C. Müntz
Technische Hochschule
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Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1993
P. Senger; W. Ahner; P. Baltes; P. Beckerle; C. Bormann; D. Brill; M. Cieślak; E. Grosse; W. Henning; P. Koczon; B. Kohlmeyer; W. Konrad; D. Miśkowiec; C. Müntz; H. Oeschler; H. Pöppl; W. Prokopowicz; F. Pühlhofer; S. Sartorius; R. Schicker; B. Schlei; E. Schwab; Y. Shin; J. Speer; J. Stein; K.E. Stiebing; Reinhard Stock; H. Ströbele; C. Sturm; K. Völkel
A double-focussing QD magnetic spectrometer has been developed and installed at the SIS heavy-ion facility at GSI in Darmstadt. The spectrometers primary purpose is to study meson production in energetic nucleus-nucleus collisions in detail. Its compact design is matched to the requirements of kaon detection with short flight path (5–6.5 m), large solid angle (up to 35 msr), wide momentum acceptance (pmaxpmin ⋍ 2), maximum momentum 1.6 GeV/c (1.9 GeV/c at reduced solid angle) and reasonable momentum resolution (⋍ 1% without and ⋍ 10−3 with ray tracing). A focal-plane length of about 1.5 m allows the efficient use of the detectors necessary for particle identification and ray-tracing, involving wire chambers, time-of-flight scintillators and Cherenkov detectors. Collisions can be characterized by two multiple-module plastic-scintillator hodoscopes detecting reaction fragments in the forward hemisphere. While the primary purpose for the construction of the spectrometer is the measurement of kaons, it can serve as a general purpose magnetic spectrometer. Its large solid angle also allows the study of two-particle correlations.
Physical Review Letters | 1998
Y. Shin; M. Cieslak; F. Pühlhofer; R. Schicker; M. Mang; E. Schwab; Christian Thomas Sturm; D. Miskowiec; D. Brill; K. Völkel; R. Barth; M. Debowski; B. Kohlmeyer; W. Walus; P. Senger; C. Müntz; E. Grosse; P. Beckerle; H. Oeschler; H. Ströbele; A. Wagner; J. Speer; P. Koczon; W. Ahner
The azimuthal angular distribution of K+ mesons has been measured in Au + Au collisions at 1 AGeV. In peripheral and semi-central collisions, K+ mesons preferentially are emitted perpendicular to the reaction plane. The strength of the azimuthal anisotropy of K+ emission is comparable to the one of pions. No in-plane flow was found for K+ mesons near projectile and target rapidity.
European Physical Journal A | 1995
C. Müntz; P. Baltes; H. Oeschler; A. Sartorius; A. Wagner; W. Ahner; R. Barth; M. Cieślak; M. Debowski; E. Grosse; W. Henning; P. Koczon; D. Miśkowiec; R. Schicker; P. Senger; C. Bormann; D. Brill; Y. Shin; J. Stein; R. Stock; H. Ströbele; B. Kohlmeyer; H. Pöppl; F. Pühlhofer; J. Speer; K. Völkel; W. Waluś
Positively charged pions and protons from collisions of Ne+NaF and Au+Au at 1 GeV/nucleon incident energy were measured near midrapidity. The center-of-mass pion spectra deviate from a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. The slope of the high-energy part of the pion spectra varies significantly with the system mass and little with the size of the reaction zone. While the total pion yield rises linearly with the number of participant nucleons, the highenergy component increases more than linearly.
Nuclear Physics | 1993
P. Senger; W. Ahner; P. Baltes; R. Barth; P. Beckerle; C. Bormann; D. Brill; M. Cieślak; E. Grosse; W. Henning; P. Koczon; B. Kohlmeyer; D. Miśkowiec; C. Müntz; H. Oeschler; H. Pöppl; F. Pühlhofer; S. Sartorius; R. Schicker; E. Schwab; Y. Shin; J. Speer; J. Stein; Reinhard Stock; H. Ströbele; C. Sturm; K. Völkel; A. Wagner; W. Waluś
Abstract Double differential cross sections for protons, π + and K + are measured in Au + Au collisions at 1.0 GeV/u and Θ lab =44°±4° with a new magnetic spectrometer at SIS. The pion spectra show an enhancement at low momenta with respect to a thermal distribution and little dependence on the collision centrality. The high-energetic pions measured in semi-central collisions at approximately midrapidity exhibit an anisotropic azimuthal angular distribution, peaking at 90° and 270° with respect to the reaction plane. The same feature is observed for protons. The kaon to proton ratio increases with the number of participating nucleons, i.e. with the centrality of the collision, whereas the pion to proton ratio stays constant. The first data on subthreshold K + production in a heavy mass collision system are discussed with respect to nuclear matter properties by a comparison to microscopic transport calculations.
European Physical Journal A | 1991
W. Ahner; P. Baltes; C. Bormann; D. Brill; R. Brockmann; M. Cieślak; E. Grosse; W. Henning; P. Koczon; B. Kohlmeyer; W. Konrad; D. Miśkowiec; C. Müntz; H. Oeschler; H. Pöppl; W. Prokopowicz; F. Pühlhofer; R. Renfordt; A. Sandoval; S. Sartorius; R. Schicker; E. Schwab; P. Senger; Y. Shin; J. Stein; K.E. Stiebing; Reinhard Stock; H. Ströbele; K. Völkel; A. Wagner
Subthreshold kaon production in197Au+197Au collisions at 1.0 GeV/u has been investigated with the Kaon Spectrometer at SIS. At Θlab=44±4∘ we found aK+/p ratio of>3 · 10−4 for the momentum range 650 MeV/c to 1150 MeV/c.
Physics Letters B | 1997
W. Ahner; C. Bormann; R. Barth; P. Beckerle; D. Brill; M. Cieslak; M. Debowski; E. Grosse; W. Henning; P. Koczon; B. Kohlmeyer; D. Miśkowiec; C. Müntz; H. Oeschler; F. Pühlhofer; E. Schwab; R. Schicker; P. Senger; Y. Shin; J. Speer; Reinhard Stock; H. Ströbele; C. Sturm; K. Völkel; A. Wagner; W. Walus
Abstract Double differential cross sections for proton, π + and K + meson production have been measured in Ne + NaF collisions at 1 and 2 GeV/nucleon. Parameterizations of the meson spectra with Maxwell-Boltzmann distributions yield common inverse slope parameters for kaons and high-energy pions at each beam energy. No evidence for different freeze out temperatures can be deduced from the spectral slopes of the emitted particles.
Physics Letters B | 1988
M. Krämer; B. Blank; E. Bożek; E. Kankeleit; G. Klotz-Engmann; C. Müntz; H. Oeschler; M. Rhein
Abstract The δ-electron spectra from binary dissipative PbPb collisions at 8.6 MeV/u incident energy exhibit the influence of an interference pattern due to time delay caused by nuclear contact. A model-independent analysis of these δ-electron spectra is developed to yield the mean trajectories of the colliding nuclei.
Archive | 1987
H. Oeschler; B. Blank; E. Bożek; U. Gollerthan; H. Jäger; E. Kankeleit; G. Klotz-Engmann; M. Krämer; R. Krieg; U. Meyer; C. Müntz; M. Rhein; P. Senger
The main research line of the Tori group is the study of the reaction dynamics of dissipative collisions between heavy ions ia positron and electron spectroscopy. The last five years since the Lahnstein-Conference1 are marked for our group by the installation of a new experimental device for detecting positrons and electrons emitted in these collisions, the so-called Tori spectrometer2. The first part of this report is devoted therefore to describe the main characteristics of this apparatus.
Archive | 1994
H. Oeschler; W. Ahner; R. Barth; M. Cieślak; M. Debowski; E. Grosse; W. Henning; P. Koczoń; M. Mang; D. Miśkowiec; R. Schicker; E. Schwab; P. Senger; P. Baltes; C. Müntz; A. Sartorius; C. Sturm; A. Wagner; P. Beckerle; C. Bormann; D. Brill; Y. Shin; J. Stein; K.E. Stiebing; Reinhard Stock; H. Ströbele; B. Kohlmeyer; H. Pöppl; F. Pühlhofer; B. Schlei
Relati vistic heavy-ion collisions provide a unique tool to study the properties of hot and dense nuclear matter. The high stopping power of nuclei in nuclear matter leads to a rapid heating and to a compression of the medium. Two classes of observables are available. One ofthem tests the dynamics of the nuclear matter expressed by pictorial words like flow, squeeze out and side splash, whereas the other class of observables explores the properties of hot and dense nuclear matter via particle production.
Archive | 1987
M. Krämer; B. Blank; E. Bożek; H. Jäger; E. Kankeleit; G. Klotz-Engmann; R. Krieg; C. Müntz; H. Oeschler; M. Rhein; P. Senger
Recent measurements of positrons in coincidence with electrons emitted in U+Th collisions near the Coulomb barrier show sharp line structures in the sum and difference energy spectra of the two leptons (ref. 1). A possible method to clarify the origin of these lines is to study the angular correlation of the leptons. In this short contribution we want to report on a positron-electron coincidence test measurement performed with the TORI spectrometer. This apparatus offers the possibility to measure positrons in coincidence with electrons emitted into the same and opposite hemisphere as well.