Two roads are presently being followed in order to establish the existence of
a liquid-gas phase transition in finite nuclear systems from nuclear reactions
at high energy. The clean experiment of observing the thermodynamic properties
of a finite number of nucleons in a container is presently only possible with
the computer. Performed with advanced nuclear transport models, it has revealed
the first-order character of the transition and allowed the extraction of the
pertinent thermodynamic parameters. The validity of the applied theory is being
confirmed by comparing its predictions for heavy-ion reactions with exclusive
experiments.
The second approach is experimentally more direct. Signals of the transition
are searched for by analysing reaction data within the framework of
thermodynamics of small systems. A variety of potential signals has been
investigated and found to be qualitatively consistent with the expectations for
the phase transition. Many of them are well reproduced with percolation models
which places the nuclear fragmentation into the more general context of
partitioning phenomena in finite systems.
A wealth of new data on this subject has been obtained in recent experiments,
some of them with a new generation of multi-detector devices aiming at higher
resolutions, isotopic identification of the fragments, and the coincident
detection of neutrons. Isotopic effects in multifragmentation were addressed
quite intensively, with particular attention being given to their relation to
the symmetry energy and its dependence on density.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, Contribution to Proceedings of INPC2004,
Goeteborg, Sweden, June 27 - July 2, 200