609 research outputs found
Relativistic calculations of the isotope shifts in highly charged Li-like ions
Relativistic calculations of the isotope shifts of energy levels in highly
charged Li-like ions are performed. The nuclear recoil (mass shift)
contributions are calculated by merging the perturbative and large-scale
configuration-interaction Dirac-Fock-Sturm (CI-DFS) methods. The nuclear size
(field shift) contributions are evaluated by the CI-DFS method including the
electron-correlation, Breit, and QED corrections. The nuclear deformation and
nuclear polarization corrections to the isotope shifts in Li-like neodymium,
thorium, and uranium are also considered. The results of the calculations are
compared with the theoretical values obtained with other methods.Comment: 28 page
Isotope shifts of the 2-2 transition in B-like ions
Isotope shifts of the 2-2 transition in B-like ions are
evaluated for a wide range of the nuclear charge number: Z=8-92. The
calculations of the relativistic nuclear recoil and nuclear size effects are
performed using a large scale configuration-interaction Dirac-Fock-Sturm
method. The corresponding QED corrections are also taken into account. The
results of the calculations are compared with the theoretical values obtained
with other methods. The accuracy of the isotope shifts of the
2-2 transition in B-like ions is significantly improved.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1410.707
Absolute rate coefficients for photorecombination of berylliumlike and boronlike silicon ions
We report measured rate coefficients for electron-ion recombination for Si10+
forming Si9+ and for Si9+ forming Si8+, respectively. The measurements were
performed using the electron-ion merged-beams technique at a heavy-ion storage
ring. Electron-ion collision energies ranged from 0 to 50 eV for Si9+ and from
0 to 2000 eV for Si10+, thus, extending previous measurements for Si10+ [Orban
et al. 2010, Astrophys. J. 721, 1603] to much higher energies. Experimentally
derived rate coefficients for the recombination of Si9+ and Si10+ ions in a
plasma are presented along with simple parameterizations. These rate
coefficients are useful for the modeling of the charge balance of silicon in
photoionized plasmas (Si9+ and Si10+) and in collisionally ionized plasmas
(Si10+ only). In the corresponding temperature ranges, the experimentally
derived rate coefficients agree with the latest corresponding theoretical
results within the experimental uncertainties.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables, 66 references, submitted to the J.
Phys. B special issue on atomic and molecular data for astrophysicist
Precision Spectroscopy at Heavy Ion Ring Accelerator SIS300
Unique spectroscopic possibilities open up if a laser beam interacts with
relativistic lithium-like ions stored in the heavy ion ring accelerator SIS300
at the future Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research FAIR in Darmstadt,
Germany. At a relativistic factor gamma = 36 the 2P 1/2 level can be excited
from the 2S 1/2 ground state for any element with frequency doubled dye-lasers
in collinear geometry. Precise transition energy measurements can be performed
if the fluorescence photons, boosted in forward direction into the X-ray
region, are energetically analyzed with a single crystal monochromator. The
hyperfine structure can be investigated at the 2P 1/2 - 2S 1/2 transition for
all elements and at the 2P 3/2 - 2S 1/2 transition for elements with Z < 50.
Isotope shifts and nuclear moments can be measured with unprecedented
precision, in principle even for only a few stored radioactive species with
known nuclear spin. A superior relative line width in the order of 5E-7 may be
feasible after laser cooling, and even polarized external beams may be prepared
by optical pumping
Toward harmonized phenotyping of human myeloid-derived suppressor cells by flow cytometry: results from an interim study
There is an increasing interest for monitoring circulating myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in cancer patients, but there are also divergences in their phenotypic definition. To overcome this obstacle, the Cancer Immunoguiding Program under the umbrella of the Association of Cancer Immunotherapy is coordinating a proficiency panel program that aims at harmonizing MDSC phenotyping. After a consultation period, a two-stage approach was designed to harmonize MDSC phenotype. In the first step, an international consortium of 23 laboratories immunophenotyped 10 putative MDSC subsets on pretested, peripheral blood mononuclear cells of healthy donors to assess the level of concordance and define robust marker combinations for the identification of circulating MDSCs. At this stage, no mandatory requirements to standardize reagents or protocols were introduced. Data analysis revealed a small intra-laboratory, but very high inter-laboratory variance for all MDSC subsets, especially for the granulocytic subsets. In particular, the use of a dead-cell marker altered significantly the reported percentage of granulocytic MDSCs, confirming that these cells are especially sensitive to cryopreservation and/or thawing. Importantly, the gating strategy was heterogeneous and associated with high inter-center variance. Overall, our results document the high variability in MDSC phenotyping in the multicenter setting if no harmonization/standardization measures are applied. Although the observed variability depended on a number of identified parameters, the main parameter associated with variation was the gating strategy. Based on these findings, we propose further efforts to harmonize marker combinations and gating parameters to identify strategies for a robust enumeration of MDSC subsets
Dielectronic Recombination of Fe XV forming Fe XIV: Laboratory Measurements and Theoretical Calculations
We have measured resonance strengths and energies for dielectronic
recombination (DR) of Mg-like Fe XV forming Al-like Fe XIV via N=3 -> N' = 3
core excitations in the electron-ion collision energy range 0-45 eV. All
measurements were carried out using the heavy-ion Test Storage Ring at the Max
Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany. We have also
carried out new multiconfiguration Breit-Pauli (MCBP) calculations using the
AUTOSTRUCTURE code. For electron-ion collision energies < 25 eV we find poor
agreement between our experimental and theoretical resonance energies and
strengths. From 25 to 42 eV we find good agreement between the two for
resonance energies. But in this energy range the theoretical resonance
strengths are ~ 31% larger than the experimental results. This is larger than
our estimated total experimental uncertainty in this energy range of +/- 26%
(at a 90% confidence level). Above 42 eV the difference in the shape between
the calculated and measured 3s3p(^1P_1)nl DR series limit we attribute partly
to the nl dependence of the detection probabilities of high Rydberg states in
the experiment. We have used our measurements, supplemented by our
AUTOSTRUCTURE calculations, to produce a Maxwellian-averaged 3 -> 3 DR rate
coefficient for Fe XV forming Fe XIV. The resulting rate coefficient is
estimated to be accurate to better than +/- 29% (at a 90% confidence level) for
k_BT_e > 1 eV. At temperatures of k_BT_e ~ 2.5-15 eV, where Fe XV is predicted
to form in photoionized plasmas, significant discrepancies are found between
our experimentally-derived rate coefficient and previously published
theoretical results. Our new MCBP plasma rate coefficient is 19-28% smaller
than our experimental results over this temperature range
Nuclear deformation effect on the binding energies in heavy ions
Nuclear deformation effects on the binding energies in heavy ions are
investigated. Approximate formulas for the nuclear-size correction and the
isotope shift for deformed nuclei are derived. Combined with direct numerical
evaluations, these formulas are employed to reanalyse experimental data on the
nuclear-charge-distribution parameters in and to revise the
nuclear-size corrections to the binding energies in H- and Li-like
. As a result, the theoretical uncertainties for the
ground-state Lamb shift in and for the
transition energy in are significantly reduced. The
isotope shift of the transition energies for
and is also evaluated
including nuclear size and nuclear recoil effects within a full QED treatment.Comment: 19 pages, 5 table
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