3,332 research outputs found
Space processing of chalcogenide glass
A program was conducted to develop the technique of space processing for chalcogenide glass, and to define the process and equipment necessary. In the course of this program, successful long term levitation of objects in a 1-g environment was achieved. Glass beads 4 mm diameter were containerless melted and fused together
Shell structure in neutron-rich Ca and Ni nuclei under semi-realistic mean fields
Shell structure in the neutron-rich Ca and Ni nuclei is investigated by the
spherical Hartree-Fock calculations with the semi-realistic interactions.
Specific ingredients of the effective interaction, particularly the tensor
force, often play a key role in the dependence of the neutron shell
structure. Such examples are found in N=32 and N=40; N=32 becomes magic or
submagic in Ca while its magicity is broken in Ni, and N=40 is
submagic (though not magic) in Ni but not in Ca. Comments are
given on the doubly magic nature of Ni. We point out that the loose
binding can lead to a submagic number N=58 in Ni, assisted by the weak
pair coupling.Comment: 14 pages including 5 figures, to appear in Physical Review C (Rapid
Communication
Measurement of the Hyperfine Structure and Isotope Shifts of the 3s23p2 3P2 to 3s3p3 3Do3 Transition in Silicon
The hyperfine structure and isotope shifts of the 3s23p2 3P2 to 3s3p3 3Do3
transition in silicon have been measured. The transition at 221.7 nm was
studied by laser induced fluorescence in an atomic Si beam. For 29Si, the
hyperfine A constant for the 3s23p2 3P2 level was determined to be -160.1+-1.3
MHz (1 sigma error), and the A constant for the 3s3p3 3Do3 level is -532.9+-0.6
MHz. This is the first time that these constants were measured. The isotope
shifts (relative to the abundant isotope 28Si) of the transition were
determined to be 1753.3+-1.1 MHz for 29Si and 3359.9+-0.6 MHz for 30Si. This is
an improvement by about two orders of magnitude over a previous measurement.
From these results we are able to predict the hyperfine structure and isotope
shift of the radioactive 31Si atom, which is of interest in building a scalable
quantum computer
Solution of two-center time-dependent Dirac equation in spherical coordinates: Application of the multipole expansion of the electron-nuclei interaction
A non-perturbative approach to the solution of the time-dependent, two-center
Dirac equation is presented with a special emphasis on the proper treatment of
the potential of the nuclei. In order to account for the full multipole
expansion of this potential, we express eigenfunctions of the two-center
Hamiltonian in terms of well-known solutions of the "monopole" problem that
employs solely the spherically-symmetric part of the interaction. When combined
with the coupled-channel method, such a wavefunction-expansion technique allows
for an accurate description of the electron dynamics in the field of moving
ions for a wide range of internuclear distances. To illustrate the
applicability of the proposed approach, the probabilities of the K- as well as
L- shell ionization of hydrogen-like ions in the course of nuclear alpha-decay
and slow ion-ion collisions have been calculated
Formation spectra of light kaonic nuclei by in-flight () reactions with chiral unitary amplitude
We study theoretically the in-flight () reactions for the formation of
light kaonic nuclear systems to get deeper physical insights on the expected
spectra, and to investigate the experimental feasibility of the reaction at new
facilities like J-PARC. We show the expected spectra for the formation of the
, and -B systems which are accessible by the
() experiments. By considering the conversion part of the Green's
function, we can show the missing mass spectra of the () reactions
coincidence with the particle emissions due to absorption in processes. To calculate the cross sections, we use the so-called
approximation to evaluate the optical potential. As for the amplitude
, we adopt the chiral unitary amplitude of channel in vacuum for
simplicity, and we also check the medium effects by applying the chiral
amplitude at finite density. The effects of the p-wave optical potential of
(1385) channel and the contribution from mixing in
He() reaction are also evaluated numerically. To understand the
meanings of the spectrum shape, we also study the behavior of the poles of kaon
Green's function in nuclear matter. We conclude that He() and
He() reactions coincident with the emission due to
absorption may show the certain structure in the bound region
spectra indicating the existence of the unstable kaonic nuclear bound states.
As for the C() spectra with the emission, we may also
observe the structure in the bound region, however, we need to evaluate the
medium effects carefully for larger nuclei.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
On the possibility to search for double beta decay of initially unstable (alpha/beta radioactive) nuclei
Possibilities to search for double beta decay of alpha/beta unstable nuclei,
many of which have higher energy release than "conventional" (beta stable)
double beta decay candidates, are discussed. First experimental half-life
limits on double beta decay of radioactive nuclides from U and Th families
(trace contaminants of the CaWO_4, CdWO_4 and Gd_2SiO_5 scintillators) were
established by reanalyzing the data of low-background measurements in the
Solotvina Underground Laboratory with these detectors (1734 h with CaWO_4,
13316 h with CdWO_4, and 13949 h with Gd_2SiO_5 crystals).Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Dynamical approach to heavy-ion induced fission using actinide target nuclei at energies around the Coulomb barrier
In order to describe heavy-ion fusion reactions around the Coulomb barrier
with an actinide target nucleus, we propose a model which combines the
coupled-channels approach and a fluctuation-dissipation model for dynamical
calculations. This model takes into account couplings to the collective states
of the interacting nuclei in the penetration of the Coulomb barrier and the
subsequent dynamical evolution of a nuclear shape from the contact
configuration. In the fluctuation-dissipation model with a Langevin equation,
the effect of nuclear orientation at the initial impact on the prolately
deformed target nucleus is considered. Fusion-fission, quasi-fission and deep
quasi-fission are separated as different Langevin trajectories on the potential
energy surface. Using this model, we analyze the experimental data for the mass
distribution of fission fragments (MDFF) in the reactions of
S+U and Si+U at several incident energies
around the Coulomb barrier. We find that the time scale in the quasi-fission as
well as the deformation of fission fragments at the scission point are
different between the Si+U and S+U systems,
causing different mass asymmetries of the quasi-fission.Comment: 11 figure
Evidence for the pair-breaking process in 116,117Sn
The nuclear level densities of 116,117Sn below the neutron separation energy
have been determined experimentally from the (3He,alpha gamma) and (3He,3He
gamma') reactions, respectively. The level densities show a characteristic
exponential increase and a difference in magnitude due to the odd-even effect
of the nuclear systems. In addition, the level densities display pronounced
step-like structures that are interpreted as signatures of subsequent breaking
of nucleon pairs.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C, 22
December 200
A QuantCrit Analysis of Context, Discipline, Special Education, and Disproportionality
Using a dis/ability critical race theory (DisCrit) and critical quantitative (QuantCrit) lens, we examine disproportionate application of exclusionary discipline on multiply marginalized youth, foregrounding systemic injustice and institutionalized racism. In doing so, we examined temporal-, student-, and school-level factors that may result in exclusion and othering (i.e., placing into special education and punishing with out-of-school suspensions) within one school district. We frame this study in DisCrit and QuantCrit frameworks to connect data-based decision making to sociocultural understandings of the ways in which schools use both special education and discipline to simultaneously provide and limit opportunities for different student groups. Results showed a complex interconnectedness between student sociodemographic labels (e.g., gender, race, and socioeconomic status) and factors associated with both special education identification and exclusionary discipline. Our findings suggest that quantitative studies lacking in-depth theoretical justification may perpetuate deficit understandings of the racialization of disability and intersections with exclusionary discipline
Ground state magnetic dipole moment of 35K
The ground state magnetic moment of 35K has been measured using the technique
of nuclear magnetic resonance on beta-emitting nuclei. The short-lived 35K
nuclei were produced following the reaction of a 36Ar primary beam of energy
150 MeV/nucleon incident on a Be target. The spin polarization of the 35K
nuclei produced at 2 degrees relative to the normal primary beam axis was
confirmed. Together with the mirror nucleus 35S, the measurement represents the
heaviest T = 3/2 mirror pair for which the spin expectation value has been
obtained. A linear behavior of gp vs. gn has been demonstrated for the T = 3/2
known mirror moments and the slope and intercept are consistent with the
previous analysis of T = 1/2 mirror pairs.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
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