14,747 research outputs found
Joshua and Dulcinea: A Conflict Between Country and Family
This research paper analyzes the struggle that Confederate soldier Joshua Callaway had in balancing his loyalty to his state and to his family in the context of what was expected of Southern men both before and during the Civil War
A computer program for calculating design and off-design performance for turbojet and turbofan engines
Program uses component performance maps to enable user to do analytical engine cycle calculations. Through scaling procedure, each of the component maps can be used to represent a family of maps. Either convergent or convergent-divergent nozzles may be used
The hydrogen atom in electric and magnetic fields : Pauli's 1926 article
The results obtained by Pauli, in his 1926 article on the hydrogen atom, made
essential use of the dynamical so(4) symmetry of the bound states. Pauli used
this symmetry to compute the perturbed energy levels of an hydrogen atom in a
uniform electric field (Stark effect) and in uniform electric and magnetic
fields. Although the experimental check of the single Stark effect on the
hydrogen atom has been studied experimentally, Pauli's results in mixed fields
have been studied only for Rydberg states of rubidium atoms in crossedfields
and lithium atoms in parallel fields.Comment: 11 pages, latex file, 2 figure
New Results on e+e- Line Emission in U+Ta Collisions
We present new results obtained from a series of follow-up e+e- coincidence
measurements in heavy-ion collisions, utilizing an improved experimental set-up
at the double-Orange beta-spectrometer of GSI. The collision system U+Ta was
reinvestigated in three independent runs at beam energies in the range
(6.0-6.4)xA MeV and different target thicknesses, with the objective to
reproduce a narrow sum-energy e+e- line at ~635 keV observed previously in this
collision system. At improved statistical accuracy, the line could not be found
in these new data. For the ''fission'' scenario, an upper limit (1 sigma) on
its production probability per collision of 1.3x10^{-8} can be set which has to
be compared to the previously reported value of [4.9 +- 0.8 (stat.) +- 1.0
(syst)]x10^{-7}. In the light of the new results, a reanalysis of the old data
shows that the continuous part of the spectrum at the line position is
significantly higher than previously assumed, thus reducing the production
probability of the line by a factor of two and its statistical significance to
< 3.4sigma.Comment: 15 pages, standard LaTeX with 3 included PS figures; Submitted to
Physics Letters
Measurement of Mean Life of Cadmium 2^3p1 by Thermal Motion of Excited Atoms during Life Time
Since the experiments of Dunoyer in 1914 some interest has developed in an experiment to show the diffusion of excited atoms in various types of resonance lamps. None of these have been successful due to the short life time of the excited states in the vapors selected. Since experiments made in this laboratory indicate a long life for the Cadmium 23P1 state, an attempt was made to measure the life of this state by the motion of the excited atoms in a unidirectional beam shot from a gun of the boiler type, and excited by passing through a narrow beam of light from a Cadmium discharge. The resonance radiation was photographed, a shield hiding the part of the beam in which the atoms were being excited from the camera. Radiation was observed above the shield edge. Below the shield - the edge near the gun - no radiation was observed indicating that the effect above was not due to secondary resonance. The results indicate a mean life for the Cadmium 23P1 state in excess of 10-6 seconds
First Energy and Angle differential Measurements of e^+e^- -pairs emitted by Internal Pair Conversion of excited Heavy Nuclei
We present the first energy and angle resolved measurements of e+e- pairs
emitted from heavy nuclei (Z>=40) at rest by internal pair conversion (IPC) of
transitions with energies of less than 2MeV as well as recent theoretical
results using the DWBA method, which takes full account of relativistic
effects, magnetic substates and finite size of the nucleus. The 1.76MeV E0
transition in Zr90 (Sr source) and the 1.77MeV M1 transition in Pb207 (Bi
source) have been investigated experimentally using the essentially improved
set-up at the double-ORANGE beta-spectrometer of GSI. The measurements prove
the capability of the setup to cleanly identify the IPC pairs in the presence
of five orders of magnitude higher beta- and gamma background from the same
source and to yield essentially background-free sum spectra despite the large
background. Using the ability of the ORANGE setup to directly determine the
opening angle of the e+e- pairs, the angular correlation of the emitted pairs
was measured. In the Zr90 case the correlation could be deduced for a wide
range of energy differences of the pairs. The Zr90 results are in good
agreement with recent theory. The angular correlation deduced for the M1
transition in Pb207 is in strong disagreement with theoretical predictions
derived within the Born approximation and shows almost isotropic character.
This is again in agreement with the new theoretical results.Comment: LaTeX, 28 pages incl. 10 PS figures; Accepted by Z.Phys.
Positron spectra from internal pair conversion observed in {238}U + {181}Ta collisions
We present new results from measurements and simulations of positron spectra,
originating from 238U + 181Ta collisions at beam energies close to the Coulomb
barrier. The measurements were performed using an improved experimental setup
at the double-Orange spectrometer of GSI. Particular emphasis is put on the
signature of positrons from Internal-Pair-Conversion (IPC) processes in the
measured e+ energy spectra, following the de-excitation of electromagnetic
transitions in the moving Ta-like nucleus. It is shown by Monte Carlo
simulations that, for the chosen current sweeping procedure used in the present
experiments, positron emission from discrete IPC transitions can lead to rather
narrow line structures in the measured energy spectra. The measured positron
spectra do not show evidence for line structures within the statistical
accuracy achieved, although expected from the intensities of the observed
transitions (E keV) and theoretical conversion
coefficients. This is due to the reduced detection efficiency for IPC
positrons, caused by the limited spatial and momentum acceptance of the
spectrometer. A comparison with previous results, in which lines have been
observed, is presented and the implications are discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages including 5 EPS figures; Accepted by Eur. Phys.Jour.
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