39 research outputs found

    Transition from participant to spectator fragmentation in Au+Au reaction between 60 AMeV and 150 AMeV

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    Using the quantum molecular dynamics approach, we analyze the results of the recent INDRA Au+Au experiments at GSI in the energy range between 60 AMeV and 150 AMeV. It turns out that in this energy region the transition toward a participant-spectator scenario takes place. The large Au+Au system displays in the simulations as in the experiment simultaneously dynamical and statistical behavior which we analyze in detail: The composition of fragments close to midrapidity follows statistical laws and the system shows bi-modality, i.e. a sudden transition between different fragmentation pattern as a function of the centrality as expected for a phase transition. The fragment spectra at small and large rapidities, on the other hand, are determined by dynamics and the system as a whole does not come to equilibrium, an observation which is confirmed by FOPI experiments for the same system.Comment: published versio

    Pion radii in nonlocal chiral quark model

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    The electromagnetic radius of the charged pion and the transition radius of the neutral pion are calculated in the framework of the nonlocal chiral quark model. It is shown in this model that the contributions of vector mesons to the pion radii are noticeably suppressed in comparison with a similar contribution in the local Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model. The form-factor for the process gamma*pi+pi- is calculated for the -1 GeV^2<q^2<1.6 GeV^2. Our results are in satisfactory agreement with experimental data.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure

    Fragmentation in Peripheral Heavy-Ion Collisions: from Neck Emission to Spectator Decays

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    Invariant cross sections of intermediate mass fragments in peripheral collisions of Au on Au at incident energies between 40 and 150 AMeV have been measured with the 4-pi multi-detector INDRA. The maximum of the fragment production is located near mid-rapidity at the lower energies and moves gradually towards the projectile and target rapidities as the energy is increased. Schematic calculations within an extended Goldhaber model suggest that the observed cross-section distributions and their evolution with energy are predominantly the result of the clustering requirement for the emerging fragments and of their Coulomb repulsion from the projectile and target residues. The quantitative comparison with transverse energy spectra and fragment charge distributions emphasizes the role of hard scattered nucleons in the fragmentation process.Comment: 5 pages, 5 eps figures, RevTeX4, submitted to Phys. Lett.

    Statistical Multifragmentation of Non-Spherical Expanding Sources in Central Heavy-Ion Collisions

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    We study the anisotropy effects measured with INDRA at GSI in central collisions of Xe+Sn at 50 A.MeV and Au+Au at 60, 80, 100 A.MeV incident energy. The microcanonical multifragmentation model with non-spherical sources is used to simulate an incomplete shape relaxation of the multifragmenting system. This model is employed to interpret observed anisotropic distributions in the fragment size and mean kinetic energy. The data can be well reproduced if an expanding prolate source aligned along the beam direction is assumed. An either non-Hubblean or non-isotropic radial expansion is required to describe the fragment kinetic energies and their anisotropy. The qualitative similarity of the results for the studied reactions suggests that the concept of a longitudinally elongated freeze-out configuration is generally applicable for central collisions of heavy systems. The deformation decreases slightly with increasing beam energy.Comment: 35 pages, 19 figures, submitted to Nuclear Physics

    Source shape determination with directional fragment-fragment velocity correlations

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    Correlation functions, constructed from directional projections of the relative velocities of fragments, are used to determine the shape of the breakup volume in coordinate space. For central collisions of 129Xe + natSn at 50 MeV per nucleon incident energy, measured with the 4pi multi-detector INDRA at GSI, a prolate shape aligned along the beam direction with an axis ratio of 1:0.7 is deduced. The sensitivity of the method is discussed in comparison with conventional fragment-fragment velocity correlations.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, subm. to Phys. Lett.

    Quinone-dependent delayed fluorescence from the reaction center of photosynthetic bacteria.

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    Millisecond delayed fluorescence from the isolated reaction center of photosynthetic bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides was measured after single saturating flash excitation and was explained by thermal repopulation of the excited bacteriochlorophyll dimer from lower lying charge separated states. Three exponential components (fastest, fast, and slow) were found with lifetimes of 1.5, 102, and 865 ms and quantum yields of 6.4 x 10(-9), 2.2 x 10(-9), and 2.6 x 10(-9) (pH 8.0), respectively. While the two latter phases could be related to transient absorption changes, the fastest one could not. The fastest component, dominating when the primary quinone was prereduced, might be due to a small fraction of long-lived triplet states of the radical pair and/or the dimer. The fast phase observed in the absence of the secondary quinone, was sensitive to pH, temperature, and the chemical nature of the primary quinone. The standard free energy of the primary stable charge pair relative to that of the excited dimer was -910 +/- 20 meV at pH 8 and with native ubiquinone, and it showed characteristic changes upon pH and quinone replacement. The interaction energy ( approximately 50 meV) between the cluster of the protonatable groups around GluL212 and the primary semiquinone provides evidence for functional linkage between the two quinone binding pockets. An empirical relationship was found between the in situ free energy of the primary quinone and the rate of charge recombination, with practical importance in the estimation of the free energy levels from the easily available lifetime of the charge recombination. The ratio of the slow and fast components could be used to determine the pH dependence of the free energy level of the secondary stable charge pair relative to that of the excited dimer

    A pilot study of Cerasorb and Bio-Oss enhanced new bone formation in animal model

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    The aim of this pilot investigation was to develop a new animal model for studying the effects on osteogenesis of agents used in the guided bone regeneration technique. As test material, a mixture of two osseoconductive materials with different physico-chemical characteristics was used. One component of the mixture was Bio-Oss, a bovine hydroxyapatite; the other was Cerasorb, a synthetic tricalcium phosphate. The mixture consisited of 50 volume percent of Bio-Oss and 50 volume percent of Cerasorb. In in vivo pilot experiment, bone wounds were prepared in the proximal third of both femurs of rabbits. A Cerasorb + Bio-Oss mixture was inserted on the test side and the same amount of sterile buffered physiological solution on the control side. After healing for 4 weeks, the bone segments were embedded and cut without decalcification, using the Exact cutting and grinding system. The density of the newlyformed bone was evaluated histomorphometrically. On the Cerasorb + Bio-Oss test side the bone density was almost 1.5 times higher than that on the control side. These results demonstrated that the applied animal model is appropriate for investigation of the effects on osteogenesis of biocompatible graft materials such as Bio-Oss and Cerasorb
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