1,003 research outputs found

    Measurement of the production branching ratios following nuclear muon capture for palladium isotopes using the in-beam activation method

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    Background: The energy distribution of excited states populated by the nuclear muon capture reaction can facilitate an understanding of the reaction mechanism; however, experimental data are fairly sparse. Purpose: We developed a new methodology, called the in-beam activation method, to measure the production probability of residual nuclei by muon capture. For the first application of the new method, we have measured muon-induced activation of five isotopically-enriched palladium targets. Methods: The experiment was conducted at the RIKEN-RAL muon facility of the Rutherford Appleton Facility in the UK. The pulsed muon beam impinged on the palladium targets and gamma rays from the beta and isomeric decays from the reaction residues were measured using high-purity germanium detectors in both the in-beam and offline setups. Results: The production branching ratios of the residual nuclei of muon capture for five palladium isotopes with mass numbers A = 104, 105, 106, 108, and 110 were obtained. The results were compared with a model calculation using the particle and heavy ion transport system (PHITS) code. The model calculation well reproduces the experimental data. Conclusion: For the first time, this study provides experimental data on the distribution of production branching ratios without any theoretical estimation or assumptions in the interpretation of the data analysisComment: 20 pages, 11 figure

    High-order harmonic generation with a strong laser field and an attosecond-pulse train: the Dirac Delta comb and monochromatic limits

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    In recent publications, it has been shown that high-order harmonic generation can be manipulated by employing a time-delayed attosecond pulse train superposed to a strong, near-infrared laser field. It is an open question, however, which is the most adequate way to approximate the attosecond pulse train in a semi-analytic framework. Employing the Strong-Field Approximation and saddle-point methods, we make a detailed assessment of the spectra obtained by modeling the attosecond pulse train by either a monochromatic wave or a Dirac-Delta comb. These are the two extreme limits of a real train, which is composed by a finite set of harmonics. Specifically, in the monochromatic limit, we find the downhill and uphill sets of orbits reported in the literature, and analyze their influence on the high-harmonic spectra. We show that, in principle, the downhill trajectories lead to stronger harmonics, and pronounced enhancements in the low-plateau region. These features are analyzed in terms of quantum interference effects between pairs of quantum orbits, and compared to those obtained in the Dirac-Delta limit.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures (eps files). To appear in Laser Physic

    Entanglement and Timing-Based Mechanisms in the Coherent Control of Scattering Processes

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    The coherent control of scattering processes is considered, with electron impact dissociation of H2+_2^+ used as an example. The physical mechanism underlying coherently controlled stationary state scattering is exposed by analyzing a control scenario that relies on previously established entanglement requirements between the scattering partners. Specifically, initial state entanglement assures that all collisions in the scattering volume yield the desirable scattering configuration. Scattering is controlled by preparing the particular internal state wave function that leads to the favored collisional configuration in the collision volume. This insight allows coherent control to be extended to the case of time-dependent scattering. Specifically, we identify reactive scattering scenarios using incident wave packets of translational motion where coherent control is operational and initial state entanglement is unnecessary. Both the stationary and time-dependent scenarios incorporate extended coherence features, making them physically distinct. From a theoretical point of view, this work represents a large step forward in the qualitative understanding of coherently controlled reactive scattering. From an experimental viewpoint, it offers an alternative to entanglement-based control schemes. However, both methods present significant challenges to existing experimental technologies

    Cortical plasticity as a new endpoint measurement for chronic pain

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    Animal models of chronic pain are widely used to investigate basic mechanisms of chronic pain and to evaluate potential novel drugs for treating chronic pain. Among the different criteria used to measure chronic pain, behavioral responses are commonly used as the end point measurements. However, not all chronic pain conditions can be easily measured by behavioral responses such as the headache, phantom pain and pain related to spinal cord injury. Here I propose that cortical indexes, that indicate neuronal plastic changes in pain-related cortical areas, can be used as endpoint measurements for chronic pain. Such cortical indexes are not only useful for those chronic pain conditions where a suitable animal model is lacking, but also serve as additional screening methods for potential drugs to treat chronic pain in humans. These cortical indexes are activity-dependent immediate early genes, electrophysiological identified plastic changes and biochemical assays of signaling proteins. It can be used to evaluate novel analgesic compounds that may act at peripheral or spinal sites. I hope that these new cortical endpoint measurements will facilitate our search for new, and more effective, pain medicines, and help to reduce false lead drug targets

    Correlation dynamics between electrons and ions in the fragmentation of D2_2 molecules by short laser pulses

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    We studied the recollision dynamics between the electrons and D2+_2^+ ions following the tunneling ionization of D2_2 molecules in an intense short pulse laser field. The returning electron collisionally excites the D2+_2^+ ion to excited electronic states from there D2+_2^+ can dissociate or be further ionized by the laser field, resulting in D+^+ + D or D+^+ + D+^+, respectively. We modeled the fragmentation dynamics and calculated the resulting kinetic energy spectrum of D+^+ to compare with recent experiments. Since the recollision time is locked to the tunneling ionization time which occurs only within fraction of an optical cycle, the peaks in the D+^+ kinetic energy spectra provides a measure of the time when the recollision occurs. This collision dynamics forms the basis of the molecular clock where the clock can be read with attosecond precision, as first proposed by Corkum and coworkers. By analyzing each of the elementary processes leading to the fragmentation quantitatively, we identified how the molecular clock is to be read from the measured kinetic energy spectra of D+^+ and what laser parameters be used in order to measure the clock more accurately.Comment: 13 pages with 14 figure

    Mapping attosecond electron wave packet motion

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    Attosecond pulses are produced when an intense infrared laser pulse induces a dipole interaction between a sublaser cycle recollision electron wave packet and the remaining coherently related bound-state population. By solving the time-dependent Schr\uf6dinger equation we show that, if the recollision electron is extracted from one or more electronic states that contribute to the bound-state wave packet, then the spectrum of the attosecond pulse is modulated depending on the relative motion of the continuum and bound wave packets. When the internal electron and recollision electron wave packet counterpropagate, the radiation intensity is lower. We show that we can fully characterize the attosecond bound-state wave packet dynamics. We demonstrate that electron motion from a two-level molecule with an energy difference of 14 eV, corresponding to a period of 290 asec, can be resolved.Peer reviewed: YesNRC publication: Ye

    Extrapolation of neutron-rich isotope cross-sections from projectile fragmentation

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    Using the measured fragmentation cross sections produced from the 48Ca and 64Ni beams at 140 MeV per nucleon on 9Be and 181Ta targets, we find that the cross sections of unmeasured neutron rich nuclei can be extrapolated using a systematic trend involving the average binding energy. The extrapolated cross-sections will be very useful in planning experiments with neutron rich isotopes produced from projectile fragmentation. The proposed method is general and could be applied to other fragmentation systems including those used in other radioactive ion beam facilities.Comment: accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
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