50 research outputs found
Body-assisted van der Waals interaction between two atoms
Using fourth-order perturbation theory, a general formula for the van der
Waals potential of two neutral, unpolarized, ground-state atoms in the presence
of an arbitrary arrangement of dispersing and absorbing magnetodielectric
bodies is derived. The theory is applied to two atoms in bulk material and in
front of a planar multilayer system, with special emphasis on the cases of a
perfectly reflecting plate and a semi-infinite half space. It is demonstrated
that the enhancement and reduction of the two-atom interaction due to the
presence of a perfectly reflecting plate can be understood, at least in the
nonretarded limit, by using the method of image charges. For the semi-infinite
half space, both analytical and numerical results are presented.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Double-Pionic Fusion of Nuclear Systems and the ABCEffect -- Aproaching a Puzzle by Exclusive and Kinematically Complete Measurements
The ABC effect - a puzzling low-mass enhancement in the invariant
mass spectrum - is well-known from inclusive measurements of two-pion
production in nuclear fusion reactions. Here we report on first exclusive and
kinematically complete measurements of the most basic double pionic fusion
reaction at 1.03 and 1.35 GeV. The measurements, which
have been carried out at CELSIUS-WASA, reveal the ABC effect to be a
channel phenomenon associated with both a resonance-like
energy dependence in the integral cross section and the formation of a
system in the intermediate state. A corresponding simple
s-channel resonance ansatz provides a surprisingly good description of the
data
The -9 /+9 Polymorphism of the Bradykinin Receptor Beta 2 Gene and Athlete Status: A Study Involving Two European Cohorts
Fission Mass Widths in 19 F + 232 Th, 16 O + 235,238 U Reactions at Near-barrier Energies
The fission fragment mass ratio distributions of fusion-fission events have been measured for the reactions of 19F + 232Th, 16O + 235U, and 16O + 238U at energies near and below the fusion barrier. It is found that the mass ratio widths follow a decreasing trend with decreasing energy, contrary to recent claims of anomalous mass widths attributed to a quasifission mechanism
