When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?

Employing the Quantum Molecular Dynamics approach for simulating the fragment formation in nucleus nucleus collisions we test the predictive power of the recently advanced Early Cluster Recognition Algorithm. We find that this algorithm gives almost the same number of fragments as the standard minim...

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Autores principales: Dorso, C.O., Aichelin, J.
Formato: JOUR
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03702693_v345_n3_p197_Dorso
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spelling todo:paper_03702693_v345_n3_p197_Dorso2023-10-03T15:28:45Z When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions? Dorso, C.O. Aichelin, J. Employing the Quantum Molecular Dynamics approach for simulating the fragment formation in nucleus nucleus collisions we test the predictive power of the recently advanced Early Cluster Recognition Algorithm. We find that this algorithm gives almost the same number of fragments as the standard minimum spanning tree procedure. It is applicable not only to the late stage of the reaction. Taking advantage of this fact we find that the final fragmentation pattern is already realized shortly after the initial phase of violent collisions between the projectile and target nucleons, long before they are supposed to be formed in thermal models. © 1995. Fil:Dorso, C.O. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03702693_v345_n3_p197_Dorso
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
description Employing the Quantum Molecular Dynamics approach for simulating the fragment formation in nucleus nucleus collisions we test the predictive power of the recently advanced Early Cluster Recognition Algorithm. We find that this algorithm gives almost the same number of fragments as the standard minimum spanning tree procedure. It is applicable not only to the late stage of the reaction. Taking advantage of this fact we find that the final fragmentation pattern is already realized shortly after the initial phase of violent collisions between the projectile and target nucleons, long before they are supposed to be formed in thermal models. © 1995.
format JOUR
author Dorso, C.O.
Aichelin, J.
spellingShingle Dorso, C.O.
Aichelin, J.
When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
author_facet Dorso, C.O.
Aichelin, J.
author_sort Dorso, C.O.
title When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
title_short When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
title_full When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
title_fullStr When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
title_full_unstemmed When and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
title_sort when and how are fragments formed in heavy ion collisions?
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03702693_v345_n3_p197_Dorso
work_keys_str_mv AT dorsoco whenandhowarefragmentsformedinheavyioncollisions
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