Torna indietro   Hardware Upgrade Forum > Off Topic > Discussioni Off Topic > Scienza e tecnica

Un fulmine sulla scrivania, Corsair Sabre v2 Pro ridefinisce la velocità nel gaming
Un fulmine sulla scrivania, Corsair Sabre v2 Pro ridefinisce la velocità nel gaming
Questo mouse ultraleggero, con soli 36 grammi di peso, è stato concepito per offrire un'esperienza di gioco di alto livello ai professionisti degli FPS, grazie al polling rate a 8.000 Hz e a un sensore ottico da 33.000 DPI. La recensione esplora ogni dettaglio di questo dispositivo di gioco, dalla sua agilità estrema alle specifiche tecniche che lo pongono un passo avanti
Nokia Innovation Day 2025: l’Europa ha bisogno di campioni nelle telecomunicazioni
Nokia Innovation Day 2025: l’Europa ha bisogno di campioni nelle telecomunicazioni
Dal richiamo di Enrico Letta alla necessità di completare il mercato unico entro il 2028 alla visione di Nokia sul ruolo dell’IA e delle reti intelligenti, il Nokia Innovation Day 2025 ha intrecciato geopolitica e tecnologia, mostrando a Vimercate come la ricerca italiana contribuisca alle sfide globali delle telecomunicazioni
Sottile, leggero e dall'autonomia WOW: OPPO Reno14 F conquista con stile e sostanza
Sottile, leggero e dall'autonomia WOW: OPPO Reno14 F conquista con stile e sostanza
OPPO Reno14 F 5G si propone come smartphone di fascia media con caratteristiche equilibrate. Il device monta processore Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 1, display AMOLED da 6,57 pollici a 120Hz, tripla fotocamera posteriore con sensore principale da 50MP e generosa batteria da 6000mAh con ricarica rapida a 45W. Si posiziona come alternativa accessibile nella gamma Reno14, proponendo un design curato e tutto quello che serve per un uso senza troppe preoccupazioni.
Tutti gli articoli Tutte le news

Vai al Forum
Rispondi
 
Strumenti
Old 15-06-2010, 11:42   #1
lowenz
Bannato
 
L'Avatar di lowenz
 
Iscritto dal: Aug 2001
Città: Berghem Haven
Messaggi: 13526
Nuovi radioisotopi scoperti

E le isotòpe?

http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/42915



The chart of the known nuclides has been extended significantly by physicists in Japan, who have discovered 45 new neutron-rich isotopes. The nuclei were spotted at the RIKEN laboratory by smashing a powerful beam of heavy ions into beryllium and lead targets.
The researchers say that the 45 are just a taste of what is to come, with technical improvements expected to lead to the production of thousands of new radioisotopes that should tell us more about the astrophysical processes responsible for the creation of atoms and also lead to advances in medical technology.
Radioisotopes are unstable chemical elements that have more or fewer neutrons than the stable forms of these elements. Physicists have been producing them using particle accelerators since the 1980s, but a new generation of radioactive beam facilities will hugely extend the number of known radioisotopes. Measurements of properties such as the lifetimes and masses of these nuclei will improve our understanding of the structure and origin of atomic nuclei.

Separated by BigRIPS

The $0.5bn Radioactive Isotope Beam Factory (RIBF) at the RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science near Tokyo is the first such facility to start operating. It uses a series of cyclotrons to accelerate beams of nuclei of any element up to uranium and then collides these nuclei with the nuclei of beryllium or lead. Fission or fragmentation reactions lead to the production of a range of neutron-rich unstable nuclei, which are then collected, separated and analysed using a superconducting instrument known as BigRIPS.
Shortly after switching on the facility in 2007, Toshiyuki Kubo and colleagues from RIKEN and other labs around the world discovered two new isotopes of palladium using a beam of uranium-238. At that stage, however, the experiment was limited by the relatively low intensity of the beam, because more neutron-rich isotopes are harder to create and require a much greater collision rate. By fine-tuning the cyclotrons, the Nishina Center's accelerator team was able to increase the intensity by a factor of 50, leading to a second experiment carried out over four days in November 2008.
For the last year and a half Kubo and co-workers have been carefully analysing the collision data from that experiment, sifting out the few events attributable to new exotic nuclei from the far larger numbers of more ordinary nuclei that were produced. Among the 45 new radioisotopes that they identified were palladium-128, which is of interest because it plays an important role in the astrophysical creation of chemical elements heavier than iron and because it has a "magic" number of neutrons (82), rendering it more stable than nuclei with slightly more or fewer neutrons. Likewise, nickel-79, which was also discovered, has a neutron number of 51, putting it just one above the neutron magic number of 50 and making it an important isotope for tests of the nuclear shell model.

Beam intensity boost needed

Similar heavy-ion facilities are also being developed in Europe and the US – the FAIR project at the GSI lab in Darmstadt, Germany, and the FRIB at Michigan State University. But these machines will not be completed for several years and so for the moment will leave the field open to the RIBF (even if FAIR, when it does start up, will probe a broader range of physics, including atomic physics, plasma physics and hadron physics). "The big advantage the Japanese have is that the machine is there now," says Bill Gelletly, a nuclear physicist at the University of Surrey. "The drawback is that they are quite slow to get the beam intensities up to the advertised levels. This limits the experiments."
Kubo acknowledges that he and his colleagues "have just started the research process". He says that the next step is to measure the lifetimes (expected to be of the order of a few tenths or hundredths of a second), decay properties, reactions and masses of the newly-created isotopes as well as discovering vast numbers of other new species. In addition to improving our understanding of nuclear physics, astrophysics and materials science, Kubo points out that the development of the new accelerators, targets and ion sources will lead to improvements in the production of radioisotopes for medical use and should, he says, also enhance cancer therapy using ion beams.
lowenz è offline   Rispondi citando il messaggio o parte di esso
Old 15-06-2010, 12:01   #2
Stellina90
Bannato
 
Iscritto dal: Jun 2010
Messaggi: 0
interessante
ma manca la lista dei radioisotopi.
Stellina90 è offline   Rispondi citando il messaggio o parte di esso
Old 15-06-2010, 14:46   #3
lowenz
Bannato
 
L'Avatar di lowenz
 
Iscritto dal: Aug 2001
Città: Berghem Haven
Messaggi: 13526
Quote:
Originariamente inviato da Stellina90 Guarda i messaggi
interessante
ma manca la lista dei radioisotopi.
Basta cercare

http://www.riken.go.jp/engn/r-world/...608/index.html

To collect, separate and identify these isotopes, the researchers made use of BigRIPS, an RI beam separator whose powerful superconducting magnets have been carefully tuned to detect even the rarest phenomena under low-background conditions. Radioisotopes discovered using BigRIPS span the spectrum from manganese (Z = 25) to barium (Z = 56) and include highly sought-after nuclei such as palladium-128, whose "magic number" of neutrons grants it surprisingly high stability.
lowenz è offline   Rispondi citando il messaggio o parte di esso
 Rispondi


Un fulmine sulla scrivania, Corsair Sabre v2 Pro ridefinisce la velocità nel gaming Un fulmine sulla scrivania, Corsair Sabre v2 Pro...
Nokia Innovation Day 2025: l’Europa ha bisogno di campioni nelle telecomunicazioni Nokia Innovation Day 2025: l’Europa ha bisogno d...
Sottile, leggero e dall'autonomia WOW: OPPO Reno14 F conquista con stile e sostanza Sottile, leggero e dall'autonomia WOW: OPPO Reno...
Destiny Rising: quando un gioco mobile supera il gioco originale Destiny Rising: quando un gioco mobile supera il...
Plaud Note Pro convince per qualità e integrazione, ma l’abbonamento resta un ostacolo Plaud Note Pro convince per qualità e int...
La Cina conquisterà lo spazio ent...
Samsung ha un nuovo entry level: debutta...
Caos nei cieli europei: attacco informat...
Volkswagen ferma la produzione di ID.Buz...
Super sconti del weekend Amazon: 5 novit...
Dreame non si ferma più: tra le n...
Samsung Galaxy Buds3 FE a meno di 95€ su...
Praticamente regalate: 135€ per le Squie...
Si rinnovano i coupon nascosti di settem...
Amazon sconta i componenti: occasioni d'...
Vibe coding: esplode la domanda di esper...
Ring Intercom su Amazon: citofono smart ...
Addio regie complicate: un'AI gestir&agr...
Xbox, nuovo aumento dei prezzi negli Sta...
Adesso ci si può laureare in stor...
Chromium
GPU-Z
OCCT
LibreOffice Portable
Opera One Portable
Opera One 106
CCleaner Portable
CCleaner Standard
Cpu-Z
Driver NVIDIA GeForce 546.65 WHQL
SmartFTP
Trillian
Google Chrome Portable
Google Chrome 120
VirtualBox
Tutti gli articoli Tutte le news Tutti i download

Strumenti

Regole
Non Puoi aprire nuove discussioni
Non Puoi rispondere ai messaggi
Non Puoi allegare file
Non Puoi modificare i tuoi messaggi

Il codice vB è On
Le Faccine sono On
Il codice [IMG] è On
Il codice HTML è Off
Vai al Forum


Tutti gli orari sono GMT +1. Ora sono le: 12:59.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Served by www3v