9 research outputs found
On the two-proton emission for Fe45 - a new type of radioactivity
In an experiment at the SISSI-LISE3 facility of GANIL, the decay of the
proton drip-line nucleus Fe45 has been studied after projectile fragmentation
of a Ni58 primary beam at 75 MeV/nucleon impinging on a natural nickel target.
Fragment-implantation events have been correlated with radioactive decay events
in a 16x16 pixel silicon strip detector on an event-by-event basis. The
decay-energy spectrum of Fe45 implants shows a distinct peak at
(1.06+/-0.04)MeV with a half-life of T1/2 = (4.7+3.4-1.4)ms. None of the events
in this peak is in coincidence with beta particles which were searched for in a
detector next to the implantation detector. For a longer correlation interval,
daughter decays of the two-proton daughter Cr43 can be observed after Fe45
implantation. The decay energy for Fe45 agrees nicely with several theoretical
predictions for two-proton emission. Barrier-penetration calculations slightly
favour a di-proton emission picture over an emission of two individual protons
and point thus to a He2 emission mode.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, sumitted to PR
Observation of Ni and decay of very exotic nuclei in this mass region
International audienc
Two-proton decay of Fe: a new type of radioactivity
International audienc
Indothiazinone, an Indolyl Thiazolyl Ketone from a Novel Myxobacterium Belonging to the Sorangiineae
Lactation and the Working Woman: Understanding the Role of Organizational Factors, Lactation Support, and Legal Policy in Promoting Breastfeeding Success
This chapter explores the organizational factors shown to impact a woman’s ability to successfully combine breastfeeding and work. As such, we explore the role of support for breastfeeding at work, flexible work arrangements, organizational policies, and other work characteristics on women’s work attitudes and well-being, as well as on, breastfeeding initiation and/or duration. The chapter discusses interventions to overcome organizational barriers, with a focus on employer education efforts and workplace lactation programs, both of which promote breastfeeding continuation upon return to work while resulting in numerous corporate benefits. Last, we conclude with a timely overview and interpretation of the complex legal landscape surrounding this critical topic in the United States, including a discussion of recent changes in legislation intended to afford the lactating working mother additional protection in the American workplace.https://ecollections.law.fiu.edu/faculty_books/1180/thumbnail.jp