1,599 research outputs found
Antiproton annihilation on light nuclei at very low energies
The recent experimental data obtained by the OBELIX group on D and
He total annihilation cross sections are analyzed. The combined
analysis of these data with existing antiprotonic atom data allows, for the
first time, the imaginary parts of the S-wave scattering lengths for the two
nuclei to be extracted. The obtained values are: for D and for He. This
analysis indicates an unexpected behaviour of the imaginary part of the
-nucleus S-wave scattering length as a function of the atomic weight
A: (p) > (D) > (He).Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Experimental evidence of antiproton reflection by a solid surface
We report here experimental evidence of the reflection of a large fraction of
a beam of low energy antiprotons by an aluminum wall. This derives from the
analysis of a set of annihilations of antiprotons that come to rest in rarefied
helium gas after hitting the end wall of the apparatus. A Monte Carlo
simulation of the antiproton path in aluminum indicates that the observed
reflection occurs primarily via a multiple Rutherford-style scattering on Al
nuclei, at least in the energy range 1-10 keV where the phenomenon is most
visible in the analyzed data. These results contradict the common belief
according to which the interactions between matter and antimatter are dominated
by the reciprocally destructive phenomenon of annihilation.Comment: 5 pages with 5 figure
Limits on the low energy antinucleon-nucleus annihilations from the Heisenberg principle
We show that the quantum uncertainty principle puts some limits on the
effectiveness of the antinucleon-nucleus annihilation at very low energies.
This is caused by the fact that the realization a very effective short-distance
reaction process implies information on the relative distance of the reacting
particles. Some quantitative predictions are possible on this ground, including
the approximate A-independence of antinucleon-nucleus annihilation rates.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
Coulomb corrections to low energy antiproton annihilation cross sections on protons and nuclei
We calculate, in a systematic way, the enhancement effect on
antiproton-proton and antiproton-nucleus annihilation cross sections at low
energy due to the initial state electrostatic interaction between the
projectile and the target nucleus. This calculation is aimed at future
comparisons between antineutron and antiproton annihilation rates on different
targets, for the extraction of pure isospin channels.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures (latex format
Collisions of low-energy antiprotons with molecular hydrogen: ionization, excitation and stopping power
A time-dependent coupled-channel approach was used to calculate ionization,
excitation, and energy-loss cross sections as well as energy spectra for
antiproton and proton collisions with molecular hydrogen for impact energies 8
keV < E < 4000 keV.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, conference LEAP0
Static and Dynamic Portfolio Methods for Optimal Planning: An Empirical Analysis
Combining the complementary strengths of several algorithms through portfolio approaches has been demonstrated to be effective in solving a wide range of AI problems. Notably, portfolio techniques have been prominently applied to suboptimal (satisficing) AI planning.
Here, we consider the construction of sequential planner portfolios for domainindependent optimal planning. Specifically, we introduce four techniques (three of which are dynamic) for per-instance planner schedule generation using problem instance features, and investigate the usefulness of a range of static and dynamic techniques for combining planners. Our extensive empirical analysis demonstrates the benefits of using static and dynamic sequential portfolios for optimal planning, and provides insights on the most suitable conditions for their fruitful exploitation
On the muon neutrino mass
During the runs of the PS 179 experiment at LEAR of CERN, we photographed an
event of antiproton-Ne absorption, with a complete pi+ -> mu+ ->e+ chain. From
the vertex of the reaction a very slow energy pi+ was emitted. The pi+ decays
into a mu+ and subsequently the mu+ decays into a positron. At the first decay
vertex a muon neutrino was emitted and at the second decay vertex an electron
neutrino and a muon antineutrino. Measuring the pion and muon tracks and
applying the momentum and energy conservation and using a classical statistical
interval estimator, we obtained an experimental upper limit for the muon
neutrino mass: m_nu < 2.2 MeV at a 90% confidence level. A statistical analysis
has been performed of the factors contributing to the square value of the
neutrino mass limit.Comment: 18 pages, 5 eps figure
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