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Kinetic energyâmass distributions from the fission of nuclei lighter than radium
The distributions in masses and total kinetic energies of fission fragments from a number of elements ranging from erbium to bismuth have been measured. The nuclei undergoing fission were produced by bombarding a variety of targets with projectiles ranging from He4 to O16. The energies of coincident fission fragments were measured using solid-state counters. The energy data were transformed to give mass-total kinetic energy density-of-events distributions. These distributions were compared with those calculated from an approximate version of the liquid-drop model which applies to this region of elements. General agreement in the shapes and widths of the distributions was found, particularly in the cases which involved small angular momenta and small nuclear temperatures. The dependence of the widths of the experimental distributions on the nuclear temperature was found to differ from that predicted by the theory, but uncertainties in the evaluation of nuclear temperatures for the reactions investigated may be large. Analysis of these uncertainties indicated that they were not large enough to alone account for the discrepancy, although this analysis was subject to some error. Angular momentum effects were studied by using certain combinations of targets and projectiles to give the compound nucleus Os186 at the same excitation energy but with different angular momenta. The effect of increasing angular momentum was to broaden and change the shape of the experimental distributions
Gamma Ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) Balloon Flight Data Handling Overview
The GLAST Balloon Flight Engineering Model (BFEM) represents one of 16 towers
that constitute the Large Area Telescope (LAT), a high-energy (>20 MeV)
gamma-ray pair-production telescope being built by an international partnership
of astrophysicists and particle physicists for a satellite launch in 2006. The
prototype tower consists of a Pb/Si pair-conversion tracker (TKR), a CsI
hodoscopic calorimeter (CAL), an anti-coincidence detector (ACD) and an
autonomous data acquisition system (DAQ). The self-triggering capabilities and
performance of the detector elements have been previously characterized using
positron, photon and hadron beams. External target scintillators were placed
above the instrument to act as sources of hadronic showers. This paper provides
a comprehensive description of the BFEM data-reduction process, from receipt of
the flight data from telemetry through event reconstruction and background
rejection cuts. The goals of the ground analysis presented here are to verify
the functioning of the instrument and to validate the reconstruction software
and the background-rejection scheme.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in IEEE Transacations on Nuclear
Science, August 200
Eight gamma-ray pulsars discovered in blind frequency searches of Fermi LAT data
We report the discovery of eight gamma-ray pulsars in blind frequency
searches using the LAT, onboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. Five of
the eight pulsars are young (tau_c10^36 erg/s), and
located within the Galactic plane (|b|<3 deg). The remaining three are older,
less energetic, and located off the plane. Five pulsars are associated with
sources included in the LAT bright gamma-ray source list, but only one, PSR
J1413-6205, is clearly associated with an EGRET source. PSR J1023-5746 has the
smallest characteristic age (tau_c=4.6 kyr) and is the most energetic
(Edot=1.1E37 erg/s) of all gamma-ray pulsars discovered so far in blind
searches. PSRs J1957+5033 and J2055+25 have the largest characteristic ages
(tau_c~1 Myr) and are the least energetic (Edot~5E33 erg/s) of the
newly-discovered pulsars. We present the timing models, light curves, and
detailed spectral parameters of the new pulsars. We used recent XMM
observations to identify the counterpart of PSR J2055+25 as XMMU
J205549.4+253959. In addition, publicly available archival Chandra X-ray data
allowed us to identify the likely counterpart of PSR J1023-5746 as a faint,
highly absorbed source, CXOU J102302.8-574606. The large X-ray absorption
indicates that this could be among the most distant gamma-ray pulsars detected
so far. PSR J1023-5746 is positionally coincident with the TeV source HESS
J1023-575, located near the young stellar cluster Westerlund 2, while PSR
J1954+2836 is coincident with a 4.3 sigma excess reported by Milagro at a
median energy of 35 TeV. Deep radio follow-up observations of the eight pulsars
resulted in no detections of pulsations and upper limits comparable to the
faintest known radio pulsars, indicating that these can be included among the
growing population of radio-quiet pulsars in our Galaxy being uncovered by the
LAT, and currently numbering more than 20.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Production of cold molecules via magnetically tunable Feshbach resonances
Magnetically tunable Feshbach resonances were employed to associate cold
diatomic molecules in a series of experiments involving both atomic Bose as
well as two spin component Fermi gases. This review illustrates theoretical
concepts of both the particular nature of the highly excited Feshbach molecules
produced and the techniques for their association from unbound atom pairs.
Coupled channels theory provides the rigorous formulation of the microscopic
physics of Feshbach resonances in cold gases. Concepts of dressed versus bare
energy states, universal properties of Feshbach molecules, as well as the
classification in terms of entrance- and closed-channel dominated resonances
are introduced on the basis of practical two-channel approaches. Their
significance is illustrated for several experimental observations, such as
binding energies and lifetimes with respect to collisional relaxation.
Molecular association and dissociation are discussed in the context of
techniques involving linear magnetic field sweeps in cold Bose and Fermi gases
as well as pulse sequences leading to Ramsey-type interference fringes. Their
descriptions in terms of Landau-Zener, two-level mean field as well as beyond
mean field approaches are reviewed in detail, including the associated ranges
of validity.Comment: 50 pages, 26 figures, to be published in Reviews of Modern Physics,
final version with updated reference
Fermi Large Area Telescope Observations of Gamma-ray Pulsars PSR J1057-5226, J1709-4429, and J1952+3252
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) data have confirmed the pulsed emission
from all six high-confidence gamma-ray pulsars previously known from the EGRET
observations. We report results obtained from the analysis of 13 months of LAT
data for three of these pulsars (PSR J1057-5226, PSR J1709-4429, and PSR
J1952+3252) each of which had some unique feature among the EGRET pulsars. The
excellent sensitivity of LAT allows more detailed analysis of the evolution of
the pulse profile with energy and also of the variation of the spectral shape
with phase. We measure the cutoff energy of the pulsed emission from these
pulsars for the first time and provide a more complete picture of the emission
mechanism. The results confirm some, but not all, of the features seen in the
EGRET data.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 45 pages, 12 figures, 11 tables.
Corresponding authors: O. Celik, F. Gargano, T. Reposeur, D.J. Thompso
PKS 1502+106: a new and distant gamma-ray blazar in outburst discovered by the Fermi Large Area Telescope
The Large Area Telescope (LAT) on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
discovered a rapid (about 5 days duration), high-energy (E >100 MeV) gamma-ray
outburst from a source identified with the blazar PKS 1502+106 (OR 103, S3
1502+10, z=1.839) starting on August 05, 2008 and followed by bright and
variable flux over the next few months. Results on the gamma-ray localization
and identification, as well as spectral and temporal behavior during the first
months of the Fermi all-sky survey are reported here in conjunction with a
multi-waveband characterization as a result of one of the first Fermi
multi-frequency campaigns. The campaign included a Swift ToO (followed up by
16-day observations on August 07-22, MJD 54685-54700), VLBA (within the MOJAVE
program), Owens Valley (OVRO) 40m, Effelsberg-100m, Metsahovi-14m, RATAN-600
and Kanata-Hiroshima radio/optical observations. Results from the analysis of
archival observations by INTEGRAL, XMM-Newton and Spitzer space telescopes are
reported for a more complete picture of this new gamma-ray blazar.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, accepted for The Astrophysical Journa
Fermi Large Area Telescope Observations of the Cosmic-Ray Induced gamma-ray Emission of the Earth's Atmosphere
We report on measurements of the cosmic-ray induced gamma-ray emission of
Earth's atmosphere by the Large Area Telescope onboard the Fermi Gamma-ray
Space Telescope. The LAT has observed the Earth during its commissioning phase
and with a dedicated Earth-limb following observation in September 2008. These
measurements yielded 6.4 x 10^6 photons with energies >100MeV and ~250hours
total livetime for the highest quality data selection. This allows the study of
the spatial and spectral distributions of these photons with unprecedented
detail. The spectrum of the emission - often referred to as Earth albedo
gamma-ray emission - has a power-law shape up to 500 GeV with spectral index
Gamma = 2.79+-0.06.Comment: Accepted for publication in PR
Fermi LAT observations of the Geminga pulsar
We report on the \textit{Fermi}-LAT observations of the Geminga pulsar, the
second brightest non-variable GeV source in the -ray sky and the first
example of a radio-quiet -ray pulsar. The observations cover one year,
from the launch of the satellite through 2009 June 15. A data sample of
over 60,000 photons enabled us to build a timing solution based solely on
rays. Timing analysis shows two prominent peaks, separated by = 0.497 0.004 in phase, which narrow with increasing energy. Pulsed
rays are observed beyond 18 GeV, precluding emission below 2.7 stellar
radii because of magnetic absorption. The phase-averaged spectrum was fitted
with a power law with exponential cut-off of spectral index = (1.30
0.01 0.04), cut-off energy = (2.46 0.04 0.17)
GeV and an integral photon flux above 0.1 GeV of (4.14 0.02 0.32)
10 cm s. The first uncertainties are statistical
and the second are systematic. The phase-resolved spectroscopy shows a clear
evolution of the spectral parameters, with the spectral index reaching a
minimum value just before the leading peak and the cut-off energy having maxima
around the peaks. Phase-resolved spectroscopy reveals that pulsar emission is
present at all rotational phases. The spectral shape, broad pulse profile, and
maximum photon energy favor the outer magnetospheric emission scenarios.Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal. Corresponding authors: Denis Dumora
([email protected]), Fabio Gargano ([email protected]),
Massimiliano Razzano ([email protected]
Fermi Large Area Telescope observations of the Vela-X Pulsar Wind Nebula
We report on gamma-ray observations in the off-pulse window of the Vela
pulsar PSR B0833-45, using 11 months of survey data from the Fermi Large Area
Telescope (LAT). This pulsar is located in the 8 degree diameter Vela supernova
remnant, which contains several regions of non-thermal emission detected in the
radio, X-ray and gamma-ray bands. The gamma-ray emission detected by the LAT
lies within one of these regions, the 2*3 degrees area south of the pulsar
known as Vela-X. The LAT flux is signicantly spatially extended with a best-fit
radius of 0.88 +/- 0.12 degrees for an assumed radially symmetric uniform disk.
The 200 MeV to 20 GeV LAT spectrum of this source is well described by a
power-law with a spectral index of 2.41 +/- 0.09 +/- 0.15 and integral flux
above 100 MeV of (4.73 +/- 0.63 +/- 1.32) * 10^{-7} cm^{-2} s^{-1}. The first
errors represent the statistical error on the fit parameters, while the second
ones are the systematic uncertainties. Detailed morphological and spectral
analyses give strong constraints on the energetics and magnetic field of the
pulsar wind nebula (PWN) system and favor a scenario with two distinct electron
populations.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
Fermi Large Area Telescope Measurements of the Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission at Intermediate Galactic Latitudes
The diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission is produced by cosmic rays (CRs)
interacting with the interstellar gas and radiation field. Measurements by the
Energetic Gamma-Ray Experiment Telescope (EGRET) instrument on the Compton
Gamma-Ray Observatory indicated excess gamma-ray emission > 1 GeV relative to
diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission models consistent with directly measured CR
spectra (the so-called ``EGRET GeV excess''). The excess emission was observed
in all directions on the sky, and a variety of explanations have been proposed,
including beyond-the-Standard-Model scenarios like annihilating or decaying
dark matter. The Large Area Telescope (LAT) instrument on the Fermi Gamma-ray
Space Telescope has measured the diffuse gamma-ray emission with improved
sensitivity and resolution compared to EGRET. We report on LAT measurements of
the diffuse gamma-ray emission for energies 100 MeV to 10 GeV and Galactic
latitudes 10 deg. <= |b| <= 20 deg. The LAT spectrum for this region of the sky
is well reproduced by a diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission model that is
consistent with local CR spectra and inconsistent with the EGRET GeV excess.Comment: 2 figures, 1 table, accepted by Physical Review Letters, available
online Dec. 18th, 200
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