66 research outputs found
Dissociation of relativistic C nuclei in nuclear track emulsion
Dissociation of 1.2 A GeV C nuclei in nuclear track emulsionis is
studied.
It is shown that most precise angular measurements provided by this technique
play a crucial role in the restoration of the excitation spectrum of the
2+2p system. Strong contribution of the cascade process
CBBe identified.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, conference: The 21st European Conference on
Few-Body Problems in Physics, Salamanca, Spain, 29th August - 3rd September,
201
"Tomography" of the cluster structure of light nuclei via relativistic dissociation
These lecture notes present the capabilities of relativistic nuclear physics
for the development of the physics of nuclear clusters. Nuclear track emulsion
continues to be an effective technique for pilot studies that allows one, in
particular, to study the cluster dissociation of a wide variety of light
relativistic nuclei within a common approach. Despite the fact that the
capabilities of the relativistic fragmentation for the study of nuclear
clustering were recognized quite a long time ago, electronic experiments have
not been able to come closer to an integrated analysis of ensembles of
relativistic fragments. The continued pause in the investigation of the "fine"
structure of relativistic fragmentation has led to resumption of regular
exposures of nuclear emulsions in beams of light nuclei produced for the first
time at the Nuclotron of the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR,
Dubna). To date, an analysis of the peripheral interactions of relativistic
isotopes of beryllium, boron, carbon and nitrogen, including radioactive ones,
with nuclei of the emulsion composition, has been performed, which allows the
clustering pattern to be presented for a whole family of light nuclei.Comment: ISBN 978-3-319-01076-2. 55 pages, 28 figure
Fragmentation and Multifragmentation of 10.6A GeV Gold Nuclei
We present the results of a study performed on the interactions of 10.6A GeV
gold nuclei in nuclear emulsions. In a minimum bias sample of 1311 interac-
tions, 5260 helium nuclei and 2622 heavy fragments were observed as Au projec-
tile fragments. The experimental data are analyzed with particular emphasis of
target separation interactions in emulsions and study of criticalexponents.
Multiplicity distributions of the fast-moving projectile fragments are inves-
tigated. Charged fragment moments, conditional moments as well as two and three
-body asymmetries of the fast moving projectile particles are determined in
terms of the total charge remaining bound in the multiply charged projectile
fragments. Some differences in the average yields of helium nuclei and heavier
fragments are observed, which may be attributed to a target effect. However,
two and three-body asymmetries and conditional moments indicate that the
breakup mechanism of the projectile seems to be independent of target mass. We
looked for evidence of critical point observable in finite nuclei by study the
resulting charged fragments distributions. We have obtained the values for the
critical exponents gamma, beta and tau and compare our results with those at
lower energy experiment (1.0A GeV data). The values suggest that a phase
transition like behavior, is observed.Comment: latex, revtex, 28 pages, 12 figures, 3tables, submitted to Europysics
Journal
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