1,384,893 research outputs found
Emission Characteristics of the Projectile Fragments at Relativistic Energy
A projectile (84^Kr_36) having kinetic energy around 1 A GeV was used to
expose NIKFI BR-2 emulsion target. A total of 700 inelastic events are used in
the present studies on projectile fragments. The emission angle of the
projectile fragments are strongly affected by charge of the other projectile
fragments emitted at same time with different emission angle is observed. The
angular distribution studies show symmetrical nature for lighter charge
projectile fragments. The symmetrical nature decreased with the charge of
projectile fragments. At ~4o of emission angle for double charge projectile
fragments, the momentum transfer during interaction is similar for various
target species of emulsion were observed. We also observed a small but
significant amplitude peaks on both side of the big peak for almost all light
charge projectile fragments having different delta angle values. It reflects
that there are few percent of projectile fragments that are coming from the
decay of heavy projectile fragments or any other process.Comment: 32 pages, 17 Figure
Non-Symbolic Fragmentation
This paper reports on the use of non-symbolic fragmentation of data for securing communications. Non-symbolic fragmentation, or NSF, relies on breaking up data into non-symbolic fragments, which are (usually irregularly-sized) chunks whose boundaries do not necessarily coincide with the boundaries of the symbols making up the data. For example, ASCII data is broken up into fragments which may include 8-bit fragments but also include many other sized fragments. Fragments are then separated with a form of path diversity. The secrecy of the transmission relies on the secrecy of one or more of a number of things: the ordering of the fragments, the sizes of the fragments, and the use of path diversity. Once NSF is in place, it can help secure many forms of communication, and is useful for exchanging sensitive information, and for commercial transactions. A sample implementation is described with an evaluation of the technology
Formation of viable cell fragments by treatment with colchicine
Time-lapse cinematography of human fibroblasts revealed that mitotic cells separated into numerous cell fragments containing varying amounts of chromatin and cytoplasm when treated with colchicine. As cell fragments were very loosely attached to the surface of the culture vessel during their formation, they could be easily detached like mitotic cells by gently shaking the vessel and thus separated from normal interphase cells. Fragments obtained by this procedure were able to exclude trypan blue indicating, therefore, an intact cell membrane. When placed into Petri dishes many of them attached to and even spread out on the surface. Five hours later the majority of the attached fragments incorporated [3H]leucine. Time-lapse films showed that fragments were able to extend and retract pseudopodia at least for several hours after their formation. Although the fragments degenerated within a few days, in the present experiments the possibility was not excluded that fragments which had lost only a very small amount of chromatin and cytoplasm survived for longer periods of time. The observations clearly indicate viability of many newly formed fragments
On Sub-Propositional Fragments of Modal Logic
In this paper, we consider the well-known modal logics ,
, , and , and we study some of their
sub-propositional fragments, namely the classical Horn fragment, the Krom
fragment, the so-called core fragment, defined as the intersection of the Horn
and the Krom fragments, plus their sub-fragments obtained by limiting the use
of boxes and diamonds in clauses. We focus, first, on the relative expressive
power of such languages: we introduce a suitable measure of expressive power,
and we obtain a complex hierarchy that encompasses all fragments of the
considered logics. Then, after observing the low expressive power, in
particular, of the Horn fragments without diamonds, we study the computational
complexity of their satisfiability problem, proving that, in general, it
becomes polynomial
Coulomb and even-odd effects in cold and super-asymmetric fragmentation for thermal neutron induced fission of 235U
The Coulomb effects hypothesis is used to interpret even-odd effects of
maximum total kinetic energy as a function of mass and charge of fragments from
thermal neutron induced fission of 235U. Assuming spherical fragments at
scission, the Coulomb interaction energy between fragments (C_sph) is higher
than the Q-value, the available energy. Therefore at scission the fragments
must be deformed, so that the Coulomb interaction energy does not exceed the
Q-value. The fact that the even-odd effects in the maximum total kinetic energy
as a function of the charge and mass, respectively, are lower than the even-odd
effects of Q is consistent with the assumption that odd mass fragments are
softer than the even-even fragments. Even-odd effects of charge distribution in
super asymmetric fragmentation also are interpreted with the Coulomb effect
hypothesis. Because the difference between C_sph and Q increases with
asymmetry, fragmentations require higher total deformation energy to occur.
Higher deformation energy of the fragments implies lower free energy to break
pairs of nucleons. This explains why in the asymmetric fragmentation region,
the even-odd effects of the distribution of proton number and neutron number
increases with asymmetry. Based on a similar reasoning, a prediction of a
relatively high even-odd effect in symmetric fragmentations is proposed.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Effect of secondary decay on isoscaling: Results from the canonical thermodynamical model
The projectile fragmentation reactions using beams
at 140 MeV/n on targets are studied using the canonical
thermodynamical model coupled with an evaporation code. The isoscaling property
of the fragments produced is studied using both the primary and the secondary
fragments and it is observed that the secondary fragments also respect
isoscaling though the isoscaling parameters and changes. The
temperature needed to reproduce experimental data with the secondary fragments
is less than that needed with the primary ones. The canonical model coupled
with the evaporation code successfully explains the experimental data for
isoscaling for the projectile fragmentation reactions
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