Z. Kohley
Texas A&M University
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Featured researches published by Z. Kohley.
Nuclear Physics | 2010
S. Wuenschel; A. Bonasera; L. W. May; G. A. Souliotis; R. Tripathi; S. Galanopoulos; Z. Kohley; K. Hagel; D. V. Shetty; K. Huseman; S. N. Soisson; B. C. Stein; S. J. Yennello
Abstract A new thermometer based on fragment momentum fluctuations is presented. This thermometer exhibited residual contamination from the collective motion of the fragments along the beam axis. For this reason, the transverse direction has been explored. Additionally, a mass dependence was observed for this thermometer. This mass dependence may be the result of the Fermi momentum of nucleons or the different properties of the fragments (binding energy, spin, etc.) which might be more sensitive to different densities and temperatures of the exploding fragments. We expect some of these aspects to be smaller for protons (and/or neutrons); consequently, the proton transverse momentum fluctuations were used to investigate the temperature dependence of the source.
Physical Review C | 2012
P. Marini; A. Bonasera; A.B. McIntosh; R. Tripathi; S. Galanopoulos; K. Hagel; L. Heilborn; Z. Kohley; L. W. May; M. Mehlman; S. N. Soisson; G. A. Souliotis; D. V. Shetty; W. B. Smith; B. C. Stein; S. Wuenschel; S. J. Yennello
Methods of extraction of the symmetry energy (or enthalpy) coefficient to temperature ratio from isobaric and isotopic yields of fragments produced in Fermi-energy heavy-ion collisions are discussed. We show that the methods are consistent when the hot fragmenting source is well characterized and its excitation energy and isotopic composition are properly taken into account. The results are independent of the mass number of the detected fragments, which suggests that their fate is decided very early in the reaction.
Physics Letters B | 2013
A.B. McIntosh; A. Bonasera; P. Cammarata; K. Hagel; L. Heilborn; Z. Kohley; J. Mabiala; L. W. May; P. Marini; Andrew Raphelt; G. A. Souliotis; S. Wuenschel; A. Zarrella; S. J. Yennello
Abstract A basic feature of the nuclear equation of state is not yet understood: the dependence of the nuclear caloric curve on the neutron–proton asymmetry. Predictions of theoretical models differ on the magnitude and even the sign of this dependence. In this work, the nuclear caloric curve is examined for fully reconstructed quasi-projectiles around mass A = 50 . The caloric curve extracted with the momentum quadrupole fluctuation thermometer shows that the temperature varies linearly with quasi-projectile asymmetry N − Z A . An increase in asymmetry of 0.15 units corresponds to a decrease in temperature on the order of 1 MeV. These results also highlight the importance of a full quasi-projectile reconstruction in the study of thermodynamic properties of hot nuclei.
Physical Review C | 2013
A.B. McIntosh; A. Bonasera; Z. Kohley; P. Cammarata; K. Hagel; L. Heilborn; J. Mabiala; L. W. May; P. Marini; Andrew Raphelt; G. A. Souliotis; S. Wuenschel; A. Zarrella; S. J. Yennello
Recently, we observed a clear dependence of the nuclear caloric curve on neutron-proton asymmetry
Physical Review C | 2013
Z. Kohley; J Felix Liang; D. Shapira; C. J. Gross; R. L. Varner; J. M. Allmond; J. J. Kolata; P. E. Mueller; A. Roberts
\frac{N-Z}{A}
Physical Review C | 2009
S. Wuenschel; R. Dienhoffer; G. A. Souliotis; S. Galanopoulos; Z. Kohley; K. Hagel; D. V. Shetty; K. Huseman; L. W. May; S. N. Soisson; B. C. Stein; A. L. Caraley; S. J. Yennello
through examination of fully reconstructed equilibrated quasi-projectile sources produced in heavy ion collisions at E/A = 35 MeV. In the present work, we extend our analysis using multiple light charged particle probes of the temperature. Temperatures are extracted with five distinct probes using a kinetic thermometer approach. Additionally, temperatures are extracted using two probes within a chemical thermometer approach (Albergo method). All seven measurements show a significant linear dependence of the source temperature on the source asymmetry. For the kinetic thermometer, the strength of the asymmetry dependence varies with the probe particle species in a way which is consistent with an average emission-time ordering.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013
P. Marini; A. Zarrella; A. Bonasera; Giacomo Bonasera; P. Cammarata; L. Heilborn; Z. Kohley; J. Mabiala; L. W. May; A.B. McIntosh; Andrew Raphelt; G. A. Souliotis; S. J. Yennello
The fusion cross sections of radioactive 134Te + 40Ca were measured at energies above and below the Coulomb barrier. The evaporation residues produced in the reaction were detected in a zero-degree ionization chamber providing high efficiency for inverse kinematics. Both coupled-channel calculations and comparison with similar Sn + Ca systems indicate an increased sub-barrier fusion probability that is correlated with the presence of positive Q-value neutron transfer channels. In comparison, the measured fusion excitation functions of 130Te + 58,64Ni, which have positive Q-value neutron transfer channels, were accurately reproduced by coupled-channel calculations including only inelastic excitations. The results demonstrate that the coupling of transfer channels can lead to enhanced sub-barrier fusion but this is not directly correlated with positive Q-value neutron transfer channels in all cases.
Physical Review C | 2011
R. Tripathi; A. Bonasera; S. Wuenschel; L. W. May; Z. Kohley; G. A. Souliotis; S. Galanopoulos; K. Hagel; D. V. Shetty; K. Huseman; S. N. Soisson; B. C. Stein; S. J. Yennello
In heavy-ion collisions, isoscaling provides a method for studying the evolution of nuclear symmetry energy as a function of excitation energy. One challenge in using isoscaling is to accurately determine the neutron-to-proton ratio (N/Z) of the fragmenting source. Isoscaling results are presented for the reactions of {sup 86,78}Kr+{sup 64,58}Ni at 35 MeV/nucleon taken on the NIMROD-ISiS array at Texas A and M University. The N/Z of the source was calculated from the isotopically identified fragments and experimentally measured neutrons emitted from reconstructed quasiprojectiles. These data exhibit isoscaling for elements with Z=1-17 over a broad range of isotopes. The isoscaling parameter {alpha} is shown to increase with increasing difference in the neutron composition ({delta}) of the compared sources. For a selected {delta}, the ratio {alpha}/{delta} is also shown to decrease with increasing excitation energy. This may reflect a corresponding decrease in the nuclear symmetry energy.
International Journal of Modern Physics E-nuclear Physics | 2013
J. Mabiala; A. Bonasera; H. Zheng; A.B. McIntosh; Z. Kohley; P. Cammarata; K. Hagel; L. Heilborn; L. W. May; Andrew Raphelt; G. A. Souliotis; A. Zarrella; S. J. Yennello
Abstract The investigation of the isospin dependence of multifragmentation reactions relies on precise reconstruction of the fragmenting source. The criteria used to assign free emitted neutrons, detected with the TAMU Neutron Ball, to the quasi-projectile source are investigated in the framework of two different simulation codes. Overall and source-specific detection efficiencies for multifragmentation events are found to be model independent. The equivalence of the two different methods used to assign experimentally detected charged particles and neutrons to the emitting source is shown. The method used experimentally to determine quasi-projectile emitted free neutron multiplicity is found to be reasonably accurate and sufficiently precise as to allow for the study of well-defined quasi-projectile sources. Experimental QP neutron multiplicity distributions for three similar reactions with different isospin content are also presented. An increase in neutron emission is found for more n-rich systems.
Journal of Physics G | 2014
B. C. Stein; A. Bonasera; G. A. Souliotis; H. Zheng; P. Cammarata; A J Echeverria; L. Heilborn; A. L. Keksis; Z. Kohley; J. Mabiala; P. Marini; L. W. May; A.B. McIntosh; Cass Richers; D. V. Shetty; S. N. Soisson; R. Tripathi; S. Wuenschel; S. J. Yennello
The critical phenomenon of the liquid-gas phase transition has been investigated in the reactions {sup 78,86}Kr+{sup 58,64}Ni at beam energy of 35 MeV/nucleon using the Landau free energy approach with isospin asymmetry as an order parameter. Fits to the free energy of fragments showed three minima, suggesting that the system is in the regime of a first-order phase transition. The relation m = -{partial_derivative}F/{partial_derivative}H, which defines the order parameter and its conjugate field H, has been experimentally verified from the linear dependence of the mirror nuclei yield ratio data on the isospin asymmetry of the source. The slope parameter, which is a measure of the distance from a critical temperature, showed a systematic decrease with increasing excitation energy of the source. Within the framework of the Landau free energy approach, isoscaling provided similar results as obtained from the analysis of mirror nuclei yield ratio data. In the present work, it is shown that the external field is primarily related to the minimum of the free energy, which implies a modification of the source concentration {Delta} used in isospin studies.