2,534 research outputs found
Peripherality of breakup reactions
The sensitivity of elastic breakup to the interior of the projectile wave
function is analyzed. Breakup calculations of loosely bound nuclei (8B and
11Be) are performed with two different descriptions of the projectile. The
descriptions differ strongly in the interior of the wave function, but exhibit
identical asymptotic properties, namely the same asymptotic normalization
coefficient, and phase shifts. Breakup calculations are performed at
intermediate energies (40-70 MeV/nucleon) on lead and carbon targets as well as
at low energy (26 MeV) on a nickel target. No dependence on the projectile
description is observed. This result confirms that breakup reactions are
peripheral in the sense that they probe only the external part of the wave
function. These measurements are thus not directly sensitive to the total
normalization of the wave function, i.e. spectroscopic factor.Comment: Reviewed version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C; 1 new
section (Sec. III E), 2 new figures (Figs. 3 and 5
Intermediate energy Coulomb excitation as a probe of nuclear structure at radioactive beam facilities
The effects of retardation in the Coulomb excitation of radioactive nuclei in
intermediate energy collisions (Elab ~100 MeV/nucleon) are investigated. We
show that the excitation cross sections of low-lying states in 11Be,
{38,40,42}S and {44,46}Ar projectiles incident on gold and lead targets are
modified by as much as 20% due to these effects. The angular distributions of
decaying gamma-rays are also appreciably modified.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, Phys. Rev. C, in pres
Coulomb Excitation of Multi-Phonon Levels of the Giant Dipole Resonance
A closed expression is obtained for the cross-section for Coulomb excitation
of levels of the giant dipole resonance of given angular momentum and phonon
number. Applications are made to the Goldhaber-Teller and Steinwedel-Jensen
descriptions of the resonance, at non-relativistic and relativistic bombarding
energies.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
The Semiclassical Coulomb Interaction
The semiclassical Coulomb excitation interaction is at times expressed in the
Lorentz gauge in terms of the electromagnetic fields and a contribution from
the scalar electric potential. We point out that the potential term can make
spurious contributions to excitation cross sections, especially when the the
decay of excited states is taken into account. We show that, through an
appropriate gauge transformation, the excitation interaction can be expressed
in terms of the electromagnetic fields alone.Comment: 12 pages. Phys. Rev. C, Rapid Communication, in pres
Semiclassical treatment of fusion processes in collisions of weakly bound nuclei
We describe a semiclassical treatment of nuclear fusion reactions involving
weakly bound nuclei. In this treatment, the complete fusion probabilities are
approximated by products of two factors: a tunneling probability and the
probability that the system is in its ground state at the strong absorption
radius. We investigate the validity of the method in a schematic two-channel
application, where the channels in the continuum are represented by a single
resonant state. Comparisons with full coupled-channels calculations are
performed. The agreement between semiclassical and quantal calculations isquite
good, suggesting that the procedure may be extended to more sophisticated
discretizations of the continuum.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Long-Time Behavior of Velocity Autocorrelation Function for Interacting Particles in a Two-Dimensional Disordered System
The long-time behavior of the velocity autocorrelation function (VACF) is
investigated by the molecular dynamics simulation of a two-dimensional system
which has both a many-body interaction and a random potential. With
strengthening the random potential by increasing the density of impurities, a
crossover behavior of the VACF is observed from a positive tail, which is
proportional to t^{-1}, to a negative tail, proportional to -t^{-2}. The latter
tail exists even when the density of particles is the same order as the density
of impurities. The behavior of the VACF in a nonequilibrium steady state is
also studied. In the linear response regime the behavior is similar to that in
the equilibrium state, whereas it changes drastically in the nonlinear response
regime.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Embryonic Precursor Cells from the Rhombic Lip Are Specified to a Cerebellar Granule Neuron Identity
AbstractThe specification of diverse classes of neurons is critical to the development of the cerebellar cortex. Here, we describe the purification of early embryonic precursors of cerebellar granule neurons from the rhombic lip, the dorsal aspect of the midbrain/hindbrain region. Isolation of rhombic lip cells reveals a homogenous population of precursor cells that express general neuronal markers and the granule cell marker RU49, but fail to extend neurites or express differentiation markers. Differentiation is induced by coculture with external germinal layer (EGL) cells, or their membranes, suggesting that a local inducing factor acts after formation of the EGL. Thus, proliferating precursors within the rhombic lip are specified to be granule cells very early, with the availability of an inducing factor increasing over the course of development
Selective Targeting to Glioma with Nucleic Acid Aptamers
Malignant glioma is characterised by a rapid growth rate and high capacity for invasive infiltration to surrounding brain tissue; hence, diagnosis and treatment is difficult and patient survival is poor. Aptamers contribute a promising and unique technology for the in vitro imaging of live cells and tissues, with a potentially bright future in clinical diagnostics and therapeutics for malignant glioma. The binding selectivity, uptake capacity and binding target of two DNA aptamers, SA43 and SA44, were investigated in glioma cells and patient tissues. The binding assay showed that SA43 and SA44 bound with strong affinity (Kd, 21.56 ± 4.60 nM and Kd, 21.11 ± 3.30 nM respectively) to the target U87MG cells. Quantitative analysis by flow cytometry showed that the aptamers were able to actively internalise in U87MG and 1321N1 glioma cells compared to the non-cancerous and non-glioma cell types. Confocal microscopy confirmed staining in the cytoplasm, and co-localisation studies with endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and lysosomal markers suggested internalisation and compartmentalisation within the endomembrane system. Both aptamers selectively bound to Ku 70 and Ku 80 DNA repair proteins as determined by aptoprecipitation (AP) followed by mass spectrometry analysis and confirmation by Western blot. In addition, aptohistochemical (AHC) staining on paraffin embedded, formalin fixed patient tissues revealed that the binding selectivity was significantly higher for SA43 aptamer in glioma tissues (grade I, II, III and IV) compared to the non-cancerous tissues, whereas SA44 did not show selectivity towards glioma tissues. The results indicate that SA43 aptamer can differentiate between glioma and non-cancerous cells and tissues and therefore, shows promise for histological diagnosis of glioma
Coulomb corrected eikonal description of the breakup of halo nuclei
The eikonal description of breakup reactions diverges because of the Coulomb
interaction between the projectile and the target. This divergence is due to
the adiabatic, or sudden, approximation usually made, which is incompatible
with the infinite range of the Coulomb interaction. A correction for this
divergence is analysed by comparison with the Dynamical Eikonal Approximation,
which is derived without the adiabatic approximation. The correction consists
in replacing the first-order term of the eikonal Coulomb phase by the
first-order of the perturbation theory. This allows taking into account both
nuclear and Coulomb interactions on the same footing within the computationally
efficient eikonal model. Excellent results are found for the dissociation of
11Be on lead at 69 MeV/nucleon. This Coulomb Corrected Eikonal approximation
provides a competitive alternative to more elaborate reaction models for
investigating breakup of three-body projectiles at intermediate and high
energies.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Structure Effects on Coulomb Dissociation of B
Coulomb Dissociation provides an alternative method for determining the
radiative capture cross sections at astrophysically relevant low relative
energies. For the breakup of B on Ni, we calculate the total Coulomb
Dissociation cross section and the angular distribution for E1, E2 and M1. Our
calculations are performed first within the standard first order semiclassical
theory of Coulomb Excitation, including the correct three body kinematics, and
later including the projectile-target nuclear interactions.Comment: 6 pages, proceedings from International Workshop on RNB, Puri, India,
January 1998 - to be published in J. Phys.
- …