108,316 research outputs found
Validation of Geant4-based Radioactive Decay Simulation
Radioactive decays are of concern in a wide variety of applications using
Monte-Carlo simulations. In order to properly estimate the quality of such
simulations, knowledge of the accuracy of the decay simulation is required. We
present a validation of the original Geant4 Radioactive Decay Module, which
uses a per-decay sampling approach, and of an extended package for Geant4-based
simulation of radioactive decays, which, in addition to being able to use a
refactored per-decay sampling, is capable of using a statistical sampling
approach. The validation is based on measurements of calibration isotope
sources using a high purity Germanium (HPGe) detector; no calibration of the
simulation is performed. For the considered validation experiment equivalent
simulation accuracy can be achieved with per-decay and statistical sampling
Coherent Description for Hitherto Unexplained Radioactivities by Super- and Hyperdeformed Isomeric States
Recently long-lived high spin super- and hyperdeformed isomeric states with
unusual radioactive decay properties have been discovered. Based on these newly
observed modes of radioactive decay, consistent interpretations are suggested
for previously unexplained phenomena seen in nature. These are the Po halos,
the low-energy enhanced 4.5 MeV alpha-particle group proposed to be due to an
isotope of a superheavy element with Z = 108, and the giant halos.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, to be published in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Light curves of hydrogen-poor Superluminous Supernovae from the Palomar Transient Factory
We investigate the light-curve properties of a sample of 26 spectroscopically
confirmed hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae (SLSNe-I) in the Palomar
Transient Factory (PTF) survey. These events are brighter than SNe Ib/c and SNe
Ic-BL, on average, by about 4 and 2~mag, respectively. The peak absolute
magnitudes of SLSNe-I in rest-frame band span ~mag, and these peaks are not powered by radioactive Ni,
unless strong asymmetries are at play. The rise timescales are longer for SLSNe
than for normal SNe Ib/c, by roughly 10 days, for events with similar decay
times. Thus, SLSNe-I can be considered as a separate population based on
photometric properties. After peak, SLSNe-I decay with a wide range of slopes,
with no obvious gap between rapidly declining and slowly declining events. The
latter events show more irregularities (bumps) in the light curves at all
times. At late times, the SLSN-I light curves slow down and cluster around the
Co radioactive decay rate. Powering the late-time light curves with
radioactive decay would require between 1 and 10 of Ni masses.
Alternatively, a simple magnetar model can reasonably fit the majority of
SLSNe-I light curves, with four exceptions, and can mimic the radioactive decay
of Co, up to days from explosion. The resulting spin values do
not correlate with the host-galaxy metallicities. Finally, the analysis of our
sample cannot strengthen the case for using SLSNe-I for cosmology.Comment: 120 pages, 48 figures, 78 tables. ApJ in pres
The light curve in supernova modeled by a continuous radioactive decay of Ni
The UVOIR bolometric light curves are usually modeled by the radioactive
decay. In order to model more precisely the absolute/apparent magnitude versus
time relationship the continuous production of radioactive isotopes is
introduced. A differential equation of the first order with separable variables
is solved.Comment: 5 pages 2 figure
Students' Beliefs About the Role of Atoms in Radioactive Decay and Half-life
Provides pedagogical insight concerning learners' pre-conceptions and misconceptions about radioactive decay The resource being annotated is: http://www.dlese.org/dds/catalog_ESA-000-000-000-035.htm
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