72 research outputs found
Thermal excitation of heavy nuclei with 5-15 GeV/c antiproton, proton and pion beams
Excitation-energy distributions have been derived from measurements of
5.0-14.6 GeV/c antiproton, proton and pion reactions with Au target
nuclei, using the ISiS 4 detector array. The maximum probability for
producing high excitation-energy events is found for the antiproton beam
relative to other hadrons, He and beams from LEAR. For protons
and pions, the excitation-energy distributions are nearly independent of hadron
type and beam momentum above about 8 GeV/c. The excitation energy enhancement
for beams and the saturation effect are qualitatively consistent with
intranuclear cascade code predictions. For all systems studied, maximum cluster
sizes are observed for residues with E*/A 6 MeV.Comment: 14 pages including 5 figures and 1 table. Accepted in Physics Letter
B. also available at http://nuchem.iucf.indiana.edu
Signals for a Transition from Surface to Bulk Emission in Thermal Multifragmentation
Excitation-energy-gated two-fragment correlation functions have been studied
between 2 to 9A MeV of excitation energy for equilibrium-like sources formed in
and p + Au reactions at beam momenta of 8,9.2 and 10.2 GeV/c.
Comparison of the data to an N-body Coulomb-trajectory code shows a decrease of
one order of magnitude in the fragment emission time in the excitation energy
interval 2-5A MeV, followed by a nearly constant breakup time at higher
excitation energy. The observed decrease in emission time is shown to be
strongly correlated with the increase of the fragment emission probability, and
the onset of thermally-induced radial expansion. This result is interpreted as
evidence consistent with a transition from surface-dominated to bulk emission
expected for spinodal decomposition.Comment: 11 pages including 3 postscript figures (1 color
The liquid to vapor phase transition in excited nuclei
For many years it has been speculated that excited nuclei would undergo a
liquid to vapor phase transition. For even longer, it has been known that
clusterization in a vapor carries direct information on the liquid- vapor
equilibrium according to Fisher's droplet model. Now the thermal component of
the 8 GeV/c pion + 197Au multifragmentation data of the ISiS Collaboration is
shown to follow the scaling predicted by Fisher's model, thus providing the
strongest evidence yet of the liquid to vapor phase transition.Comment: four pages, four figures, first two in color (corrected typo in Ref.
[26], corrected error in Fig. 4
Thermally-induced expansion in the 8 GeV/c + Au reaction
Fragment kinetic energy spectra for reactions induced by 8.0 GeV/c
beams incident on a Au target have been analyzed in
order to deduce the possible existence and influence of thermal expansion. The
average fragment kinetic energies are observed to increase systematically with
fragment charge but are nearly independent of excitation energy. Comparison of
the data with statistical multifragmentation models indicates the onset of
extra collective thermal expansion near an excitation energy of E*/A
5 MeV. However, this effect is weak relative to the radial
expansion observed in heavy-ion-induced reactions, consistent with the
interpretation that the latter expansion may be driven primarily by dynamical
effects such as compression/decompression.Comment: 12 pages including 4 postscript figure
Tracking the phase-transition energy in disassembly of hot nuclei
In efforts to determine phase transitions in the disintegration of highly
excited heavy nuclei, a popular practice is to parametrise the yields of
isotopes as a function of temperature in the form
, where 's are the measured yields
and and are fitted to the yields. Here would be
interpreted as the phase transition temperature. For finite systems such as
those obtained in nuclear collisions, this parametrisation is only approximate
and hence allows for extraction of in more than one way. In this work we
look in detail at how values of differ, depending on methods of
extraction. It should be mentioned that for finite systems, this approximate
parametrisation works not only at the critical point, but also for first order
phase transitions (at least in some models). Thus the approximate fit is no
guarantee that one is seeing a critical phenomenon. A different but more
conventional search for the nuclear phase transition would look for a maximum
in the specific heat as a function of temperature . In this case is
interpreted as the phase transition temperature. Ideally and would
coincide. We invesigate this possibility, both in theory and from the ISiS
data, performing both canonical () and microcanonical ()
calculations. Although more than one value of can be extracted from the
approximate parmetrisation, the work here points to the best value from among
the choices. Several interesting results, seen in theoretical calculations, are
borne out in experiment.Comment: Revtex, 10 pages including 8 figures and 2 table
Caloric curve of 8 GeV/c negative pion and antiproton + Au reactions
The relationship between nuclear temperature and excitation energy of hot
nuclei formed by 8 GeV/c negative pion and antiproton beams incident on 197Au
has been investigated with the ISiS 4-pidetector array at the BNL AGS
accelerator. The double-isotope-ratio technique was used to calculate the
temperature of the hot system. The two thermometers used (p/d-3He/4He) and
(d/t-3He/4He) are in agreement below E*/A ~ 7 MeV when corrected for secondary
decay. Comparison of these caloric curves to those from other experiments shows
some differences that may be attributable to instrumentation and analysis
procedures. The caloric curves from this experiment are also compared with the
predictions from the SMM multifragmentation model.Comment: 34 pages, 11 figure
Multifragmentation of 197-Au by 5.0 - 14.6 GeV/c Proton and pi- Beams
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478
Constraints on the low-energy E1 cross section of 12C(α,γ)16O from the β-delayed α spectrum of 16N
The shape of the low-energy part of the β-delayed α-particle spectrum of 16N is very sensitive to the α+12C reduced width of the 7.117 MeV subthreshold state of 16O. This state, in turn, dominates the low-energy p-wave capture amplitude of the astrophysically important 12C(α,γ)16O reaction. The α spectrum following the decay of 16N has been measured by producing a low-energy 16N14N+ beam with the TRIUMF isotope separator TISOL, stopping the molecular ions in a foil, and counting the α particles and 12C recoil nuclei in coincidence, in thin surface-barrier detectors. In addition to obtaining the α spectrum, this procedure determines the complete detector response including the low-energy tail. The spectrum, which contains more than 106 events, has been fitted by R- and K-matrix parametrizations which include the measured 12C(α,γ)16O cross section and the measured α+12C elastic scattering phase shifts. The model space appropriate for these parametrizations has been investigated. For SE1(300), the E1 part of the astrophysical S factor for the 12C(α,γ)16O reaction at Ec.m.=300 keV, values of 79±21 and 82±26 keV b have been derived from the R- and K-matrix fits, respectively
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