58 research outputs found
Associations with 5 CFTR Mutations in »Grande BriÚre«, an Isolate Located in Southern Brittany
The variability at three microsatellites in the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Gene (CFTR) locus has been studied for frequent mutations encountered in an isolated population of »Grande BriÚre«, a small region located in Southern Brittany. Fluorescent multiplex PCR of these microsatellites were assayed in 16 Cystic Fibrosis (CF) families carrying 5 different mutations. The four most frequent haplotypes on df508 chromosomes were the same as those found in Northern France and Europe but the distribution of these haplotypes provides new enlightenment on the population origin of this insular community
Fragment properties of fragmenting heavy nuclei produced in central and semi-peripheral collisions
Fragment properties of hot fragmenting sources of similar sizes produced in
central and semi-peripheral collisions are compared in the excitation energy
range 5-10 AMeV. For semi-peripheral collisions a method for selecting compact
quasi-projectiles sources in velocity space similar to those of fused systems
(central collisions) is proposed. The two major results are related to
collective energy. The weak radial collective energy observed for
quasi-projectile sources is shown to originate from thermal pressure only. The
larger fragment multiplicity observed for fused systems and their more
symmetric fragmentation are related to the extra radial collective energy due
to expansion following a compression phase during central collisions. A first
attempt to locate where the different sources break in the phase diagram is
proposed.Comment: 23 pages submitted to NP
Multifragmentation and phase transition for hot nuclei
5 pages, Proceedings of NN2009, August 17-21, Beijing (China)Recent important progress on the knowledge of multifragmentation and phase transition for hot nuclei, thanks to the high detection quality of the INDRA array, is reported. It concerns i) the radial collective energies involved in hot fragmenting nuclei/sources produced in central and semi- peripheral collisions and their influence on the observed fragment partitions, ii) a better knowledge of freeze-out properties obtained by means of a simulation based on all the available experimental information and iii) the quantitative study of the bimodal behaviour of the heaviest fragment distribution for fragmenting hot heavy quasi-projectiles which allows the extraction, for the first time, of an estimate of the latent heat of the phase transition
Yield scaling, size hierarchy and fluctuations of observables in fragmentation of excited heavy nuclei
Multifragmentation properties measured with INDRA are studied for single
sources produced in Xe+Sn reactions in the incident energy range 32-50 A MeV
and quasiprojectiles from Au+Au collisions at 80 A MeV. A comparison for both
types of sources is presented concerning Fisher scaling, Zipf law, fragment
size and fluctuation observables. A Fisher scaling is observed for all the
data. The pseudo-critical energies extracted from the Fisher scaling are
consistent between Xe+Sn central collisions and Au quasi-projectiles. In the
latter case it also corresponds to the energy region at which fluctuations are
maximal. The critical energies deduced from the Zipf analysis are higher than
those from the Fisher analysis.Comment: 30 pages, accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics A, references
correcte
Decay of excited nuclei produced in the 78;82Kr+40Ca reactions at 5.5 MeV/nucleon
International audienc
Multi-particle correlation function to study short-lived nuclei
Unstable 10C nuclei are produced as quasi-projectiles in 12C+24Mg collisions
at E/A = 53 and 95 MeV. The decay of their short-lived states is studied with
the INDRA multidetector array via multi-particle correlation functions. The
obtained results show that heavy-ion collisions can be used as a tool to access
spectroscopic information of unbound states in exotic nuclei, such as their
energies and the relative importance of different sequential decay widths.Comment: 8 figures, accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics
- âŠ