decided to give a break for July 4. Yeah. 10:14:27 Okay, um, then dark light I guess so. 10:14:35 We meet on Thursday at one o'clock. 10:14:42 Yep. Yeah, just to see what's going on. Is there any other update rather than Richards paper. 10:14:49 Well, the, the HP are all transfer was supposed to happen this week, I did not hear anything from Jim yet so Polson maybe today. Yeah, move all the gear up debates. 10:15:19 I think that's an important step in terms of determining the field and stuff. It also maybe give a reminder nudge or remind him to nudge Ernie. 10:15:14 What's nice about what am I supposed to give to earn that we were supposed to get some, some updated field map from him. 10:15:22 Okay, maybe I'm out of date they're not yeah I mean the main. 10:15:27 There was this issue, somebody reported it Ricardo had done some calculation. 10:15:33 And it wasn't clear what Ricardo and calculated what field. 10:15:39 I mean I think what Ernie did was, it's clear and he has the field. 10:15:44 But 10:15:47 I think the main thing was to, he was going, when the HP RL magnet was back at base he was going to physically measure the maximum field, and that was that's important ingredient to the dust experiment. 10:15:59 Okay. 10:16:00 As I recall anyway. But, 10:16:05 um, 10:16:09 yeah I mean, there's a general question of, kind of getting people new people getting up to speed on, on, you know doing simulations and things like that so we probably need a group of people to be identified soon you know to do all of that. 10:16:29 I think know roughly who they are but it's. 10:16:35 I realized I missed the last 10:16:39 meeting, so you can watch the recording. Yeah, and I put your leisure. 10:16:44 But, so my informations little bit out of date apologize. No no no i mean it's it's not all linear here at all. 10:16:55 But I think getting the, you know, their focus this week was going to be get the equipment back to base actually that's a significant step. There's a lot of equipment in the hall that may be useful. 10:17:07 And so I'll pause German on that the learning. 10:17:16 On that learning. 10:17:16 All right. Hey, no yeah yeah the other okay so we submitted an abstract for panic. I think we do need to submit an abstract for DMP, I'm very happy if somebody else takes care of that. 10:17:29 Just use the text or whatever and. 10:17:33 So if if john or Ross or somebody else wants to do that. That'd be great. But I think that should get in. By the end of the month. Yeah. So, tell us which one do you want, I do the other one. 10:17:45 I'll put before it. 10:17:48 Well, I'm happy to submit this with the same structure that you did. 10:17:54 Richard, which is this but all three days. 10:17:57 Actually, Yeah, I think it might make sense, if, if you do DMP because I want to come with Miss Muse and everything I might be somewhere else. 10:18:13 But let's see what I talked about that offline, I guess. Yeah, yeah. And I guess we can decide five minutes before the talk. 10:18:20 Yeah. 10:18:22 Yeah. 10:18:25 You probably need to update the schedule where they. 10:18:35 The abstract I've changed that P packs Ethan or give the DMP and Patrick forgive for Kinect. 10:18:41 Okay, I've changed that appropriately. 10:18:51 I can, I can get that abstract, put together and then you know the other the other thing is, I identified a possible pot of money at MIT that might get us something like 50 K so I'm writing a proposal. 10:19:09 1000 words or something, and I would ask for money for the test experiment to basically it's kind of seed money. 10:19:16 So I'm thinking to pay Bates engineers do some travel and maybe some equipment or something like that I don't know. 10:19:23 That sounds good, maybe should really think about who we approach for for this, for the main program. 10:19:31 Well, I mean for us at MIT it's, it's clear it's do we nuclear physics and whether it's medium energy or fundamental cemeteries I mean that's, but I think we need a global plan, you know, with their meeting today the Canadian So, I mean, once you start 10:19:48 putting these people if they take you seriously then they, the first question they ask, is they want to know the big picture so we have to get this all straight, before we really fully engaged with them so I'm just wondering if NSF might be a good venue 10:20:02 for us now, ya know, if you if they fund you already. I mean it's Delta on what they fund you so that's probably why you should start for you, you know, if it's a script proposal right but then I mean, maybe, maybe be right. 10:20:18 Come proposal. 10:20:20 Yeah, but it's often and experiments I've been involved with. Part of it is funded by NSF funded by the way i mean this existing program so that's that's that's not unusual, I mean for Olympus that all came to do in nuclear physics, but it doesn't have 10:20:35 to be. I mean I would just, if you have a relationship with NSF Program Manager I've you informed them about this yet. 10:20:44 I mean I would just send them an email an informational email not ask them for anything. But you send them the proposal and send them the letter from the. 10:20:53 Yeah, the committee, the approval letter and say, and you know the proposal has the dollar amounts in there, and I mean I would call it a modest request. 10:21:04 You know, or something like that. And, and you could, you know, tell them we're considering. 10:21:12 You know we're planning or with our Canadian colleagues we're putting together a plan. 10:21:19 And we'll be approaching them in the near future or something I don't know just a big, big words, you know, but I would inform them just so they know. 10:21:30 Yeah, that's a good idea. Yeah, I think Stony Brook said, you know, you guys should should get funding under this you know to do what you want to do. Seems to me. 10:21:40 I think your question is a fitness Fs more fonts. 10:21:43 Yeah. 10:21:45 You know, it just gave me a supplement for a postdoc, but, you know, maybe it's next year then they find this or something you know who knows you know we can we can we can wing it, you know. 10:21:58 Yeah. 10:22:00 Yeah, I mean they're kind of, I mean, I can send it to NSF NDOE. Right. 10:22:07 Well then it looks like a kind of a general fishing expedition, you know I wouldn't unless you have a relationship, like the program manager or whoever it is always has some sense of responsibility to fund us to do what we want to do so. 10:22:22 I think that's kind of universal. And so if you have a program manager at the NSF. I will especially inform them and educate them about you know what's going on. 10:22:31 Rather than just sending something to end funding agencies hoping you know that that's not generally. 10:22:39 And this is you know yeah it was wondering if you want to talk. If you don't go through caution if you want to talk to that person first and see what they think, if they would prefer a proposal from you as from MIT alone or proposal from all us about. 10:22:58 Right. Well, I would just news we had some problems, somehow being funded by the UI and some pod funded by by by NSF they didn't really like that. 10:23:10 What, what you can kind of assume is that the program managers talk. They certainly have regular communication, and sometimes you know they say it's an NSF project sometimes they said so do we project and sometimes they split it. 10:23:27 So I wouldn't get too hung up on on the format, I would just explain that the great opportunity is, as a result, you know, and how important that is for Stony Brook, new to get going on it. 10:23:42 And that's about it, you know and and also it's certainly the international collaboration, it's a Canada us collaboration at triumph and exciting science modest investment. 10:23:57 You know important physics, and that's, I mean that's what I would plan right now, you know, maybe in a month. Once we have all our, our story straight north, you know, then we can get we get more serious you know as time goes on. 10:24:13 Yeah, maybe, maybe next week when I'm in Germany I have enough time to think about another let them email and compiler. I mean, one time scale is the Canadians have to have a letter of intent by August one to pull us to answer it. 10:24:25 you know, that'll have to be very specific from the Canadian side what what groups what responsibilities what funding. Yeah, that has to be court we have to coordinate mean that long before that we have to talk, I mean, I will. 10:24:39 I mean I was going to wait a week or two until we had a listing I mean it might be good in a few weeks to then have we have a table of responsibilities and funding request to send that to people and then again starting to get more serious and you mentioned 10:24:52 that the Canadians are submitting a letter of intent on this one you know that that will raise it you know for the US funding agencies, they have to think like well, these are our people who are leading this experiment and the Canadians are are getting 10:25:06 are starting to get discuss funding, where are we, you know, So I mean that's the way I would do it I would just kind of. 10:25:14 Yeah, sounds good. Sounds good. 10:25:26 Okay. Um, 10:25:31 yeah, just a reminder The deadline for the DNPVJM is July 1. So, for submitting abstracts. 10:25:40 Okay. Anything on EIC that people want to race, other than your 5:30am. Yeah, well, actually, it was a useful meeting you get to kind of sift through it for three hours. 10:25:54 I must say I'm impressed quite impressed by the progress with that change I mean there. 10:25:59 It's really organized there they're just cranking up to do full scale simulations are starting, and they've got all kinds of computing lined up at BNLJ lab even beats is involved, and it's it's quite impressive. 10:26:15 And we have an outline of the proposal that's kind of my little area that I'm contributing to and we have an overly file and, 10:26:24 you know, this is, this is moving along quite well. 10:26:29 Yeah. 10:26:31 I think there are 75 institutions in that channel. 10:26:37 Yeah, Stony Brook is putting out a little bit format you know is all right. 10:26:43 Because the HA so getting away from the TPC, so the TPC people are less interested. 10:26:48 Yeah. 10:26:50 Yeah, I mean I will certainly stay an extra just because of the drQ but, yeah, it seems I mean I by certainly assumes that in a year, we will have one proposal of have one group. 10:27:07 Push together by a che and Athena, right, yeah. 10:27:11 First much. Maybe well, he may be correct I don't either. I believe I don't, I don't think that far ahead but but no I think it's important to identify individuals should identify what they're interested in. 10:27:24 Yeah, if there's one big group, it'll, you'll still be part of it and you have to. 10:27:29 I mean, it's not like you suddenly go from data acquisition to. 10:27:33 And I'll tracking or something yeah you know I you know I think each person should kind of find the role in the present, and I think. 10:27:48 But you but the data acquisition the streaming readout makes total sense and, you know, you'll be part of anything that goes for you know they'll be there will be that going forward how this whole thing plays out I have no idea. 10:27:55 I wouldn't know how to prognosticate on that, but all I can say is I think he is doing fine and we will have a serious proposal, and I think it will be strong, and I don't say it'll win but we'll see. 10:28:18 Okay. 10:28:19 Anything else before going on to class 12 10:28:26 think so. No. Okay then. 10:28:30 We're will. 10:28:32 I guess most of us some one o'clock on Thursday for the dark, some of us. 10:28:37 Yeah, one o'clock on Thursday for the dark light meeting. 10:28:43 Okay, so we're about to class travel. 10:28:47 Yeah, so everyone. Bye bye, bye, bye bye. 10:28:54 Yeah, so we just had a meeting obviously I thought that was excellent myself. Yeah. 10:29:02 I you know this discrepancy at 29 degrees or wherever one, you know it's clear that it's leakage from the 10:29:11 other angles into this Ben Yeah, I'd be tempted to either cut the been out or. 10:29:20 I wouldn't spend a lot of time on it myself. 10:29:24 I would put it very low down the list. 10:29:43 Yeah. 10:29:39 Yeah, I thought you did an excellent job of presenting it and focusing I think the discussion was very good things, I mean sometimes discussions get off into the weeds, but I think actually all the discussion was was was very constructive, and I think 10:29:44 FX just sent out an email, I think, you know, going ahead going ahead with large scale simulation trying to get more data statistics and rebuilding and add ray of corrections like, I don't think there should be a lot of thinking about that just take the 10:30:04 code and put it in the event generator and radiate generated events, I think, and then go back and see what you got. 10:30:18 Yeah, know for some secular. Well, I didn't have chance to explain it, because it affects comment. 10:30:31 So a 10:30:36 bunch of wonderful. 10:30:38 Actually the mic by problem is that chef greed, that was input of division. 10:30:49 Actually, kind of, it was processed by heart and even heard cannot remember that was processed so 10:31:00 can I share the screen. And 10:31:10 I was asking what, how, of this safe file was created, and he said, I gave defeat tactic and just test for grit and one is the one working now it's one the data and the other one it's without, without, and the other one, it's not 10:31:34 the repository so. 10:31:37 Well, if that'll be good if he finds find a few. 10:31:49 If not, it's problematic because I haven't No, not know Polish of this year perfect file was put up the submission. 10:31:55 This has to be something above your level of MIT in the collaboration somebody has to deal with this sorted out. 10:32:02 So it's true. 10:32:05 I mean, 10:32:07 I mean obviously you do your best to sort it out before you launch a major, you know, set of simulations that go for a month or something but you know I, on the other hand I wouldn't sit around indefinitely waiting for this to get clarified. 10:32:21 You know, I think, I mean it's clear what you're doing is pretty on the right track, the minimum on the right track. And so I would really push, I mean you have I think you have momentum. 10:32:36 You have some clear issues to deal with. 10:32:39 I would, I think I would follow FX as advice and, and the other advice, and just, just keep going. 10:32:57 Okay. Bobby, to have anything. 10:33:04 a bit. 10:33:07 Yeah. So, 10:33:07 I for the past while now, I've been working on 10:33:12 trying to get in the right direction for the radio generator. 10:33:18 And, um, last week was able to have some useful conversations with Andre, who works. Also in the pilot process. 10:33:29 Up to, Valerie, as well as Cole Smith. 10:33:33 Basically, the non rated of generator for pions has been used, you know, at least by some people over the past few years for class 12, no one really seems to be using the radiative generator. 10:33:46 And so it kind of hasn't really been touched for maybe since the days of class six. 10:33:52 And so cool Smith to someone who's been on class since the beginning. 10:33:58 I had some conversation with him about actually what the input to the radiative generators supposed to be and how the program actually works. 10:34:08 because there's basically no documentation, so point being, it's still kind of a work in progress, right now so same back today, presented the fact that I've simulated some, you know, with reasonable statistics and kind of a small kinematic Ben. 10:34:26 And we discussed in our meeting last Friday, that it would be useful, while I'm kind of nailing down these issues with the radio generator to go ahead and 10:34:37 submit jobs for the non rated of generator across kind of the, you know, region of face space for, you know, all the festivals, and that way it'll be you know useful at the same back and I, and you know anyone else working on these processes, and it should 10:34:52 be done, running on the farms in a couple of weeks. 10:34:57 And that way we can kind of utilize. 10:35:00 You know I don't need to let the radiative generator bottleneck. 10:35:03 What's going on, so that's what's going on my side there's not too much to update on besides just kind of technical software work. 10:35:14 Oh, and the other thing is, yeah. 10:35:18 DMP I'll I guess get an abstract out, and maybe send it around to our group this week, I guess I mean I guess I'm probably all need to do this, so big. 10:35:31 So, be I know that it's not do or die It's up to you. I mean if you feel like you want it, I mean I don't think we have to be totally present reporting on every analysis at every meeting but if you if it's in general it's a useful exercise and if it does 10:35:46 give you visibility in the field which will be helpful, but it's if you if you feel like you don't want to do it. It's okay to don't don't feel like you have to do it. 10:35:58 Okay, great. yeah i think i think i will it seems like it should be a boat right to do so I'll get that done and send around it right. Yeah, I think it's really nice that you guys signed back and Bobby you work together and that was nice that sounds like 10:36:11 mention your work as well so yeah thank you for doing that thing but I appreciate it. 10:36:18 Okay thanks Bobby, Brandon, that you want to go next. 10:36:27 And last week, you and I went over some preliminary results that I have from unbending data set. And I just need to kind of work on extracting the counts as a function of data now. 10:36:46 Taking into account a polynomial fits the backgrounds and subtracting that from the total fits great, and I also need to implement these this like set of people for the shortcuts that Nick had implemented for his inclusive work. 10:37:04 I think we, that was brought up had met with Clemson, so I'm, I'm still waiting for Nick to send them to me. 10:37:13 I've just been badgering him with an email so hopefully he doesn't eat at some point. 10:37:19 So I'm just waiting on getting that implemented and then we're doing the analysis because I think he said it had a huge impact on on the quality of the final sample of electrons was getting. 10:37:35 So, once, once I have that implemented. 10:37:40 Should that should kind of go a long way. And I am hoping to have a discussion with standby later, I'm just letting him know that I might need some guidance on getting background merge with the elastic events that I want to look at because that will, 10:38:02 I need to get that data set available to look at the evidence for this stuff. So, so that's about it in terms of that that sounds really good yeah I think it's great that you're pushing the elastic scattering I just think that will be, you know, in the 10:38:19 end that will be a cornerstone of all the analysis that will that will be held very helpful. 10:38:24 Yeah, hopefully I can present some preliminary stuff in the coming weeks. 10:38:31 Not. I mean if you are you are you on the list for the Tuesday nine o'clock meeting, are you in that list. Yeah, yeah. 10:38:40 Because, definitely elastic scattering is one of the seems like we should have a meeting on that at some point in the not too distant future and. 10:38:50 And maybe we have a couple of people contribute, you know. 10:38:53 Yeah, so keep that in mind. 10:38:56 Yeah, that's fine. 10:38:58 Thanks. 10:38:59 Sounds good. 10:39:02 shushing that you want to give up there. 10:39:07 So, yeah, so I think, basically, I have got all the process finished in order to be able to get into the app. And, except for the radiation Walker test, which I'm going to take in about 20 minutes. 10:39:30 Yeah, and I did some also do some review for that test. 10:39:37 Yeah, I forgot to mention when we discuss about the dark like earlier on that last week. 10:39:45 I have some also have some further a in our exchange with young Ricardo, to see what is the condition Ricardo have in his calculation for them, filled and found out that we have different, 10:40:05 different conditions in terms of the geometries the beam current and also the material definitions. 10:40:15 I'm so I'm Claudine for more detailed comparison between the color was filled and the previous result I got from Maxwell simulation. Yeah. But I do believe we you, we, we, we didn't use the same 10:40:40 like Prime Minister's yes a different magnets. Yes. 10:40:47 So, well that's really good that's really good you're chasing that down. You might you might want to just even give a brief report on Thursday, but whatever you know. 10:40:57 Yeah. So, work in progress, but I think it's good that you hunt that down, because we may learn something it's you know maybe Ricardo did something different than that's much better you know that that might be the case. 10:41:09 Yeah. 10:41:14 Yeah, that's all from my side. 10:41:18 Yeah, so we had a regular bi weekly polarized helium three meeting yesterday and shy saying is in is in the lab But James at Jefferson Lab the polarize target lab so things things are getting real down there which is good. 10:41:35 So did you get your desk setup. Are you are you all, at least, I haven't. So I actually don't have mentors to really set up there. But I think I'm fun just to drop my stuff. 10:41:52 Yeah, exactly, start using it. Yeah. 10:41:59 Okay, very good.