469 research outputs found
Elements Discrimination in the Study of Super-Heavy Elements using an Ionization Chamber
Dedicated ionization chamber was built and installed to measure the energy
loss of very heavy nuclei at 2.7 MeV/u produced in fusion reactions in inverse
kinematics (beam of 208Pb). After going through the ionization chamber,
products of reactions on 12C, 18O targets are implanted in a Si detector. Their
identification through their alpha decay chain is ambiguous when their
half-life is short. After calibration with Pb and Th nuclei, the ionization
chamber signal allowed us to resolve these ambiguities. In the search for rare
super-heavy nuclei produced in fusion reactions in inverse or symmetric
kinematics, such a chamber will provide direct information on the nuclear
charge of each implanted nucleus.Comment: submitted to NIMA, 10 pages+4 figures, Latex, uses elsart.cls and
grahpic
Pseudorapidity distributions of charged particles from Au+Au collisions at the maximum RHIC energy, Sqrt(s_NN) = 200 GeV
We present charged particle densities as a function of pseudorapidity and
collision centrality for the 197Au+197Au reaction at Sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV. For
the 5% most central events we obtain dN_ch/deta(eta=0) = 625 +/- 55 and
N_ch(-4.7<= eta <= 4.7) = 4630+-370, i.e. 14% and 21% increases, respectively,
relative to Sqrt{s_NN}=130 GeV collisions. Charged-particle production per pair
of participant nucleons is found to increase from peripheral to central
collisions around mid-rapidity. These results constrain current models of
particle production at the highest RHIC energy.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures; fixed fig. 5 caption; revised text and figures to
show corrected calculation of and ; final version accepted for
publicatio
Tracing a phase transition with fluctuations of the largest fragment size: Statistical multifragmentation models and the ALADIN S254 data
A phase transition signature associated with cumulants of the largest
fragment size distribution has been identified in statistical
multifragmentation models and examined in analysis of the ALADIN S254 data on
fragmentation of neutron-poor and neutron-rich projectiles. Characteristics of
the transition point indicated by this signature are weakly dependent on the
A/Z ratio of the fragmenting spectator source. In particular, chemical
freeze-out temperatures are estimated within the range 5.9 to 6.5 MeV. The
experimental results are well reproduced by the SMM model.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the International Workshop on
Multifragmentation and Related Topics (IWM2009), Catania, Italy, November
2009
Neutron recognition in the LAND detector for large neutron multiplicity
The performance of the LAND neutron detector is studied. Using an
event-mixing technique based on one-neutron data obtained in the S107
experiment at the GSI laboratory, we test the efficiency of various analytic
tools used to determine the multiplicity and kinematic properties of detected
neutrons. A new algorithm developed recently for recognizing neutron showers
from spectator decays in the ALADIN experiment S254 is described in detail. Its
performance is assessed in comparison with other methods. The properties of the
observed neutron events are used to estimate the detection efficiency of LAND
in this experiment.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Gross Properties and Isotopic Phenomena in Spectator Fragmentation
A systematic study of isotopic effects in the break-up of projectile
spectators at relativistic energies has been performed with the ALADiN
spectrometer at the GSI laboratory. Searching for signals of criticality in the
fragment production we have applied the model independent universal
fluctuations theory already proposed to track criticality signals in
multifragmentation to our data. The fluctuation of the largest fragment charge
and of the asymmetry of the two and three largest fragments and their bimodal
distribution have also been analysed.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, IX International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus
Collisions, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, August 28 - September 1, 200
Discriminant Analysis and Secondary-Beam Charge Recognition
The discriminant-analysis method has been applied to optimize the exotic-beam
charge recognition in a projectile fragmentation experiment. The experiment was
carried out at the GSI using the fragment separator (FRS) to produce and select
the relativistic secondary beams, and the ALADIN setup to measure their
fragmentation products following collisions with Sn target nuclei. The beams of
neutron poor isotopes around 124La and 107Sn were selected to study the isospin
dependence of the limiting temperature of heavy nuclei by comparing with
results for stable 124Sn projectiles. A dedicated detector to measure the
projectile charge upstream of the reaction target was not used, and alternative
methods had to be developed. The presented method, based on the multivariate
discriminant analysis, allowed to increase the efficacy of charge recognition
up to about 90%, which was about 20% more than achieved with the simple scalar
methods.Comment: 6 pages, 7 eps figures, elsart, submitted to Nucl. Instr. and Meth.
Isotopic Dependence of the Nuclear Caloric Curve
The A/Z dependence of projectile fragmentation at relativistic energies has
been studied with the ALADIN forward spectrometer at SIS. A stable beam of
124Sn and radioactive beams of 124La and 107Sn at 600 MeV per nucleon have been
used in order to explore a wide range of isotopic compositions. Chemical
freeze-out temperatures are found to be nearly invariant with respect to the
A/Z of the produced spectator sources, consistent with predictions for expanded
systems. Small Coulomb effects (\Delta T \approx 0.6 MeV) appear for residue
production near the onset of multifragmentation.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publ. in Phys. Rev. Let
Charged particle densities from Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_{NN}}=130 GeV
We present charged particle densities as a function of pseudorapidity and
collision centrality for the 197Au+197Au reaction at sqrt{s_{NN}}=130 GeV. An
integral charged particle multiplicity of 3860+/-300 is found for the 5% most
central events within the pseudorapidity range -4.7 <= eta <= 4.7. At
mid-rapidity an enhancement in the particle yields per participant nucleon pair
is observed for central events. Near to the beam rapidity, a scaling of the
particle yields consistent with the ``limiting fragmentation'' picture is
observed. Our results are compared to other recent experimental and theoretical
discussions of charged particle densities in ultra-relativistic heavy-ion
collisions.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; to be published in Phys. Lett.
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