70 research outputs found

    Review of radioactive ion beam facilities and research opportunities

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    GANIL

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    The project Ganil which is under construction at Caen consists essentially of two identical isochronous separated sector cyclotrons with K = 400. The principle of the accelerator and the expected performances are presented

    NUCLEAR PHYSICS at GANIL - A COMPILATION 1983-1988

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    On orthogonal projections for dimension reduction and applications in augmented target loss functions for learning problems

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    The use of orthogonal projections on high-dimensional input and target data in learning frameworks is studied. First, we investigate the relations between two standard objectives in dimension reduction, preservation of variance and of pairwise relative distances. Investigations of their asymptotic correlation as well as numerical experiments show that a projection does usually not satisfy both objectives at once. In a standard classification problem we determine projections on the input data that balance the objectives and compare subsequent results. Next, we extend our application of orthogonal projections to deep learning tasks and introduce a general framework of augmented target loss functions. These loss functions integrate additional information via transformations and projections of the target data. In two supervised learning problems, clinical image segmentation and music information classification, the application of our proposed augmented target loss functions increase the accuracy

    EVOLUTION OF THE FUSION LIKE PROCESS AROUND THE FERMI ENERGY

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    The study of evaporation residue from the Ne + Ag system shows that there is qualitative change in the reaction mechanism in the Fermi energy domain. At 20 MeV/u the projectile is mostly absobered by the target, while at 30-37 MeV/u a continious range of mass transfer with a large transverse momentum is observed

    Computed tomography measurements of different dimensions of maxillary and frontal sinuses

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We have previously proposed the use of Doppler ultrasound to non-invasively stage sinus infection, as we showed that acoustic streaming could be generated in nonpurulent sinus secretions and helped to distinguish it from mucopurulent sinus secretions. In order to continue this development of a clinically applicable Doppler equipment, we need to determine different dimensions of the paranasal sinuses, especially the thickness of the anterior wall of the maxillary sinus (at the canine fossa). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on the thickness of the canine fossa. This study aimed to (a) estimate different dimensions of the maxillary and frontal sinuses measured on computed tomography (CT) of the head, (b) define cut-off values for the normal upper and lower limits of the different measured structures, (c) determine differences in age, side and gender, (d) compare manually and automatically estimated maxillary sinuses volumes, and (e) present incidental findings in the paranasal sinuses among the study patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Dimensions of 120 maxillary and frontal sinuses from head CTs were measured independently by two radiologists.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The mean value of the maxillary sinus volume was 15.7 ± 5.3 cm<sup>3 </sup>and significantly larger in males than in females (P = 0.004). There was no statistically significant correlation between the volume of maxillary sinuses with age or side. The mean value of the bone thickness at the canine fossa was 1.1 ± 0.4 mm. The automatically estimated volume of the maxillary sinuses was 14-17% higher than the calculated volume. There was high interobserver agreement with regard to the different measurements performed in this study. Different types of incidental findings of the paranasal sinuses were found in 35% of the patients.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We presented different dimensions of the maxillary and frontal sinuses on CTs. We believe that our data are necessary for further development of a clinically applicable Doppler equipment for staging rhinosinusitis.</p

    Fusion and Binary-Decay Mechanisms in the 35^{35}Cl+24^{24}Mg System at E/A \approx 8 MeV/Nucleon

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    Compound-nucleus fusion and binary-reaction mechanisms have been investigated for the 35^{35}Cl+24^{24}Mg system at an incident beam energy of ELab_{Lab}= 282 MeV. Charge distributions, inclusive energy spectra, and angular distributions have been obtained for the evaporation residues and the binary fragments. Angle-integrated cross sections have been determined for evaporation residues from both the complete and incomplete fusion mechanisms. Energy spectra for binary fragment channels near to the entrance-channel mass partition are characterized by an inelastic contribution that is in addition to a fully energy damped component. The fully damped component which is observed in all the binary mass channels can be associated with decay times that are comparable to, or longer than the rotation period. The observed mass-dependent cross sections for the fully damped component are well reproduced by the fission transition-state model, suggesting a fusion followed by fission origin. The present data cannot, however, rule out the possibility that a long-lived orbiting mechanism accounts for part or all of this yield.Comment: 41 pages standard REVTeX file, 14 Figures available upon request -

    Nuclear Physics at GANIL - Trends

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    International audienceThe purpose of this lecture is to give an overview of recent nuclear physicsexperiments performed at Ganil and to point out some trends for the next future. I willfocus mainly on studies of nuclei under extreme conditions, and on progresses achievedwith radioactive beams. Many interesting contributions achieved at Ganil on nuclearphysics, solide state and atomic physics and biophysics have not been covered within thescope of this presentation
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