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Dive into the research topics where Craig Emerson Tull is active.

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Featured researches published by Craig Emerson Tull.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

Production Cross Sections of Fragments from Beams of 400-650 MeV per Nucleon 9Be,11B,12C,14N,15N,16O,20Ne,22Ne,56Fe, and 58Ni Nuclei Interacting in a Liquid Hydrogen Target. II. Isotopic Cross Sections of Fragments

W. R. Webber; J. C. Kish; J. M. Rockstroh; Y. Cassagnou; R. Legrain; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull

We have measured the isotopic cross sections of 130 secondary fragmentation isotopes from 10 different beam nuclei from 9Be to 58Ni that were accelerated to between 400 and 650 MeV nucleon-1 at the SATURNE Accelerator in France in 1993 and 1994. These beam nuclei interacted in a 1.52 g cm-2 thick liquid hydrogen target, and the isotopic fragments were observed. This is the first use of a pure hydrogen target with a thickness approximating the amount of hydrogen traversed by cosmic rays in our Galaxy to measure cross sections. Several of the beam charges such as 9Be,11B,15N, and 22Ne have not had their fragmentation cross sections measured previously. The isotopic cross sections from the 12C,14N,16O,20Ne,56Fe, and 58Ni beam interactions are compared with earlier measurements by our group using a CH2 - C target subtraction technique to determine the hydrogen cross sections. The overall agreement between the new measurements and the earlier measurements using a CH2 - C target subtraction is excellent with a systematic consistency between measurements ~3%-5%. These new isotopic cross sections define the Galactic production of the secondary isotopes 10Be,10B,11B,13C,14N,15N, and 18O as well as Fe and Ni secondary decay isotopes from Cl to Co to a level of precision of ~3%-5%. These cosmic-ray isotopes are important for understanding the nucleosynthesis in the cosmic-ray sources as well as tracing the detailed propagation history of cosmic rays in the Galaxy.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

Production Cross Sections of Fragments from Beams of 400-650 MeV per Nucleon 9Be,11B,12C,14N,15N,16O,20Ne,22Ne,56Fe, and 58Ni Nuclei Interacting in a Liquid Hydrogen Target. I. Charge Changing and Total Cross Sections

W. R. Webber; J. C. Kish; J. M. Rockstroh; Y. Cassagnou; R. Legrain; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull

We have measured the charge changing cross sections from 10 individual beams of isotopes from 8 different nuclei between Be and Ni which were accelerated to energies from 400-650 MeV nucleon-1 at the SATURNE Accelerator in France in 1993 and 1994. These nuclei interacted in a 1.52 g cm-2 thick liquid hydrogen target and the fragments were observed. This is the first use of a pure hydrogen target to measure cross sections that has a thickness approximating the amount of hydrogen traversed by cosmic rays in our Galaxy. Several of the beam charges such as 9Be,11B,15N, and 22Ne have not had their fragmentation cross sections measured previously. The cross sections from the 12C,14N,16O,20Ne,56Fe, and 58Ni beams are compared with earlier measurements by our group using a CH2 - C target subtraction technique to determine the hydrogen cross sections. The overall agreement between the new measurements and the earlier measurements using CH2 - C subtraction is excellent with a systematic consistency between measurements of 3%-5%. Using these new cross sections the predictions of both the B/C and Z = (21-23)/Fe ratios at ~1 GeV nucleon-1 now agree with HEAO measurements to ~1%-2%, thus obviating the need for truncation of the exponential path length distribution path length distribution that is expected from uniform propagation models. Also, these new charge changing cross sections along with the isotopic cross sections reported in paper two of this series, define the production of cosmic-ray beryllium and boron nuclei in the galaxy and also the secondary isotopes 10Be,13C,14N,15N,18O, and all of the Fe secondary isotopes to a level of precision of 3%-5% or better. These cross sections are important for determining the abundance of these rare isotopes and others in the cosmic-ray sources as well as tracing the detailed propagation history of cosmic rays in the Galaxy. These measurements also provide high precision cross sections for the study of the nuclear physics of the interaction process.


Archive | 1998

Production Cross Sections of Fragments from Beams of 400â650 MeV per Nucleon â¹Be, ¹¹B, ¹²C, ¹â´N, ¹âµN, ¹â¶O, ²°Ne, ²²Ne, âµâ¶Fe, and âµâ¸Ni Nuclei Interacting in a Liquid Hydrogen Target. I. Charge Changing and Total Cross Sections

W. R. Webber; J. C. Kish; J. M. Rockstroh; Y. Cassagnou; R. Legrain; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull


Archive | 1998

Production Cross Sections of Fragments from Beams of 400â650 MeV per Nucleon â¹Be, ¹¹B, ¹²C, ¹â´N, ¹âµN, ¹â¶O, ²°Ne, ²²Ne, âµâ¶Fe, and âµâ¸Ni Nuclei Interacting in a Liquid Hydrogen Target. II. Isotopic Cross Sections of Fragments

W. R. Webber; J. C. Kish; J. M. Rockstroh; Y. Cassagnou; R. Legrain; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull


Archive | 1997

Neutron Production at O degrees from 40Ca+H at E lab = 357 and 565 A MeV

C. Tuve; S. Albergo; D. Boemi; Z. Caccia; Chunxi Chen; S. Costa; H. J. Crawford; M. Cronqvist; J. Engelage; L. Greiner; T. Gregory Guzik; A. Insolia; Clinton Neal Knott; P. J. Lindstrom; J. W. Mitchell; R. Potena; S. Reito; J. Romanski; G. V. Russo; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull; C. Jake Waddington; W. R. Webber; J. P. Wefel


Archive | 1995

Measurements of Fragmentation Cross Sections with Heavy Ion Beams Below 1 GeV/nucleon

Y. Cassagnou; P. Ferrando; J. C. Kish; R. Legrain; J. M. Rockstroh; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull; W. R. Webber


Archive | 1995

Systematics of New Isotopic Production Cross Sections from Neon Projectiles

Cindy Xinmin Chen; S. Albergo; Z. Caccia; S. Costa; M. Cronqvist; H. J. Crawford; J. Engelage; P. Ferrando; I. Flores; L. Greiner; T. Gregory Guzik; A. Insolia; Clinton Neal Knott; Sung-jea Ko; C. C. Kuo; P. J. Lindstrom; Matthew T. McMahon; J. W. Mitchell; R. Potenza; J. Romanski; G. V. Russo; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull; C. Tuve; C. Jake Waddington; W. R. Webber; J. P. Wefel


Archive | 1995

The Study of Galactic Cosmic Ray CNO Source Abundances using New Isotope Cross Sections

T. Gregory Guzik; S. Albergo; Z. Caccia; S. Costa; Cindy Xinmin Chen; M. Cronqvist; H. J. Crawford; J. Engalage; P. Ferrando; I. Flores; L. Greiner; A. Insolia; Clinton Neal Knott; Sung-jea Ko; C. C. Kuo; P. J. Lindstrom; Matthew T. McMahon; J. W. Mitchell; R. Potenza; J. Romanski; G. V. Russo; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull; C. Tuve; C. Jake Waddington; W. R. Webber; J. P. Wefel


Archive | 1993

Energy Dependence of Isotopic Production Cross Sections from Projectile Fragmentation of 32S

Craig Emerson Tull; S. Albergo; Z. Caccia; Chunxi Chen; S. Costa; H. J. Crawford; M. Cronqvist; J. Engelage; P. Ferrando; I. Flores; L. Greiner; T. Gregory Guzik; A. Insolia; Frank C. Jones; Clinton Neal Knott; Sung-jea Ko; C. C. Kuo; P. J. Lindstrom; J. Mazotta; J. W. Mitchell; R. Potenza; J. Romanski; G. V. Russo; A. Soutoul; T. J. M. Symons; O. Testard; C. Tuve; C. Jake Waddington; W. R. Webber; J. P. Wefel


Archive | 1993

Neutron Production from Heavy-Ion Reactions in H at 400 and 600 MeV/nucleon

S. Costa; S. Albergo; Z. Caccia; Chunxi Chen; H. J. Crawford; M. Cronqvist; J. Engelage; P. Ferrando; T. Gregory Guzik; A. Insolia; Frank C. Jones; Clinton Neal Knott; P. J. Lindstrom; J. W. Mitchell; R. Potenza; J. Romanski; G. V. Russo; A. Soutoul; O. Testard; Craig Emerson Tull; C. Tuve; W. R. Webber; J. P. Wefel

Collaboration


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W. R. Webber

New Mexico State University

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A. Soutoul

University of New Hampshire

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H. J. Crawford

University of California

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J. W. Mitchell

Goddard Space Flight Center

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T. Gregory Guzik

Louisiana State University

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A. Insolia

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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J. Engelage

University of California

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J. P. Wefel

Louisiana State University

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L. Greiner

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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P. J. Lindstrom

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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