313 research outputs found
The HypHI project: Hypernuclear spectroscopy with stable heavy ion beams and rare isotope beams at GSI and FAIR
The HypHI collaboration aims to perform a precise hypernuclear spectroscopy
with stable heavy ion beams and rare isotope beams at GSI and fAIR in order to
study hypernuclei at extreme isospin, especially neutron rich hypernuclei to
look insight hyperon-nucleon interactions in the neutron rich medium, and
hypernuclear magnetic moments to investigate baryon properties in the nuclei.
We are currently preparing for the first experiment with Li and C
beams at 2 AGeV to demonstrate the feasibility of a precise hypernuclear
spectroscopy by identifying H, H and
He. The first physics experiment on these hypernuclei is
planned for 2009. In the present document, an overview of the HypHI project and
the details of this first experiment will be discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, French-Japanese symposium 2008, Paris (France
Search for H hypernucleus by the Li reaction at = 1.2 GeV/
We have carried out an experiment to search for a neutron-rich hypernucleus,
H, by the Li() reaction at =1.2
GeV/. The obtained missing mass spectrum with an estimated energy resolution
of 3.2 MeV (FWHM) showed no peak structure corresponding to the H
hypernucleus neither below nor above the H particle decay
threshold. An upper limit of the production cross section for the bound
H hypernucleus was estimated to be 1.2 nb/sr at 90% confidence
level.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Structure near ++ threshold in the in-flight He reaction
To search for an S= -1 di-baryonic state which decays to , the reaction was studied at 1.0 GeV/.
Unobserved neutrons were kinematically identified from the missing mass
of the reaction in order to have a large
acceptance for the final state. The observed events,
distributed widely over the kinematically allowed region of the Dalitz plot,
establish that the major component comes from a three nucleon absorption
process. A concentration of events at a specific neutron kinetic energy was
observed in a region of low momentum transfer to the . To account
for the observed peak structure, the simplest S-wave pole was assumed to exist
in the reaction channel, having Breit-Wigner form in energy and with a Gaussian
form-factor. A minimum method was applied to deduce its mass
2355 (stat.) (syst.) MeV/c, and decay-width
110 (stat.) (syst.) MeV/c,
respectively. The form factor parameter 400 MeV/ implies that the
range of interaction is about 0.5Comment: 12pages, 8 figure
Measurement of the strong interaction induced shift and width of the 1s state of kaonic deuterium at J-PARC
The antikaon-nucleon interaction close to threshold provides crucial
information on the interplay between spontaneous and explicit chiral symmetry
breaking in low-energy QCD. In this context the importance of kaonic deuterium
X-ray spectroscopy has been well recognized, but no experimental results have
yet been obtained due to the difficulty of the measurement. We propose to
measure the shift and width of the kaonic deuterium 1s state with an accuracy
of 60 eV and 140 eV respectively at J-PARC. These results together with the
kaonic hydrogen data (KpX at KEK, DEAR and SIDDHARTA at DAFNE) will then permit
the determination of values of both the isospin I=0 and I=1 antikaon-nucleon
scattering lengths and will provide the most stringent constraints on the
antikaon-nucleon interaction, promising a breakthrough. Refined Monte Carlo
studies were performed, including the investigation of background suppression
factors for the described setup. These studies have demonstrated the
feasibility of determining the shift and width of the kaonic deuterium atom 1s
state with the desired accuracy of 60 eV and 140 eV.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Spectroscopy of 32Ne and the Island of Inversion
We report on the first spectroscopic study of the N=22 nucleus 32Ne at the
newly completed RIKEN Radioactive Ion Beam Factory. A single gamma-ray line
with an energy of 722(9) keV was observed in both inelastic scattering of a 226
MeV/u 32Ne beam on a Carbon target and proton removal from 33Na at 245 MeV/u.
This transition is assigned to the de-excitation of the first J^pi = 2+ state
in 32Ne to the 0+ ground state. Interpreted through comparison with
state-of-the-art shell model calculations, the low excitation energy
demonstrates that the Island of Inversion extends to at least N=22 for the Ne
isotopes.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. 11 pages, 3 figure
Alcohol dehydrogenase 1B (ADH1B) genotype, alcohol consumption and breast cancer risk by age 50 years in a German case–control study
In a population-based study of 613 cases and 1082 controls, alcohol dehydrogenase 1B (ADH1B) genotype was not an independent risk factor for breast cancer, athough the possibility was raised that it modifies risk associated with high levels of alcohol consumption (OR 1.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.8–1.6 for ADH1B*1/*1 genotype vs 0.2, 95% CI 0.1–1.0 for ADH1B*2 carriers)
In-beam tests of scintillating fibre detectors at MAMI and at GSI
The performance of scintillating fibre detectors was studied with electrons
at the spectrometer facility of the Mainz microtron MAMI, as well as in a C-12
beam of 2 AGeV energy and in a beam of different particle species at GSI.
Multi-anode photomultipliers were used to read out one or more bundles of 128
fibres each in different geometries. For electrons a time resolution of FWHM =
1 ns was measured in a single detector plane with a detection efficiency
epsilon > 99%. A time resolution of 310 ps (FWHM) between two planes of fibres
was achieved for carbon ions, leading to a FWHM = 220 ps for a single detector.
The hit position residual was measured with a width of FWHM = 0.27 mm. The
variation in the measured energy deposition was Delta E/E= 15-20% (FWHM) for
carbon ions. In addition, the energy response to p/pi/d particles was studied.
Based on the good detector performance fibre hodoscopes will be constructed for
the KAOS/A1 spectrometer at MAMI and for the HypHI experiment at GSI.Comment: submitted to Nucl. Instrum. Meth.
Low-Energy Direct Capture in the 8Li(n,gamma)9Li and 8B(p,gamma)9C Reactions
The cross sections of the 8Li(n,gamma)9Li and 8B(p,gamma)9C capture reactions
have been analyzed using the direct capture model. At low energies which is the
astrophysically relevant region the capture process is dominated by E1
transitions from incoming s-waves to bound p-states. The cross sections of both
mirror reactions can be described simultaneously with consistent potential
parameters, whereas previous calculations have overestimated the capture cross
sections significantly. However, the parameters of the potential have to be
chosen very carefully because the calculated cross section of the
8Li(n,gamma)9Li reaction depends sensitively on the potential strength.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Phys. Rev. C, accepte
Identification of Cis-Acting Promoter Elements in Cold- and Dehydration-Induced Transcriptional Pathways in Arabidopsis, Rice, and Soybean
The genomes of three plants, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), rice (Oryza sativa), and soybean (Glycine max), have been sequenced, and their many genes and promoters have been predicted. In Arabidopsis, cis-acting promoter elements involved in cold- and dehydration-responsive gene expression have been extensively analysed; however, the characteristics of such cis-acting promoter sequences in cold- and dehydration-inducible genes of rice and soybean remain to be clarified. In this study, we performed microarray analyses using the three species, and compared characteristics of identified cold- and dehydration-inducible genes. Transcription profiles of the cold- and dehydration-responsive genes were similar among these three species, showing representative upregulated (dehydrin/LEA) and downregulated (photosynthesis-related) genes. All (46 = 4096) hexamer sequences in the promoters of the three species were investigated, revealing the frequency of conserved sequences in cold- and dehydration-inducible promoters. A core sequence of the abscisic acid-responsive element (ABRE) was the most conserved in dehydration-inducible promoters of all three species, suggesting that transcriptional regulation for dehydration-inducible genes is similar among these three species, with the ABRE-dependent transcriptional pathway. In contrast, for cold-inducible promoters, the conserved hexamer sequences were diversified among these three species, suggesting the existence of diverse transcriptional regulatory pathways for cold-inducible genes among the species
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