6,157 research outputs found
A model for projectile fragmentation
A model for projectile fragmentation is developed whose origin can be traced
back to the Bevalac era. The model positions itself between the
phenomenological EPAX parametrization and transport models like "Heavy Ion
Phase Space Exploration" (HIPSE) model and antisymmetrised molecular dynamics
(AMD) model. A very simple impact parameter dependence of input temperature is
incorporated in the model which helps to analyze the more peripheral
collisions. The model is applied to calculate the charge, isotopic
distributions, average number of intermediate mass fragments and the average
size of largest cluster at different Z_{bound} of different projectile
fragmentation reactions at different energies.Comment: Talk given by Gargi Chaudhuri at the 11th International Conference on
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio, Texas, USA, May 27-June 1,
2012. 10 pages, 7 figure
Transformation between statistical ensembles in the modelling of nuclear fragmentation
We explore the conditions under which the particle number conservation
constraint deforms the predictions of fragmentation observables as calculated
in the grand canonical ensemble. We derive an analytical formula allowing to
extract canonical results from a grand canonical calculation and vice versa.
This formula shows that exact canonical results can be recovered for
observables varying linearly or quadratically with the number of particles,
independent of the grand canonical particle number fluctuations. We explore the
validity of such grand canonical extrapolation for different fragmentation
observables in the framework of the analytical Grand Canonical or Canonical
Thermodynamical Model [(G)CTM] of nuclear multifragmentation. It is found that
corrections to the grand canonical expectations can be evaluated with high
precision, provided the system does not experience a first order phase
transition. In particular, because of the Coulomb quenching of the liquid-gas
phase transition of nuclear matter, we find that mass conservation corrections
to the grand canonical ensemble can be safely computed for typical observables
of interest in experimental measurements of nuclear fragmentation, even if
deviations exist for highly exclusive observables.Comment: In press in Physics Letters
Symmetry energy from fragment observables in the canonical thermodynamic model
Different formulas relying measurable fragment isotopic observables to the
symmetry energy of excited nuclei have been proposed and applied to the
analysis of heavy ion collision data in the recent literature. In this paper we
examine the quality of the different expressions in the framework of the McGill
Canonical Thermodynamic Model. We show that even in the idealized situation of
canonical equilibrium and in the absence of secondary decay, these formulas do
not give a precise reconstruction of the symmetry energy of the fragmenting
source. However, both isotopic widths and isoscaling appear very well
correlated to the physical symmetry energy.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review
- …