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Articles 32821 - 32850 of 36555
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Fullerene Derivatives And Fullerene Superconductors, H. H. Wang, J. A. Schlueter, A. C. Cooper, J. L. Smart, M. E. Whitten, U. Geiser, K. D. Carlson, J. M. Williams, U. Welp, J. D. Dudek, M. A. Caleca
Fullerene Derivatives And Fullerene Superconductors, H. H. Wang, J. A. Schlueter, A. C. Cooper, J. L. Smart, M. E. Whitten, U. Geiser, K. D. Carlson, J. M. Williams, U. Welp, J. D. Dudek, M. A. Caleca
Faculty Publications - Department of Biological & Molecular Science
A series of 1:1 Cgo cycloaddition adducts, CgoA (A = anthracene, butadiene, cyclopentadiene, and methylcyclopentadiene), has been synthesized. The products are cleanly separated and characterized by use of TGA, iH-NMR, IR, and mass spectrometry. Among these adducts, Cgodaethylcyclopentadiene) showed the highest thermal stability and was doped with three equivalents of rubidium. The resulting Rb3C6o(MeCp) is a semiconductor but can be thermally converted to the superconducting Rb3C6O through a retro-Diels-Alder reaction. A one-step doping process to prepare Rb3Ceo crystals has been developed. The optimal doping condition occurs at ~300°C. High superconducting shielding fractions: between 60 and 90% and sharp transition widths …
A Model Of Cell Damage In Space Flight, Robert Katz, F. A. Cucinotta, J. W. Wilson, J. L. Shinn, Duc M. Ngo
A Model Of Cell Damage In Space Flight, Robert Katz, F. A. Cucinotta, J. W. Wilson, J. L. Shinn, Duc M. Ngo
Robert Katz Publications
Cell damage by high LET radiations has been described by a phenomenological model (track theory) for 20 years and more. Molecules of biological significance (dry enzymes and viruses) act as 1 hit detectors. Recent additions to the class of I-hit detectors are E. Coli B, and the creation of both single and double strand breaks in SV-40 virus in EO buffer, where indirect effects predominate. The response of cells (survival, transformation, chromosome aberration) to these radiations is typically described by a 4-parameter model whose numerical values are determined by fitting the equations of the theory to experimental data at high …
Recovery Of Quenched Hopping Conduction In Gaas-Layers Grown By Molecular-Beam Epitaxy At 200-Degrees-C, David C. Look, Z-Q. Fang, J. R. Sizelove
Recovery Of Quenched Hopping Conduction In Gaas-Layers Grown By Molecular-Beam Epitaxy At 200-Degrees-C, David C. Look, Z-Q. Fang, J. R. Sizelove
Physics Faculty Publications
The dark current at 82 K, in GaAs layers grown by molecular-beam epitaxy at 200 °C and annealed at 550 °C, is reduced by a factor 350 after 5 min of IR (hν<~1.12 eV) light illumination. As temperature is swept upward at 0.2 K/s, the current recovers rapidly near 130 K. A numerical analysis of the current recovery, based on hopping conduction, gives an excellent fit to the data for a thermal recovery rate r=3×108 exp(-0.26/kT), very close to the rate observed for EL2 (AsGa). This proves that the conduction below 300 K in this material is due to hopping between AsGa-related centers in their ground states. Variable-range hopping [exp-(T0/T)1/4] gives a slightly better fit to the data than nearest-neighbor hopping [exp(-ɛ3/kT)] in the range T=82-160 K, but the fitted recovery …~1.12>
New Asga Related Center In Gaas, David C. Look, Z-Q. Fang, J. R. Sizelove, C. E. Stutz
New Asga Related Center In Gaas, David C. Look, Z-Q. Fang, J. R. Sizelove, C. E. Stutz
Physics Faculty Publications
A new center related to AsGa has been found at relatively high concentrations (1017 cm-;3) in semi‐insulating (2×10;7 Ω cm) molecular beam epitaxial GaAs grown at 400 °C. Although the ir photoquenching and thermal recovery characteristics are nearly identical to those of ;EL2, the thermal activation energy is only 0.65±0.01 eV, much lower than the ;EL2 value of 0.75±0.01 eV. Other properties which are different include the electron‐capture barrier energy, hyperfine constant, and magnetic circular dichroism spectrum.
Hydrodynamic Theory Of Multicomponent Diffusion And Thermal Diffusion In Multitemperature Gas Mixtures, John D. Ramshaw
Hydrodynamic Theory Of Multicomponent Diffusion And Thermal Diffusion In Multitemperature Gas Mixtures, John D. Ramshaw
Physics Faculty Publications and Presentations
A phenomenological theory is developed for multicomponent diffusion, including thermal diffusion, in gas mixtures in which the components may have different temperatures. The theory is based on the hydrodynamic approach of Maxwell and Stefan, as extended and elaborated by Furry [1] and Williams [2]. The present development further extends these earlier treatments to multiple temperatures and multicomponent thermal diffusion. The resulting diffusion fluxes obey generalized Stefan-Maxwell relations which include the effects of ordinary, forced, pressure, and thermal diffusion. When thermal diffusion is neglected, these relations have the same form as the usual single-temperature ones, except that mole fractions are replaced …
Resonant Vibrations Of The Irish Folk Harp, Patrick Healy
Resonant Vibrations Of The Irish Folk Harp, Patrick Healy
Other Resources
An analysis of the resonant vibration of an O’Meachair cedar and mahogany Irish folk harp is reported. A report is also made of a small number of measurements carried out on an O’Meachair spruce and maple Irish folk harp. The structure and operation of the harp is described.
The theory of small vibrations of plates and wooden boards is set out.
The system devised to measure input admittance at driving points on the harp body over a frequency range O-2 kHz is described. Tests of its linearity and out of its frequency flatness are reported.
Resonant vibrations of an isolated …
Strong Velocity Dependence Of Electron Capture In Collisions Between Aligned Na*(3p) And He2+, A. R. Schlatmann, R. Hoekstra, R. Morgenstern, Ronald E. Olson, J. Pascale
Strong Velocity Dependence Of Electron Capture In Collisions Between Aligned Na*(3p) And He2+, A. R. Schlatmann, R. Hoekstra, R. Morgenstern, Ronald E. Olson, J. Pascale
Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works
By analyzing spectra of emitted photons, we have studied state-selective electron capture in collisions of He2+ on aligned Na*(3p) atoms that span the "velocity-matching" energy between projectile and target electron. We find a strong dependence of the capture cross sections on the Na*(3p) orbital alignment, i.e., aligned perpendicular or parallel to the ion beam direction. The preference changes from perpendicular to parallel at a velocity close to the classical orbital velocity of the 3p electron. Classical-trajectory Monte Carlo calculations reproduce this striking energy dependence. © 1993 The American Physical Society.
Azimuthal Angular Dependence Of Recoil-Ion And Electron Emission In 0.5-Mev P + He Collisions, R. Dörner, J. Ullrich, Ronald E. Olson, O. Jagutzki, H. Schmidt-Böcking
Azimuthal Angular Dependence Of Recoil-Ion And Electron Emission In 0.5-Mev P + He Collisions, R. Dörner, J. Ullrich, Ronald E. Olson, O. Jagutzki, H. Schmidt-Böcking
Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works
Measurements and n-body classical-trajectory Monte Carlo calculations are presented for the dependence of recoil-ion emission on the azimuthal angle between a projectile and a recoil ion. From the measured momenta of the projectile and the recoil ion, the dependence of the electron emission on the azimuthal angle between projectile and electron is deduced. The recoil ions are found to be emitted to the opposite direction of the scattered projectile only for scattering angles larger than 1 mrad, while for smaller scattering angles, the momentum of the emitted electron results in a broad azimuthal angular distribution of the recoil ions. For …
Generation Of Surface Shape From Variable-Resolution Video Moire Contours, Joel H. Blatt, Scott C. Cahall, Bernard Gilbert, Jeffrey A. Hooker, Gary L. Wallace
Generation Of Surface Shape From Variable-Resolution Video Moire Contours, Joel H. Blatt, Scott C. Cahall, Bernard Gilbert, Jeffrey A. Hooker, Gary L. Wallace
Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications
Several methods for generation of three dimensional surface shapes from variable resolution video moire contours are described. In a classical moire system, a physical grating is projected on a target and also used to view the target. The moire contours are generated in the plane of the viewing grating. An unambiguous surface shape can then be computed by processing a set of moire images where the grating, target, or both are moved. By using an interferometer to generate and project variable pitch gratings and video technology to generate the moire contours, a 3-D surface can be scanned at different resolutions …
Variable-Resolution Video Moire Error Map System For Inspection Of Continuously Manufactured Objects, Joel H. Blatt, Scott C. Cahall, Jeffery A. Hooker
Variable-Resolution Video Moire Error Map System For Inspection Of Continuously Manufactured Objects, Joel H. Blatt, Scott C. Cahall, Jeffery A. Hooker
Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications
Moire techniques can be a powerful tool to determine deviation of a manufactured shape from a desired shape. In a traditional moire system, distorted gratings on an object are viewed through an undistorted grating. The moire contours that result represent equal depth contours over the entire viewed surface. By generating the moire patterns in video, it is possible to view the distorted gratings on a test object through a set of gratings that has been distorted by a similar but perfect object. The output is then a set of moire contours that corresponds to the differences between the two surfaces. …
Real-Time Generation Of Intersection Of Surfaces For Welding By Video Moire, Scott Christian Cahall, Jeffery A. Hooker, Joel H. Blatt
Real-Time Generation Of Intersection Of Surfaces For Welding By Video Moire, Scott Christian Cahall, Jeffery A. Hooker, Joel H. Blatt
Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications
A common problem in fabrication and welding of complex structures is that there is no simple way to determine where to cut one part so that it will fit another part unless both parts designed and built on a CAD/CAM system. Particularly in prototype or retrofit work, cutting and fitting parts for welding is more of an art than a science. We have developed a unique video moire system that generates the intersection contour in near real time with the contour superimposed on a video image of the part, allowing the cut line to be marked while following the contour …
The Development Of A Solar Radiation Extinction Correction For Satellite Data, Widad I. Mohamed
The Development Of A Solar Radiation Extinction Correction For Satellite Data, Widad I. Mohamed
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
The main objectives of this thesis are the following: 1) Remove the haze using water surfaces in Landsat satellite imagery of the visible and near-infrared regions for their properties of high absorption of solar radiation and weak reflection of it. The scattered solar radiation is most obvious in dark weakly reflecting regions such as water. The haze removal technique depends on subtraction of scattered light from picture elements within the satellite imagery. 2) Derive a formula and techniques for a given image to correct for extinction by transforming the observed intensity of the signal transmitted to the Landsat detector to …
Gravitational Observables And Local Symmetries, Charles G. Torre
Gravitational Observables And Local Symmetries, Charles G. Torre
All Physics Faculty Publications
Using a recent classification of local symmetries of the vacuum Einstein equations, it is shown that there can be no observables for the vacuum gravitational field (in a closed universe) built as spatial integrals of local functions of Cauchy data and their derivatives.
A First-Principle Derivation Of The High Latitude Total Electron Content Distribution, D. J. Crain, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, P. H. Doherty, J. A. Klobucher
A First-Principle Derivation Of The High Latitude Total Electron Content Distribution, D. J. Crain, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, P. H. Doherty, J. A. Klobucher
All Physics Faculty Publications
Calculation of the high-latitude distribution of the vertical total electron content (TEC) is possible using a three-dimensional, time-dependent ionospheric model. Global and local comparisons may be made with observations of TEC. We compare the local diurnal variation of TEC calculated by the model with observations of TEC at Goose Bay, Labrador and Hamilton, Massachusetts. Data from the period of March 1–11, 1989, and monthly averaged data for solar maximum and solar minimum periods are examined. We extend the model to predict diurnal variations of TEC in the polar cap and compare these results with the observed TEC at Thule, Greenland, …
Symmetries Of The Einstein Equations, Charles G. Torre, Ian M. Anderson
Symmetries Of The Einstein Equations, Charles G. Torre, Ian M. Anderson
All Physics Faculty Publications
We classify all generalized symmetries of the vacuum Einstein equations in four spacetime dimensions. They consist of constant scalings of the metric, and of the infinitesimal action of generalized spacetime diffeomorphisms. Our results rule out a large class of possible ‘‘observables’’ for the gravitational field, and suggest that the vacuum Einstein equations are not integrable.
Parameterized Study Of The Ionospheric Modification Associated With Sun-Aligned Polar Cap Arcs, D. J. Crain, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, Lie Zhu
Parameterized Study Of The Ionospheric Modification Associated With Sun-Aligned Polar Cap Arcs, D. J. Crain, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, Lie Zhu
All Physics Faculty Publications
Sun-aligned (SA) arcs are a prevalent feature of the polar cap ionosphere during northward interplanetary magnetic field conditions. These arcs are, like the auroral arc, a complex electrodynamic system coupling the ionosphere and magnetosphere. The electron precipitation and convection electric field associated with this system modify the polar cap ionospheric plasma distribution. In the past decade, a wealth of observational information has indicated the complexity of these ionospheric modifications, but only a limited number of model studies have been carried out to elucidate the changes associated with SA arcs. In this investigation, an extensive parametric study has been conducted to …
Modeling Polar Cap F-Region Patches Using Time Varying Convection, Jan Josef Sojka, M. D. Bowline, Robert W. Schunk, D. T. Decker, Cesar E. Valladares, R. Sheehand, D. N. Anders, R. A. Heelis
Modeling Polar Cap F-Region Patches Using Time Varying Convection, Jan Josef Sojka, M. D. Bowline, Robert W. Schunk, D. T. Decker, Cesar E. Valladares, R. Sheehand, D. N. Anders, R. A. Heelis
All Physics Faculty Publications
Creation of polar cap F‐region patches are simulated for the first time using two independent physical models of the high latitude ionosphere. The patch formation is achieved by temporally varying the magnetospheric electric field (ionospheric convection) input to the models. The imposed convection variations are comparable to changes in the convection that result from changes in the By IMF component for southward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). Solar maximum‐winter simulations show that simple changes in the convection pattern lead to significant changes in the polar cap plasma structuring. Specifically, in winter, as enhanced dayside plasma convects into the polar …
A Time-Dependent Model Of Polar Cap Arcs, Lie Zhu, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, D. J. Crain
A Time-Dependent Model Of Polar Cap Arcs, Lie Zhu, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, D. J. Crain
All Physics Faculty Publications
A two-dimensional time-dependent model of polar cap arcs has been developed. The electrodynamics of the polar cap arcs are treated self-consistently in the frame of the coupled magnetosphere-ionosphere system. The focus of this paper is to introduce the physics and mathematical formulation of the model and describe the features of the spatial structure and temporal evolution of the polar cap arcs. The modeling results indicate that the time constant for the formation of the polar cap arcs is around 10 min. It is found that an initial single-arc precipitation pattern associated with a polar cap arc tends to split into …
Influence Of Horizontal Inhomogeneity In The Ionosphere On The Reflection Of Alfvén Waves, Lie Zhu, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, D. J. Crain
Influence Of Horizontal Inhomogeneity In The Ionosphere On The Reflection Of Alfvén Waves, Lie Zhu, Jan Josef Sojka, Robert W. Schunk, D. J. Crain
All Physics Faculty Publications
A study of the reflection of Alfvén waves at a horizontally inhomogeneous ionosphere has been carried out. In this study, the Alfvén speed above the ionosphere is assumed to be uniform and the ionosphere is treated as a height‐integrated conducting slab. Analytical and numerical results indicate that the horizontal nonuniformity of the ionospheric conductivity can lead to a rotation of the reflected wave fields and cause field‐aligned currents that originate in the ionosphere. A strong conductivity nonuniformity in the direction perpendicular to the incident wave field, large Hall to Pedersen conductivity ratios, and low conductivity values lead to a large …
Femtosecond Thermionic Emission In The Space-Charge Limited Regime, D. Mark Riffe, X. Y. Wang, M. C. Downer, D. L. Fisher, T. Tajima, J. L. Erskine
Femtosecond Thermionic Emission In The Space-Charge Limited Regime, D. Mark Riffe, X. Y. Wang, M. C. Downer, D. L. Fisher, T. Tajima, J. L. Erskine
All Physics Faculty Publications
We study femtosecond-laser-pulse-induced electron emission from W(100), Al(110), and Ag(lll) in the sub-damage regime (1–44 mJ/cm2 fluence) by simultaneously measuring the incident-light reflectivity, total electron yield, and electron-energy distribution curves of the emitted electrons. The total-yield results are compared with a space-charge-limited extension of the Richardson-Dushman equation for short-time-scale thermionic emission and with particle-in-a-cell computer simulations of femtosecond-pulsed-induced thermionic emission. Quantitative agreement between the experimental results and two calculated temperature-dependent yields is obtained and shows that the yield varies linearly with temperature beginning at a threshold electron temperature of ~0.25 eV The particle-in-a-cell simulations also reproduce the experimental electron-energy …
Timestamp Semantics And Representation., Curtis Dyreson, Richard T. Snodgrass
Timestamp Semantics And Representation., Curtis Dyreson, Richard T. Snodgrass
Curtis Dyreson
Many database Management systems and operating systems provide support for time values. At the physical level time values are known as timestamps. A timestamp has a physical realization and a temporal interpretation. The physical realization is a pattern of bits while the temporal interpretation is the meaning of each bit pattern, that is, the time each pattern represents. All previous proposals defined timestamps in terms of seconds. However, as we show, there are at least seven definitions of this fundamental time unit. We propose a more precise temporal interpretation, the time-line clock, that constructs a time-line by using different well-defined …
F-Region Plasma Drifts Over Arecibo: Solar Cycle, Seasonal And Magnetic Activityeffects, Bela G. Fejer
F-Region Plasma Drifts Over Arecibo: Solar Cycle, Seasonal And Magnetic Activityeffects, Bela G. Fejer
Bela G. Fejer
We have used Arecibo incoherent scatter measurements from 1981 to 1990 to determine the characteristics of low-latitude F region plasma drifts. The measurements show large day-to-day variability even during magnetically quiet periods. The average poleward/perpendicular plasma drifts do not change significantly with season and solar cycle except in the midnight-morning sector. The zonal drifts show clear solar cycle and seasonal effects. The afternoon-nighttime eastward drifts increase with solar flux; the westward drifts in the early morning-afternoon sector show a large increase from summer to winter but are independent of solar activity. The two perpendicular velocity components also respond differently to …
Beyond The Standard Model: New Scalars And New Leptons, Yao Yuan
Beyond The Standard Model: New Scalars And New Leptons, Yao Yuan
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
Physics that might lie beyond the standard model is discussed, with special emphasis on two possible extensions of the standard model: multi-Higgs extension, and the fourth generation leptons.;In multi-Higgs-boson extensions of the standard model, tree-level flavor-changing neutral currents exist naturally. It is often believed that the presence of the tree-level FCNC in this model is fatal, unless a discrete symmetry is added, since it requires the exchanged scalar to be extremely heavy. This follows, however, from the assumption that the flavor-changing coupling is quite large. Using a more natural value for the flavor-changing coupling, much smaller bounds were obtained. Unlike …
A Numerical Study Of Wave Propagation In A Confined Mixing Layer By Eigenfunction Expansions, Fang Q. Hu
A Numerical Study Of Wave Propagation In A Confined Mixing Layer By Eigenfunction Expansions, Fang Q. Hu
Mathematics & Statistics Faculty Publications
It is well known that the growth rate of instability waves of a two-dimensional free shear layer is reduced greatly at supersonic convective Mach numbers. In previous works, it has been shown that new wave modes exist when the shear layers are bounded by a channel due to the coupling effect between the acoustic wave modes and the motion of the mixing layer. The present work studies the simultaneous propagation of multiple stability waves using numerical simulation. It is shown here that the coexistence of two wave modes in the flow field can lead to an oscillatory growth of disturbance …
Phenomenological Theory Of Cuprate Superconductivity, Mario Rabinowitz, T. Mcmullen
Phenomenological Theory Of Cuprate Superconductivity, Mario Rabinowitz, T. Mcmullen
Physics Publications
Reasonably good agreement with the superconducting transitiontemperatures of the cuprate high‐T c superconductors can be obtained on the basis of an approximate phenomenological theory. In this theory, two criteria are used to calculate the superconducting transitiontemperature. One is that the quantum wavelength is of the order of the electron‐pair spacing. The other is that a fraction of the normal carriers exist as Cooper pairs at T c . The resulting simple equation for T c contains only two parameters: the normal carrier density and effective mass. We calculate specific transition temperatures for 12 cuprate superconductors.
Pairwise And Many-Body Contributions To Interaction Potentials In He(N) Clusters, Carol A. Parish, Clifford E. Dykstra
Pairwise And Many-Body Contributions To Interaction Potentials In He(N) Clusters, Carol A. Parish, Clifford E. Dykstra
Chemistry Faculty Publications
High level ab initio calculations have been carried out to assess the pairwise additivity of potentials in the attractive or well regions of the potential surfaces of clusters of helium atoms. A large basis set was employed and calculations were done at the Brueckner orbital coupled cluster level. Differences between calculated potentials for several interacting atoms and the corresponding summed pair potentials reveal the three‐body and certain higher order contributions to the interaction strengths. Attraction between rare gas atoms develops from dispersion, and so helium clusters provide the most workable systems for analyzing nonadditivity of dispersion. The results indicate that …
Ultraviolet Spectra Of Acetic Acid, Glycine, And Glyphosate, J. Scott Mcconnell, Rose M. Mcconnell, Lloyd R. Hossner
Ultraviolet Spectra Of Acetic Acid, Glycine, And Glyphosate, J. Scott Mcconnell, Rose M. Mcconnell, Lloyd R. Hossner
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
The influence of pH on the ultraviolet spectra of 0.001, 0.005, and 0.010 M glyphosate, glycine, and acetic acid was investigated. Each dilution of each acid was adjusted to acidic, neutral, and basic pH values. Ultraviolet spectra were recorded from 300 to 200 nm for each acid-dilution-pH combination. The wavelength of maximum absorption (Lambdamax) of glyphosate and glycine was slightly higher in the high pH solutions than in the neutral and low pH solutions. The Lambdamax of acetic acid was apparently unaffected by changes in ph. Molar extinction coefficients (epsilon) at Lambdamax increased with pH for all three acids. Regression …
User-Interface Coding For The Cern/Geant Nuclear Physics Program, David L. Roetzel, Wilfred J. Braithwaite
User-Interface Coding For The Cern/Geant Nuclear Physics Program, David L. Roetzel, Wilfred J. Braithwaite
Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science
Explanations will be given of the various user-written routines required by the Monte Carlo detector-modeling program GEANT, developed by CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. User-written routines must be linked with the CERN library to accomplish the researcher's intentions. Examples will illustrate how GEANT passes information to subprograms needed to model events. Various data structures used by GEANT library calls and included in each user routine, are similarly illustrated. Both computational-speed and memory-size limitations need to be factored into the construction of a simulation model. This will constrain the calls used in the user-written routines. Examples are provided of …
Velocity Dependence Of One- And Two-Electron Processes In Intermediate-Velocity Ar16++He Collisions, W. Wu, J. P. Giese, I. Ben-Itzhak, C. L. Cocke, P. Richard, M. Stockli, R. Ali, H. Schöne, Ronald E. Olson
Velocity Dependence Of One- And Two-Electron Processes In Intermediate-Velocity Ar16++He Collisions, W. Wu, J. P. Giese, I. Ben-Itzhak, C. L. Cocke, P. Richard, M. Stockli, R. Ali, H. Schöne, Ronald E. Olson
Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works
We report investigations of one- and two-electron processes in the collisions of 0.9-keV/u to 60-keV/u (vp=0.19-1.55 a.u.) Ar16+ ions with He targets. The cross sections for these processes were measured by observing the final charges of the Ar ions and the recoiling target ions in coincidence. The average Q values for the capture channels were determined by measuring the longitudinal momenta of the recoiling target ions. Single capture (SC) is the dominant process and is relatively independent of the projectile energy. The two-electron transfer-ionization (TI) process is the next largest and slowly increases with projectile energy. The Q values …
Measurements Of Recoil Ion Longitudinal Momentum Transfer In Multiply Ionizing Collisions Of Fast Heavy Ions With Multielectron Targets, V. Frohne, S. Cheng, R. Ali, M. Raphaelian, C. L. Cocke, R. (Ronald) E. Olson
Measurements Of Recoil Ion Longitudinal Momentum Transfer In Multiply Ionizing Collisions Of Fast Heavy Ions With Multielectron Targets, V. Frohne, S. Cheng, R. Ali, M. Raphaelian, C. L. Cocke, R. (Ronald) E. Olson
Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works
The longitudinal momentum transfer to the recoil ion in collisions of 1 MeV/amu bare F ions with Ne are resolved for final charge states of both projectile and recoil ions. We observe the recoil to be thrown backwards in electron-capture events, reflecting the physical impact of the electron translation factor. The size of the momentum transfer is in agreement with classical trajectory Monte Carlo calculations for low charge state recoil ions but not for high charge state recoil ions. © 1993 The American Physical Society.