1,269 research outputs found
Effects of Nuclear Structure on Quasi-fission
The quasi-fission mechanism hinders fusion of heavy systems because of a mass
flow between the reactants, leading to a re-separation of more symmetric
fragments in the exit channel. A good understanding of the competition between
fusion and quasi-fission mechanisms is expected to be of great help to optimize
the formation and study of heavy and superheavy nuclei. Quantum microscopic
models, such as the time-dependent Hartree-Fock approach, allow for a treatment
of all degrees of freedom associated to the dynamics of each nucleon. This
provides a description of the complex reaction mechanisms, such as
quasi-fission, with no parameter adjusted on reaction mechanisms. In
particular, the role of the deformation and orientation of a heavy target, as
well as the entrance channel magicity and isospin are investigated with
theoretical and experimental approaches.Comment: Invited talk to NSRT12. To be published in Eur. Phys. J. Web of Con
Novel insights into transfer processes in the reaction 16O+208Pb at sub-barrier energies
The collision of the doubly-magic nuclei O+Pb is a benchmark
in nuclear reaction studies. Our new measurements of back-scattered
projectile-like fragments at sub-barrier energies show show that transfer of 2
protons () is much more probable than -particle transfer.
transfer probabilities are strongly enhanced compared to expectations for the
sequential transfer of two uncorrelated protons; at energies around the fusion
barrier absolute probabilities for two proton transfer are similar to those for
one proton transfer. This strong enhancement indicates strong pairing
correlations in O, and suggests evidence for the occurrence of a nuclear
supercurrent of two-proton Cooper pairs in this reaction, already at energies
well below the fusion barrier.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Neighbouring Link Travel Time Inference Method Using Artificial Neural Network
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.This paper presents a method for modelling relationship between road segments using feed forward back-propagation neural networks. Unlike most previous papers that focus on travel time estimation of a road based on its traffic information, we proposed the Neighbouring Link Inference Method (NLIM) that can infer travel time of a road segment (link) from travel time its neighbouring segments. It is valuable for links which do not
have recent traffic information. The proposed method learns the relationship between travel time of a link and traffic parameters of its nearby links based on sparse historical travel time data. A travel time data outlier detection based on Gaussian mixture
model is also proposed in order to reduce the noise of data before they are applied to build NLIM. Results show that the proposed method is capable of estimating the travel time on all traffic link categories. 75% of models can produce travel time data with mean absolute percentage error less than 22%. The proposed method performs better on major than minor links. Performance of the proposed method always dominates performance of traditional methods such as statistic-based and linear least square estimate methods
Estimation of Travel Times for Minor Roads in Urban Areas Using Sparse Travel Time Data
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link
Importance of lifetime effects in breakup and suppression of complete fusion in reactions of weakly bound nuclei
Complete fusion cross sections in collisions of light, weakly bound nuclei
and high Z targets show above-barrier suppression of complete fusion. This has
been interpreted as resulting from breakup of the weakly bound nucleus prior to
reaching the fusion barrier, reducing the probability of complete fusion. This
paper investigates how these conclusions are affected by lifetimes of the
resonant states that are populated prior to breakup. If the mean life of a
populated resonance is much longer than the fusion timescale, then its breakup
cannot suppress complete fusion. For short-lived resonances, the situation is
more complex. This work includes the mean life of the short-lived 2+ resonance
in 8Be in classical dynamical model calculations to determine its effect on
energy and angular correlations of the breakup fragments and on predictions of
fusion suppression. Coincidence measurements of breakup fragments produced in
reactions of 9Be with 144Sm, 168Er, 186W, 196Pt, 208Pb and 209Bi at energies
below the barrier are re-analysed. Predictions of breakup observables and of
complete and incomplete fusion at energies above the fusion barrier are made
using the classical dynamical simulation code PLATYPUS, modified to include the
lifetimes of short-lived resonant states. The agreement of the breakup
observables is improved when lifetime effects are included. The predicted
suppression of complete fusion due to breakup is nearly independent of Z, with
an average value of 9%, below the experimentally determined fusion suppression
of 30% in these systems. This more realistic treatment of breakup leads to the
conclusion that the suppression of complete fusion cannot be fully explained by
breakup prior to reaching the fusion barrier. Other mechanisms that can
suppress complete fusion must be investigated. A candidate is cluster transfer
that produces the same nuclei as incomplete fusion.This work was supported by ARC Grants No.
FL110100098, No. DP130101569, and No. DP140101337
Reduced quasifission competition in fusion reactions forming neutron-rich heavy elements
Measurements of mass-angle distributions (MADs) for Cr + W reactions,
providing a wide range in the neutron-to-proton ratio of the compound system,
(N/Z)CN, have allowed for the dependence of quasifission on the (N/Z)CN to be
determined in a model-independent way. Previous experimental and theoretical
studies had produced conflicting conclusions. The experimental MADs reveal an
increase in contact time and mass evolution of the quasifission fragments with
increasing (N/Z)CN, which is indicative of an increase in the fusion
probability. The experimental results are in agreement with microscopic
time-dependent Hartree-Fock calculations of the quasifission process. The
experimental and theoretical results favor the use of the most neutron-rich
projectiles and targets for the production of heavy and superheavy nuclei.Comment: Accepted to PRC as a Rapid Communicatio
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