139 research outputs found
GANIL operation status and upgrade of SPIRAL1
International audienceThe GANIL facility (Caen, France) is dedicated to the acceleration of heavy ion beams for nuclear physics, atomic physics, radiobiology and material irradiation. The production of stable and radioactive ion beams for nuclear physics studies represents the main part of the activity. The exotic beams are produced by the Isotope Separation On-Line method with SPIRAL1 facility. It is running since 2001, producing and post-accelerating radioactive ion beams. The review of the operation from 2001 to 2011 is presented. Because of the physicist demands, the facility is about to be improved with the project Upgrade SPIRAL1. The goal of the project is to extend the range of post-accelerated exotic beams available. The upgrade of the "Système de Production d'Ions Radioactifs en Ligne" phase I (SPIRAL1) is in progress and should be ready by 2015
Isotopic distribution of fission fragments in collisions between 238U beam and 9Be and 12C targets at 24 MeV/u
Inverse kinematics coupled to a high-resolution spectrometer is used to
investigate the isotopic yields of fission fragments produced in reactions
between a 238U beam at 24 MeV/u and 9Be and 12C targets. Mass, atomic number
and isotopic distributions are reported for the two reactions. These
informations give access to the neutron excess and the isotopic distribution
widths, which together with the atomic-number and mass distributions are used
to investigate the fusion-fission dynamics.Comment: Submitted to PR
Heavy ion irradiation of crystalline water ice
Under cosmic irradiation, the interstellar water ice mantles evolve towards a
compact amorphous state. Crystalline ice amorphisation was previously monitored
mainly in the keV to hundreds of keV ion energies. We experimentally
investigate heavy ion irradiation amorphisation of crystalline ice, at high
energies closer to true cosmic rays, and explore the water-ice sputtering
yield. We irradiated thin crystalline ice films with MeV to GeV swift ion
beams, produced at the GANIL accelerator. The ice infrared spectral evolution
as a function of fluence is monitored with in-situ infrared spectroscopy
(induced amorphisation of the initial crystalline state into a compact
amorphous phase). The crystalline ice amorphisation cross-section is measured
in the high electronic stopping-power range for different temperatures. At
large fluence, the ice sputtering is measured on the infrared spectra, and the
fitted sputtering-yield dependence, combined with previous measurements, is
quadratic over three decades of electronic stopping power. The final state of
cosmic ray irradiation for porous amorphous and crystalline ice, as monitored
by infrared spectroscopy, is the same, but with a large difference in
cross-section, hence in time scale in an astrophysical context. The cosmic ray
water-ice sputtering rates compete with the UV photodesorption yields reported
in the literature. The prevalence of direct cosmic ray sputtering over
cosmic-ray induced photons photodesorption may be particularly true for ices
strongly bonded to the ice mantles surfaces, such as hydrogen-bonded ice
structures or more generally the so-called polar ices.Comment: 22pages, 11 figures, accepted in A&
Search for Superscreening effect in Superconductor
4 pages, 3 figures, Expérience au GANIL avec SPIRAL/EXOGAMThe decay of O() and Ne() implanted in niobium in its superconducting and metallic phase was measured using purified radioactive beams produced by the SPIRAL/GANIL facility. Half-lives and branching ratios measured in the two phases are consistent within one-sigma error bar. This measurement casts strong doubts on the predicted strong electron screening in superconductor, the so-called superscreening. The measured difference in screening potential energy is 110(90) eV for Ne and 400(320) eV for O. Precise determinations of the half-lives were obtained for O: 26.476(9)~s and Ne: 17.254(5)~s
Spatio-temporal permanence and plasticity of foraging trails in young and mature leaf-cutting ant colonies (Atta spp.)
The distribution and formation of foraging trails have largely been neglected as factors explaining harvesting
patterns of leaf-cutting ants.We applied fractal analysis, circular, and conventional statistics to published and newly
recorded trailmaps of seven Atta colonies focusing on three aspects: permanence, spatio-temporal plasticity and colony
life stage. In the long term, trail patterns of young and mature Atta colonies revealed that foraging activities were
focused on distinct, static sectors that made up only parts of their potentially available foraging range. Within these
foraging sectors, trails were typically ephemeral and highly variable in space and time. These ephemeral trails were
concentrated around permanent trunk trails in mature and around nest entrances in young colonies. Besides these
similarities, the comparison of trail systems between the two life stages indicated that young colonies exploited fewer
leaf sources, used smaller and less-complex systems of foraging trails, preferred different life forms as host plants, and
switched hosts more often compared with mature colonies. Based on these analyses, we propose a general hypothesis
which describes the foraging pattern in Atta as a result of initial foraging experiences, spatio-temporal distribution of
suitable host plants, energetic constraints, and other factors such as seasonality and interspecific predatio
Resonances in 19Ne with relevance to the astrophysically important 18F(p,{\alpha})15O reaction
The most intense gamma-ray line observable from novae is likely to be from
positron annihilation associated with the decay of 18F. The uncertainty in the
destruction rate of this nucleus through the 18F(p,{\alpha})15O reaction
presents a limit to interpretation of any future observed gamma-ray flux.
Direct measurements of the cross section of both this reaction and the
18F(p,p)18F reaction have been performed between center of mass energies of 0.5
and 1.9 MeV. Simultaneous fits to both data sets with the R-Matrix formalism
reveal several resonances, with the inferred parameters of populated states in
19Ne in general agreement with previous measurements. Of particular interest,
extra strength has been observed above ECM \sim1.3 MeV in the 18F(p,p)18F
reaction and between 1.3-1.7 MeV in the 18F(p,{\alpha})15O reaction. This is
well described by a broad 1/2+ state, consistent with both a recent theoretical
prediction and an inelastic scattering measurement. The astrophysical
implications of a broad sub-threshold partner to this state are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Spectroscopy of Na: Bridging the two-proton radioactivity of Mg
The unbound nucleus Na, the intermediate nucleus in the two-proton
radioactivity of Mg, was studied by the measurement of the resonant
elastic scattering reaction Ne(p,Ne)p performed at 4 A.MeV.
Spectroscopic properties of the low-lying states were obtained in a R-matrix
analysis of the excitation function. Using these new results, we show that the
lifetime of the Mg radioactivity can be understood assuming a sequential
emission of two protons via low energy tails of Na resonances
High-precision quadrupole moment reveals significant intruder component in 13 33Al20 ground state
The electric quadrupole moment of the Al201333 ground state, located at the border of the island of inversion, was obtained using continuous-beam β-detected nuclear quadrupole resonance (β-NQR). From the measured quadrupole coupling constant νQ=2.31(4) MHz in an α-Al2O3 crystal, a precise value for the electric quadrupole moment is extracted: |Qs(Al33)|=141(3) mb. A comparison with large-scale shell model calculations shows that Al33 has at least 50% intruder configurations in the ground state wave function, favoring the excitation of two neutrons across the N=20 shell gap. Al33 therefore clearly marks the gradual transition north of the deformed Na and Mg nuclei towards the normal Z≥14 isotopesThis work was partly supported by the European Community FP6—Structuring the ERA—Integrated Infrastructure Initiative Contract EURONS No. RII3-CT-2004-506065, by the FWO-Vlaanderen, by the IAP programme of the Belgium Science Policy under Grants No. P6/23 and No. P7/12, by a grant of the MICINN (Spain) (FPA2011-29854), by the Nupnet network SARFEN (PRI-PIMMNUP-2011-1361), by MINECO (Spain) Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa Programme under Grant No. SEV-2012-0249, and by JSPS KAKENHI (Japan) Grants No. 21740204 and No. 15K05094. The experiment was carried out under Experimental Program E437
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