298 research outputs found
Imaging Sources with Fast and Slow Emission Components
We investigate two-proton correlation functions for reactions in which fast
dynamical and slow evaporative proton emission are both present. In such cases,
the width of the correlation peak provides the most reliable information about
the source size of the fast dynamical component. The maximum of the correlation
function is sensitive to the relative yields from the slow and fast emission
components. Numerically inverting the correlation function allows one to
accurately disentangle fast dynamical from slow evaporative emission and
extract details of the shape of the two-proton source.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Resolution Tests of CsI(Tl) Scintillators Read Out by Pin Diodes
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY 87-1440
Probing Transport Theories via Two-Proton Source Imaging
Imaging technique is applied to two-proton correlation functions to extract
quantitative information about the space-time properties of the emitting source
and about the fraction of protons that can be attributed to fast emission
mechanisms. These new analysis techniques resolve important ambiguities that
bedeviled prior comparisons between measured correlation functions and those
calculated by transport theory. Quantitative comparisons to transport theory
are presented here. The results of the present analysis differ from those
reported previously for the same reaction systems. The shape of the two-proton
emitting sources are strongly sensitive to the details about the in-medium
nucleon-nucleon cross sections and their density dependence.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures. Figures are in GIF format. If you need
postscript format, please contact: [email protected]
IMF Emission in the 14-N + nat-Ag, Au Reactions at E/A = 60-100 MeV
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478
The influence of cluster emission and the symmetry energy on neutron-proton spectral double ratios
Emissions of free neutrons and protons from the central collisions of
124Sn+124Sn and 112Sn+112Sn reactions are simulated using the Improved Quantum
Molecular Dynamics model with two different density dependence of the symmetry
energy in the nuclear equation of state. The constructed double ratios of the
neutron to proton ratios of the two reaction systems are found to be sensitive
to the symmetry terms in the EOS. The effect of cluster formation is examined
and found to affect the double ratios mainly in the low energy region. In order
to extract better information on symmetry energy with transport models, it is
therefore important to have accurate data in the high energy region which also
is affected minimally by sequential decays.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Nonequilibrium Slope Temperatures for IMF Emission in the E/A = 20-100 MeV 14-N + 197-Au Reactions
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478
Two-Particle Correlation Functions for the 200-MeV 3-He + Ag Reaction
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478
Non-Thermal Behavior in Multifragment Decay
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478
Statistical Multifragmentation in Central Au+Au Collisions at 35 MeV/u
Multifragment disintegrations, measured for central Au + Au collisions at E/A
= 35 MeV, are analyzed with the Statistical Multifragmentation Model. Charge
distributions, mean fragment energies, and two-fragment correlation functions
are well reproduced by the statistical breakup of a large, diluted and
thermalized system slightly above the multifragmentation threshold.Comment: Latex file, 8 pages + 4 postscript figures available upon request
from [email protected]
Multifragment production in Au+Au at 35 MeV/u
Multifragment disintegration has been measured with a high efficiency
detection system for the reaction at . From the event
shape analysis and the comparison with the predictions of a many-body
trajectories calculation the data, for central collisions, are compatible with
a fast emission from a unique fragment source.Comment: 9 pages, LaTex file, 4 postscript figures available upon request from
[email protected]. - to appear in Phys. Lett.
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