601 research outputs found
Fast trajectory reconstruction techniques for the large acceptance magnetic spectrometer VAMOS++
The large angular and momentum acceptance magnetic spectrometer VAMOS++, at
GANIL, France, is frequently used for nuclear structure and reaction dynamics
studies. It provides an event-by-event identification of heavy ions produced in
nuclear reactions at beam energies around the Coulomb barrier. The highly
non-linear ion optics of VAMOS++ requires the use of the heavy ion trajectory
reconstruction methods in the spectrometer to obtain the high-resolution
definition of the measured atomic mass number. Three different trajectory
reconstruction methods, developed and used for VAMOS++, are presented in this
work. The performances obtained, in terms of resolution of reconstructed atomic
mass number, are demonstrated and discussed using a single data-set of fission
fragments detected in the spectrometer.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in
Physics Research Section
Neutron Transfer Studied with a Radioactive beam of 24Ne, using TIARA at SPIRAL
A general experimental technique for high resolution studies of nucleon
transfer reactions using radioactive beams is briefly described, together with
the first new physics results that have been obtained with the new TIARA array.
These first results from TIARA are for the reaction 24Ne(d,p)25Ne, studied in
inverse kinematics with a pure radioactive beam of 100,000 pps from the SPIRAL
facility at GANIL. The reaction probes the energies of neutron orbitals
relevant to very neutron rich nuclei in this mass region and the results
highlight the emergence of the N=16 magic number for neutrons and the
associated disappearance of the N=20 neutron magic number for the very neutron
rich neon isotopes.Comment: Proceedings of the Carpathian Summer School of Physics,
Mamaia-Constanta, Romania, 13-24 June 200
Performance of VAMOS for reactions near the Coulomb barrier
Détecteur VAMOSVAMOS (VAriable MOde Spectrometer) is a large solid angle ray-tracing spectrometer employing numerical methods for reconstructing the particle trajectory. Complete identification of reaction products has been achieved by trajectory reconstruction. Equipped with a versatile detection system, VAMOS is capable of identifying reaction products from diverse reactions using beams at GANIL. The technique for trajectory reconstruction and its application for identifying reaction products are presented. The angular acceptance of the spectrometer has been studied using Monte Carlo simulation by an ion optics code. The spectrometer was coupled to the high efficiency EXOGAM γ-array to obtain γ-recoil coincidences for studying nuclei far from stability. The main features of the spectrometer as well as some results applied to experiments in deep inelastic collisions are described
Improvement in the reconstrution method for VAMOS Spectrometer
International audienceThe VAMOS spectrometer operational at GANIL is a large acceptance variable mode spectrometer designed for nuclear reaction studies using radioactive and stable ion beams. The spectrometer coupled with ancillary detectors like EXOGAM has been successfully used in recent experiments on (in)elastic, few nucleon transfer reactions in inverse kinematics and search for nuclei far from stability using deep inelastic transfer reactions In large acceptance spectrometers, the experimental resolution is worsened by aberrations of third and higher orders. Hardware corrections are limited and cannot completely correct the non-linear effects. Thus software reconstruction of trajectories (ray tracing) is essential to obtain the required resolution and identification of the products. A numerical method has been developed for reconstruction of ion trajectories and correction of aberrations in VAMOS. We have devised a procedure to select an optimum subset of closest trajectories for each focal plane event (x, θ, y, ϕ) from the database (generated by an ion-optics calculation). A polynomial fit to the momentum vector of the reaction product in terms of (x, θ, y, ϕ) is made only to this subset. Such an approach is found to give improved resolutions compared to fitting a single polynomial over the entire phase space. Extraction of charge state and angular distributions are rather difficult due to the variation of acceptance over the large phase space. Mass identification of the reaction products and characteristics of the spectrometer acceptance with its variation for different rigidities have been obtained. Applications to 238U+48Ca and 238U+58Ni systems at 5.5 MeV/u will be presented
Measurement of nuclide cross-sections of spallation residues in 1 A GeV 238U + proton collisions
The production of heavy nuclides from the spallation-evaporation reaction of
238U induced by 1 GeV protons was studied in inverse kinematics. The
evaporation residues from tungsten to uranium were identified in-flight in mass
and atomic number. Their production cross-sections and their momentum
distributions were determined. The data are compared with empirical
systematics. A comparison with previous results from the spallation of 208Pb
and 197Au reveals the strong influence of fission in the spallation of 238U.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, background information at
http://www-wnt.gsi.de/kschmidt
New dynamical pair breaking effect
A dynamical pair breaking effect is evidenced at very low excitation
energies. For this purpose, a new set of time-dependent coupled channel
equations for pair-breaking in superfluid systems are deduced from the
variational principle. These equations give the probability to destroy or to
create a Cooper pair under the action of some perturbations or when the mean
field varies in time.
The odd-even effect in fission is investigated within the model as an
example. For this purpose, the time-dependent probability to find the system in
a seniority-one or in a seniority-two state is restricted in the sense that the
perturbations are considered only in the avoided crossing regions.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Isotopic and velocity distributions of Bi produced in charge-pickup reactions of 208Pb at 1 A GeV
Isotopically resolved cross sections and velocity distributions have been
measured in charge-pickup reactions of 1 A GeV 208Pb with proton, deuterium and
titanium target. The total and partial charge-pickup cross sections in the
reactions 208Pb + 1H and 208Pb + 2H are measured to be the same in the limits
of the error bars. A weak increase in the total charge-pickup cross section is
seen in the reaction of 208Pb with the titanium target. The measured velocity
distributions show different contributions - quasi-elastic scattering and
Delta-resonance excitation - to the charge-pickup production. Data on total and
partial charge-pickup cross sections from these three reactions are compared
with other existing data and also with model calculations based on the coupling
of different intra-nuclear cascade codes and an evaporation code.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, background information on
http://www-w2k.gsi.de/kschmidt
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