5,724 research outputs found
Cluster structures in B
Structures of excited states in B are investigated with a method of
- constraint antisymmetrized molecular dynamics in combination
with the generator coordinate method. Various excited states with developed
cluster core structures are suggested in positive- and negative-parity states.
For negative-parity states, we suggest a band with a cluster
structure. This band starts from the state and can correspond to
the experimental band observed recently. In positive-parity states, two
core cluster structures with surrounding nucleons are found. A
band is suggested to be constructed from a remarkably developed
cluster structure with a large prolate deformation. We discuss features of the
cluster structure in association with molecular orbital structures of
Be.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1004.495
Cluster structures of excited states in C
Structures of excited states in C are investigated with a method of
- constraint antisymmetrized molecular dynamics in combination
with the generator coordinate method. Various excited states with the developed
-cluster core structures are suggested in positive- and
negative-parity states. In the positive-parity states, triaxial deformed and
linear-chain structures are found to construct excited bands. Interestingly,
Be+ correlation is found in the cluster states above the
Be+ threshold energy.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Application of photodiodes to the detection of electromagnetic bursts
A new type of photodiode + scintillator (1 m2 x 1 cm) detector is developed to detect the large electro-magnetic burst under an EX-chamber. The threshold burst size is found to be 4.3 x 10 the 5 particles at the center of the scintillator. Therefore a gamma-ray family of 10 TeV is detectable by it, when it is set under 14 r.1. of iron. In addition, a very fast (2.4 nsec width) and very bright (correspond to 10 to the 6 particles) scintillation pulse has become avarable for this study
cluster structures and Hoyle-analogue states in B
The structure of and states in B is investigated
with an orthogonality condition model (OCM) based on the
Gaussian expansion method. Full levels up to the and
states around the threshold (=11.1 MeV) are reproduced
consistently with the experimental energy levels. It is shown that the
state located around the Li+ threshold has an
cluster structure, whereas the and
states have a shell-model-like compact structure. We found that
the state does not possess an -condensate-like nature
similar to the state of C (Hoyle state) which has a dilute
-condensate structure described by a configuration
with about \% probability, although the monopole transition strength of the
former is as large as that of the latter. We discuss the reasons why the
state does not have the condensate character. On the other hand,
the state just below the Li+ threshold has a
cluster structure which can be interpreted as a parity-doublet partner of the
state. We indicate that the -MeV state
() just above the threshold observed in
the Li(Li,B) reaction etc. is of the
dilute-cluster-gas-like, and is a strong candidate for the Hoyle-analogue state
which has a configuration of with about \%
probability from the analyses of the single-cluster motions in B. The
structure property of the resonant state is analyzed with the complex
scaling method.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
Negative parity states of B and C and the similarity with $^{12}C
The negative parity states of B and C were studied based on the
calculations of antisymmetrized molecular dynamics(AMD). The calculations well
reproduced the experimental strengths of Gamov-Teller(GT), and monopole
transitions. We, especially, focused on the and states, for
which GT transition strengths were recently measured. The weak and GT
transitions for the in B and C are described by a
well-developed cluster structure of + and +He,
respectively, while the strong transitions for the is characterized
by an intrinsic spin excitation with no cluster structure. It was found that
the state is a dilute cluster state, and its features are similar to
those of the C which is considered to be a gas state of three
clusters.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitterd to Physical Review
Microscopic study of 4-alpha-particle condensation with proper treatment of resonances
The 4-alpha condensate state for ^{16}O is discussed with the THSR
(Tohsaki-Horiuchi-Schuck-Roepke) wave function which has alpha-particle
condensate character. Taking into account a proper treatment of resonances, it
is found that the 4-alpha THSR wave function yields a fourth 0^+ state in the
continuum above the 4-alpha-breakup threshold in addition to the three 0^+
states obtained in a previous analysis. It is shown that this fourth 0^+
((0_4^+)_{THSR}) state has an analogous structure to the Hoyle state, since it
has a very dilute density and a large component of alpha+^{12}C(0_2^+)
configuration. Furthermore, single-alpha motions are extracted from the
microscopic 16-nucleon wave function, and the condensate fraction and momentum
distribution of alpha particles are quantitatively discussed. It is found that
for the (0_4^+)_{THSR} state a large alpha-particle occupation probability
concentrates on a single-alpha 0S orbit and the alpha-particle momentum
distribution has a delta-function-like peak at zero momentum, both indicating
that the state has a strong 4-alpha condensate character. It is argued that the
(0_4^+)_{THSR} state is the counterpart of the 0_6^+ state which was obtained
as the 4-alpha condensate state in the previous 4-alpha OCM (Orthogonality
Condition Model) calculation, and therefore is likely to correspond to the
0_6^+ state observed at 15.1 MeV.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, submitted to PRC
Evidence for strong refraction of He in an alpha-particle condensate
We have analyzed He scattering from C at 34.7 and 72 MeV in a
coupled channel method with a double folding potential derived from the precise
wave functions for the ground 0 state and (7.65 MeV)
Hoyle state, which has been suggested to be an particle condensate.
It is found that strong refraction of He in the Hoyle state can be clearly
seen in the experimental angular distribution at {\it low} incident energy
region as an Airy minimum of the {\it pre-rainbow oscillations}
Are You Tampering With My Data?
We propose a novel approach towards adversarial attacks on neural networks
(NN), focusing on tampering the data used for training instead of generating
attacks on trained models. Our network-agnostic method creates a backdoor
during training which can be exploited at test time to force a neural network
to exhibit abnormal behaviour. We demonstrate on two widely used datasets
(CIFAR-10 and SVHN) that a universal modification of just one pixel per image
for all the images of a class in the training set is enough to corrupt the
training procedure of several state-of-the-art deep neural networks causing the
networks to misclassify any images to which the modification is applied. Our
aim is to bring to the attention of the machine learning community, the
possibility that even learning-based methods that are personally trained on
public datasets can be subject to attacks by a skillful adversary.Comment: 18 page
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