Lipids, especially phospholipids, are very common
but important molecules found in cells and animal
tissue, performing many biological functions, particularly
in membranes. Lipids, when mixed with water,
spontaneously form ordered systems, such as micelles,
vesicles and multibilayers. The size of these systems
and their degree of ordering depend on the...
Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are the most energetic explosions in the Universe, producing up to $\sim10^{53}$ ergs of energy in the first few seconds of their emission -- the so-called prompt phase that is dominated by high energy X-ray and $\gamma$-ray photons. The very large luminosities released in these events...
The decay scheme of Mn⁵¹ has been investigated using gamma-ray
and beta-ray scintillation spectrometers and a fast coincidence
spectrometer. A half-life value of 46.5 ± 0.2 minutes was determined
for Mn⁵¹ which decays predominantly to the ground state of
Cr⁵¹ by the emission of positons with an experimentally measured
end-point...
BiCuOSe and SnS are layered, moderate band gap (ε[subscript G] ≈ 1 eV) semiconductors that exhibit intrinsic p type conductivity. Doping of BiCuOSe with Ca results in a slight expansion of the lattice and an increase of the hole concentration from 10¹⁸ cm⁻³ to greater than 10²⁰ cm⁻³. The large...
We study the late-time (t > 0.5 days) X-ray afterglows of nearby (z < 0.5) long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with Swift and identify a population of explosions with slowly decaying, super-soft (photon index Γx > 3) X-ray
emission that is inconsistent with forward shock synchrotron radiation associated with the afterglow....
Gamma-gamma directional correlations were measured
in Ba¹³⁴ at ten angles between 90 degrees and 180 degrees in ten
degree increments using a scintillation spectrometer. The spectrometer
which used NaI crystals, differential energy selection,
and standard coincidence techniques was tested by measuring the
directional correlation of the two cascade gamma rays...