18,708 research outputs found
The mass hierarchy with atmospheric neutrinos at INO
We study the neutrino mass hierarchy at the magnetized Iron CALorimeter
(ICAL) detector at India-based Neutrino Observatory with atmospheric neutrino
events generated by the Monte Carlo event generator Nuance. We judicially
choose the observables so that the possible systematic uncertainties can be
reduced. The resolution as a function of both energy and zenith angle
simultaneously is obtained for neutrinos and anti-neutrinos separately from
thousand years un-oscillated atmospheric neutrino events at ICAL to migrate
number of events from neutrino energy and zenith angle bins to muon energy and
zenith angle bins. The resonance ranges in terms of directly measurable
quantities like muon energy and zenith angle are found using this resolution
function at different input values of . Then, the marginalized
s are studied for different input values of with its
resonance ranges taking input data in muon energy and zenith angle bins.
Finally, we find that the mass hierarchy can be explored up to a lower value of
with confidence level 95% in this set up.Comment: some clarifications added, version accepted in PLB, 12 pages, 34
figure
Alpha decay chains from superheavy nuclei
Magic islands for extra-stable nuclei in the midst of the sea of
fission-instability were predicted to be around Z=114, 124 or, 126 with N=184,
and Z=120, with N=172. Whether these fission-survived superheavy nuclei with
high Z and N would live long enough for detection or, undergo alpha-decay in a
very short time remains an open question. Alpha-decay half lives of nuclei with
130 < Z < 100 have been calculated in a WKB framework using density-dependent
M3Y interaction with Q-values from different mass formulae. The results are in
excellent agreement with the experimental data. Fission survived Sg nuclei with
Z=106, N=162 is predicted to have the highest alpha-decay half life ~ 3.2 hrs
in the Z=106-108, N=160-164 region called, small island/peninsula. Superheavy
nuclei with Z > 118 are found to have alpha-decay half lives of the order of
microseconds or, less.Comment: Invited Talk presented at the "International School Of Nuclear
Physics. 30th Course. Heavy-Ion Collisions from the Coulomb Barrier to the
Quark-Gluon Plasma", Erice-Sicily: 16 - 24 September 200
Reply to Comment on Extension of the Bethe-Weizsacker mass formula to light nuclei and some new shell closures
Some properties of the modified Bethe-Weizsacker mass formula (BWM) are
discussed. As BWM has no shell effect included, the extra-stability or,
magicity in nuclei clearly stands out when experimental mass data are compared
with BWM predictions. If the shell effect quenches, the BWM predictions come
closer to the experimental data.Comment: 2 pages, no figur
Superheavy Elements in the Magic Islands
Recent microscopic calculation based on the density functional theory
predicts long-lived superheavy elements in a variety of shapes, including
spherical, axial and triaxial configurations. Only when N=184 is approached one
expects superheavy nuclei that are spherical in their ground states. Magic
islands of extra-stability have been predicted to be around Z=114, 124 or, 126
with N=184, and Z=120, with N=172. However, the question of whether the
fission-survived superheavy nuclei with high Z and N would live long enough for
detection or, undergo alpha-decay in a very short time remains open. In this
talk I shall present results of our calculations of alpha-decay half lives of
heavy and superheavy nuclei. Calculations, carried out in a WKB framework using
density-dependent M3Y interaction, have been found to reproduce the
experimental data quite well. Fission survived Sg nuclei with Z=106, N=162 is
predicted to have the highest alpha-decay half life (~3.2 hrs) in the
Z=106-108, N=160-164 region called, small island/peninsula. Neutron-rich (N
>170) superheavy nuclei with Z >118 are found to have half-lives of the order
of microseconds or, less.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, 1 table; Invited Talk presented at the "Fourth
International Conference on Fission and Properties of Neutron-Rich nuclei",
held at Sanibel Island, Florida, November 11-17, 200
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