We report the measurement of secondary charge and isotopic fragmentation cross sections in a liquid hydrogen target from 30 incident beams of relativistic nuclei ranging from 10B to 55Mn. These individual beams were obtained by initially accelerating 580 MeV/nucleon 40Ar and 630 MeV/nucleon 56Fe nuclei and letting these nuclei interact in a thin CH2 target in the beam line. The fragments of these interactions were then focused according to their A/Z ratios onto a hydrogen target and the charge and isotopic composition of the fragmentation in this target was measured using our standard cosmic ray telescope. Several of these nuclei have had their cross sections measured previously and a comparison with earlier data confirms the estimated precision ∼5% of the new cross section data. The 30 nuclei for which the cross sections were measured doubles the previously reported data for 15 nuclei from several experiments in the charge range from Li to Ni. The systematics of these new cross sections are discussed both with respect to the charge changing and isotopic cross sections. These systematics will lead to improvements in the productive capability of the formulas used to describe the unmeasured cross sections. It should be noted, however, that from the point of view of the propagation of galactic cosmic rays through the interstellar medium, which is one of the main goals of this experiment, the fragmentation cross sections have now been measured at at least one energy for over 98% of the arriving particles with Z=3–28.
No description provided.
No description provided.
K+ production far below the free nucleon-nucleon threshold has been investigated in collisions of 36Ar on 12C, natTi, and 181Ta targets at an incident energy of 92 MeV per nucleon. The cross sections for K+ production have been inferred from the observed muon decays of positive kaons. The results are discussed in the framework of a participant-spectator model and are compared to proton induced K+ production and to subthreshold pion production experiments.
Three different production modes are assumed: (C=ISOTROPIC) isotropic emmision inthe lab frame with a kinetic energy EKIN(K) = 35 MeV, (C=SPECTRUM) isotropic emmision inthe lab frame with a kinetic energy spectrum from S. Gosh, PR C45,R518, (C=FIREBALL) isotropic emmision in the fireball frame with a kinetic ener gy EKIN(K) = 35 MeV.
Multifragmentation of Agnat and Au197 nuclei induced by 1.8–4.8 GeV He3 ions has been studied with the Indiana Silicon Sphere 4π detector array. Rapidity, moving source, and sphericity-coplanarity analyses are consistent with near-simultaneous emission from a source in approximate kinetic equilibrium. For the most dissipative collisions, the spectral peaks are broadened and shifted to very low energies, indicative of emission from an extended nuclear system with ρ/ρ0∼1/3. Predictions of an intranuclear cascade/expanding, emitting source model compare well with experimental multiplicity distributions and the evolution of fragment spectral shapes. © 1996 The American Physical Society.
No description provided.
No description provided.
The Indiana Silicon Sphere 4π detector has been used to measure light-charged particles and intermediate-mass fragments (IMFs) emitted in the 18–4.8 GeV He3+natAg, Au197 reactions. Ejectile multiplicity and total event kinetic energy distributions scale systematically with projectile energy and target mass, except for the Agnat target at 3.6 and 4.8 GeV. For this system, a saturation in deposition energy is indicated by the data, suggesting the upper projectile energy for stopping has been reached. Maximum deposition energies of ∼950 MeV for the Agnat target and ∼1600 MeV for the Au197 target are inferred from the data. The results also demonstrate the importance of accounting for fast cascade processes in defining the excitation energy of the targetlike residue. Correlations between various observables and the average IMF multiplicity indicate that the total thermal energy and total observed charge provide useful gauges of the excitation energy of the fragmenting system. Comparison of the experimental distributions with intranuclear cascade predictions shows qualitative agreement. © 1996 The American Physical Society.
TARGET IS NATURAL AG.
No description provided.
The production of neutral pions has been studied in the 16 O+ 27 Al, 58 Ni, 208 Pb reactions at 95 MeV/nucleon. Inclusive pion differential distributions d σ d p t , d σ d T π , and d σ d Ω have been measured by detecting the two-pion decay γ-rays in a setup of 8 lead glass Cherenkov detector telescopes. The data are discussed in the framework of a moving thermal source model. It is shown that the shape of the pion energy spectra is better described if mean field effects on the primary pion-production cross section and pion reabsorption are included in the calculation.
Axis error includes +- 10/10 contribution.
SPECTRA WERE FITTED USING THE FORMULA D3(N)/D3(P)= CONST/(EXP(EKIN(P=3)/T)-1).
Axis error includes +- 10/10 contribution.
The cross section for K + meson production in collisions of 36 Ar ions on a 48 Ti target has been measured at an incident energy of 92 MeV per nucleon. A description of the experimental set-up is given. Twelve events attributed to monoenergetic muons following the decay of stopped kaons have been identified. From these events, one infers a production cross section of 240 pb. Data are briefly discussed.
No description provided.
Correlations between target fragments were measured in α- and 14 N-induced reactions at 70, 250 and 800 MeV/u incident energies. The reaction mechanism is characterized by the linear momentum transfer and the excitation energy which were deduced from the kinematics and the mass distribution of the fission fragments. By selecting targets lighter than Th (Au and Ho) the yield from peripheral collisions is reduced by the increase in the fission barrier thus allowing events with the highest linear momentum transfer and excitation energy to be favoured. The results show that up to an incident energy of 800 MeV/u hot nuclei are formed which decay via normal binary fission. The linear momentum transfer is essentially constant over the covered energy range, but the excitation energy increases until the total incident energy is greater than 3 GeV. At this energy, independent of the projectile mass the fission probability of the heavy nuclei drops below 50%, while the emission of intermediate-mass fragments increases. The relative velocities between two intermediate-mass fragments exceed strongly the values of binary fission. Monte Carlo calculations show that the relative velocities between these fragments exclude a sequential emission from the recoil nucleus and support a simultaneous breakup mechanism.
SIG IS FISSION CROSS-SECTION CALCULATED WITH THE SOFT-SPHERE MODEL OF REF. PHYS.REV.C11 (1975) 1203.
SIG IS FISSION CROSS-SECTION CALCULATED WITH THE SOFT-SPHERE MODEL OF REF. PHYS.REV.C11 (1975) 1203.
SIG IS FISSION CROSS-SECTION CALCULATED WITH THE SOFT-SPHERE MODEL OF REF. PHYS.REV.C11 (1975) 1203.