442 research outputs found
The Dynamical Dipole Mode in Dissipative Heavy Ion Collisions
We study the effect of a direct Giant Dipole Resonance () excitation in
intermediate dinuclear systems with exotic shape and charge distributions
formed in charge asymmetric fusion entrance channels. A related enhancement of
the gamma yield in the evaporation cascade of the fused nucleus is
expected. The dynamical origin of such extra strength will show up in a
characteristic anisotropy of the dipole gamma-emission. A fully microscopic
analysis of the fusion dynamics is performed with quantitative predictions of
the photon yield based on a dynamics- statistics coupling model. In
particular we focus our attention on the energy and mass dependence of the
effect.
We suggest a series of new experiments, in particular some optimal entrance
channel conditions. We stress the importance of using the new available
radioactive beams.Comment: 20 pages (Latex), 14 Postscript figure
First experimental evidence of 2He decay from 18Ne excited states
Two-proton decay from 18Ne excited states has been studied by complete kinematical detection of the decay products. The 18Ne nucleus has been produced as a radioactive beam by 20Ne projectile fragmentation at 45 AMeV on a 9Be target, using the FRIBs in-flight facility of the LNS. The 18Ne at 33 AMeV incident energy has been excited via Coulomb excitation on a natPb target. The correlated 2p emission has been disentangled from the uncorrelated 2p emission using a high granularity particle detector setup allowing the reconstruction of momentum and angle correlations of the two emitted protons. The obtained results unambiguously show that the 6.15 MeV 18Ne state two-proton decay proceeds through 2He emission (31%) and democratic or virtual sequential decay (69%)
Elastic scattering of Beryllium isotopes near the Coulomb barrier
In this contribution, results of experiments performed with the three Beryllium isotopes
9,10,11Be on a medium mass 64Zn target, at a center of mass energy of≈1.4 the Coulomb barrier, will be discussed. Elastic scattering angular distributions have been measured for the 9,10Be reactions. In the 11Be case the quasielastic scattering angular distribution was obtained. In the halo nucleus case, the angular distribution exhibit a non-Fresnel-type pattern with a strong damping of the Coulombnuclear interference peak. Moreover, it is found that the total reaction cross-section for the halo nucleus induced collision is more than double the ones extracted in the collisions induced by the non-halo Beryllium isotopes. A large contribution to the total-reaction cross-section in the 11Be case could be attributed to transfer and/or break-up events
Ground-state proton decay of 69Br and implications for the rp-process 68Se waiting-point
The first direct measurement of the proton separation energy, Sp, for the
proton-unbound nucleus 69Br is reported. Of interest is the exponential
dependence of the 2p-capture rate on Sp which can bypass the 68Se waiting-point
in the astrophysical rp process. An analysis of the observed proton decay
spectrum is given in terms of the 69Se mirror nucleus and the influence of Sp
is explored within the context of a single-zone X-ray burst model.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, INPC 2010 conference proceeding
Opportunities for coppice management at the landscape level: the Italian experience
Coppice silviculture has a long tradition in Italy. Societal demands have led to
the development of forest management techniques for integrating wood production
with other kinds of forest uses and regulations have been issued to
limit forest degradation. In Italy, 35% of the national forest cover is currently
managed under coppice silvicultural systems that provide 66% of the annual
wood production. Fuel-wood demand is increasing and a large amount of fuelwood
is currently imported in Italy. Modern coppice practices differ from those
adopted in the past and may have a reduced impact on ecosystem characteristics
and processes. Nevertheless, coppice silviculture has a bad reputation
mostly on grounds that are beyond economic, technical and ecological rationales.
Neither cessation of use nor a generalized conversion from coppice to
high forest are likely to respond simultaneously to the many demands deriving
from complex and articulated political and economic perspectives operating at
global, European, national, regional and forest stand-level scales. Different
approaches of modern silviculture to coppice successfully tested in Italy for
more than a decade are illustrated. We propose to combine different options
at the stand and sub-stand level, including either development without human
interference or conversion to high forest, and to apply these approaches
within the framework of novel forest management plans and regionally consistent
administrative procedures. This bottom-up approach represents a potential
solution to the socio-economic and environmental challenges affecting
coppicing as a silvicultural system
Collective Dipole Bremsstrahlung in Fusion Reactions
We estimate the dipole radiation emitted in fusion processes. We show that a
classical bremsstrahlung approach can account for both the preequilibrium and
the thermal photon emission. We give an absolute evaluation of the
pre-equilibrium component due to the charge asymmetry in the entrance channel
and we study the energy and mass dependence in order to optimize the
observation. This dynamical dipole radiation could be a relevant cooling
mechanism in the fusion path. We stress the interest in experiments with the
new available radioactive beams.Comment: 4 pages (LATEX), 4 Postscript figures, minor text modification
18 Ne diproton decay
Two proton radioactivity studies have been performed on excited states of 18 Ne produced, among other fragments, by 20 Ne projectile fragmentation and excited via Coulomb excitation on a Pb target. Every incoming ion was tagged before interacting with the lead target on an event by event basis in order to discriminate the secondary reactions according to the projectile. Decay of 18 Ne levels has been studied by complete kinematical reconstruction. In spite of the low statistics a couple of events looks very promising for two proton correlated emission
Lung Surfactant Decreases Biochemical Alterations and Oxidative Stress Induced by a Sub-Toxic Concentration of Carbon Nanoparticles in Alveolar Epithelial and Microglial Cells
Carbon-based nanomaterials are nowadays attracting lots of attention, in particular in the biomedical field, where they find a wide spectrum of applications, including, just to name a few, the drug delivery to specific tumor cells and the improvement of non-invasive imaging methods. Nanoparticles inhaled during breathing accumulate in the lung alveoli, where they interact and are covered with lung surfactants. We recently demonstrated that an apparently non-toxic concentration of engineered carbon nanodiamonds (ECNs) is able to induce oxidative/nitrosative stress, imbalance of energy metabolism, and mitochondrial dysfunction in microglial and alveolar basal epithelial cells. Therefore, the complete understanding of their “real” biosafety, along with their possible combination with other molecules mimicking the in vivo milieu, possibly allowing the modulation of their side effects becomes of utmost importance. Based on the above, the focus of the present work was to investigate whether the cellular alterations induced by an apparently non-toxic concentration of ECNs could be counteracted by their incorporation into a synthetic lung surfactant (DPPC:POPG in 7:3 molar ratio). By using two different cell lines (alveolar (A549) and microglial (BV-2)), we were able to show that the presence of lung surfactant decreased the production of ECNs-induced nitric oxide, total reactive oxygen species, and malondialdehyde, as well as counteracted reduced glutathione depletion (A549 cells only), ameliorated cell energy status (ATP and total pool of nicotinic coenzymes), and improved mitochondrial phosphorylating capacity. Overall, our results on alveolar basal epithelial and microglial cell lines clearly depict the benefits coming from the incorporation of carbon nanoparticles into a lung surfactant (mimicking its in vivo lipid composition), creating the basis for the investigation of this combination in vivo
Experimental study of the collision 11Be + 64Zn around the Coulomb barrier
In this paper details of the experimental procedure and data analysis of the collision of 11Be +64Zn around the Coulomb barrier are described and discussed in the framework of different theoretical approaches. In a previous work, the elastic scattering angular distribution of the collisions 9 ,10Be +64Zn as well as the angular distribution for the quasielastic scattering and transfer/breakup cross sections for the 11Be +64Zn reaction were briefly reported. The suppression of the quasielastic angular distribution in the Coulomb-nuclear interference angular region observed in the collision of the 11Be halo nucleus with respect to the other two beryllium isotopes was interpreted as being caused by a long-range absorption owing to the long decay length of the 11Be wave function. In this paper, new continuum-discretized coupled-channel calculations of the 11Be +64Zn reaction are reported in the attempt to interpret the effect of coupling with the breakup channels on the measured cross sections. The calculations show that the observed suppression of the Coulomb-nuclear interference peak is caused by a combined effect of Coulomb and nuclear couplings to the breakup channels.INFN y Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España) FPA2009-07653 FPA2009-07387 FPA2010-17142Comisión Europea 50606
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