The excitation functions of proton induced reactions on natMo targets are measured using the activation technique followed by off-line {\gamma}-ray spectroscopy with improved precision. The experiment was performed at the BARC-TIFR Pelletron Linac Facility, Mumbai. Thin samples of natMo were irradiated with a proton beam of energies ranging from 13 to 22 MeV for measurements of various (p,x) cross sections, with an emphasis on the production of medical isotopes. The present data for 93mTc and 94gTc address and resolve the discrepancies in the existing data. The 93gTc radioisotope production is extracted with appropriate corrections for 93mTc contribution. While the measured cross sections for the production of 95gTc, 96g+mTc, 99mTc and 99Mo are consistent with the reported data, significant differences are observed for 89g+mZr. A comprehensive uncertainty analysis, including the correlation coefficients of the measured reaction cross sections is also presented.
Accurate identification of charged pions and kaons is essential for precision measurements in relativistic heavy-ion collisions, but becomes increasingly challenging at intermediate and high transverse momentum due to the overlap between time-of-flight mass-square ($m^{2}$) and ionization energy loss ($n\sigma$) distributions. In this work, we present a two-dimensional shift and rotation method that exploits the correlated information between $m^{2}$ and $n\sigma$ to enhance particle identification performance. The method is validated using Au+Au collision events generated with the AMPT model, where detector response effects are incorporated through a data-driven smearing procedure tuned to reproduce the particle identification performance of the STAR experiment. The reconstructed pion and kaon transverse momentum distributions show excellent agreement with the AMPT input, maintaining a purity exceeding 98\% at high $p_T$ and extend the reliable identification range up to $p_T \approx$ 3 GeV/$c$. The extracted elliptic flow $v_2$ remains consistent with the input over the extended $p_T$ range, demonstrating that the proposed method provides a robust framework for high precision identified hadron measurements.
Radiation detectors deployed as part of a large urban network or for homeland security monitoring must maintain reliable energy calibration even when subjected to substantial variations in temperature and ambient background radiation. Traditional calibration methods often rely on power-intensive temperature stabilization or peak-locking algorithms that are susceptible to environmental changes. This publication presents a novel software-based calibration method that eliminates the need for active temperature control by utilizing full-spectrum analysis. The method continuously updates the calibration parameters by fitting the spectral data with a series of background radiation contributions (K, U, Th series, radon progeny and cosmics) combined with a Monte-Carlo-based physical detector model that incorporates light yield non-proportionality and photomultiplier tube saturation. Performance was validated using simulated data, measurements in an environmental chamber across a wide temperature range (-25C to +50C), and data from a multi-day outdoor field deployment. Results demonstrate that the method successfully maintains stable energy calibration despite significant ambient temperature variations and precipitation events. The technique effectively decouples instrumental drift from spectral changes caused by environmental background fluctuations. This approach provides a robust, automated, and low-power alternative to conventional calibration techniques, enabling the practical deployment of large-scale, unattended networked detector systems.
The spatial extent of the proton is a key factor in nuclear physics. Different measurement techniques probe different aspects of the proton, yielding different radii. The mass and charge radii depend on the parton and quark distributions respectively, while the mechanical radius depends on the mass/energy distribution. Here, we probe the spatial distribution of a new proton characteristic, studying the distribution of baryon number within the proton. We investigate the baryon number distribution by studying four exclusive meson production channels arising from photon-proton collisions ($\gamma p \rightarrow p \rho^0$, $\gamma p \rightarrow p \omega$, $\gamma p \rightarrow n \pi^+$, and $\gamma p \rightarrow p \pi^0$). The two-dimensional transverse sizes of the interacting systems are extracted by analyzing the transverse momentum, $p_T$, dependence of the meson production cross section, using Fourier-Bessel transformations. We find that baryon number is confined to a transverse radius of $0.33 - 0.53$~fm. In comparison, the transverse radius of the proton charge and mass distributions are considerably larger, at least 0.67~fm. The baryon number is concentrated in the center of the proton.
We study some interesting aspects of the spectral properties of SU(3) gauge theory, both with and without dynamical quarks (QCD) at thermal equilibrium using lattice gauge theory techniques. By calculating the eigenstates of a massless overlap Dirac operator on the gauge configurations, we implement a gauge-invariant method to study spectral properties of non-Abelian gauge theories. We have unambiguously categorized Dirac eigenvalues into different regimes based on a quantity defined in terms of the ratios of nearest neighbor spacings. While majority of these eigenstates below the magnetic scale are similar to those of random matrices belonging to the Gaussian Unitary ensemble at temperatures much higher than the chiral crossover transition in QCD, a few among them start to become prominent only near the crossover. These form fractal-like clusters with the median value for their fractal dimensions hinting at the universality class of the chiral transition in QCD. We further demonstrate that momentum modes below the magnetic scale in a particular non-equilibrium state of QCD are classically chaotic and estimate an upper bound on the thermalization time $\sim 1.44$ fm/c by matching this magnetic scale with that of a thermal state at $\sim 600$ MeV.
Technetium-99m ($^{99m}$Tc) is essential to more than 16 million diagnostic procedures performed annually in the United States. It is typically acquired on-site from generators containing $^{99}$Mo, in turn produced at nuclear reactor facilities. This supply chain involves multiple points of vulnerability, which can lead to shortages and delays with potentially negative patient outcomes. We report on the development of a new family of cyclotrons originally designed for the IsoDAR neutrino experiment, capable of operating at much higher current than typical cyclotrons. When operated with deuterons at 1.5 MeV/amu and an anticipated continuous beam current of 5 mA, simulations project that such a system would yield $\sim$10$^{13}$ neutrons per second using a thin beryllium target. This neutron yield is sufficient, in principle, to support $^{99}$Mo production without the use of highly enriched uranium or reliance on foreign reactors. Simulations and conceptual design studies suggest that the system's beam dynamics could make it a viable pathway toward decentralized, hospital-based isotope generation. The relatively low energy of the deuterons minimizes activation and safety concerns. This work presents the physics motivation, technical design considerations, and projected neutron yields, outlining a pathway from a neutrino-physics prototype to a biomedical isotope production platform.
We present theoretical and experimental evidence for a new phase of matter in neutron-rich systems that we call multimodal superfluidity. Using ab initio lattice calculations, we show that the condensate consists of coexisting s-wave pairs, p-wave pairs in entangled double pair combinations, and quartets composed of bound states of two s-wave pairs. We identify multimodal superfluidity as a general feature of single-flavor spin-1/2 fermionic systems with attractive s-wave and p-wave interactions, provided the system is stable against collapse into a dense droplet. Beyond neutrons at sub-saturation densities, we demonstrate that this phase appears in generalized attractive extended Hubbard models in one, two, and three dimensions. We elucidate the mechanism for this coexistence using self-consistent few-body Cooper models and compare with Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory. We also derive the form of the effective action and show that spin, rotational, and parity symmetries remain unbroken. Finally, we analyze experimental data to show that p-wave pair gaps and quartet gaps are present in atomic nuclei, and we discuss the consequences of this new phase for the structure and dynamics of neutron star crusts.