ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Stochastic fluctuations of the neutron population within a nuclear reactor are typically prevented by operating the core at a sufficient power, since a deterministic behavior of the neutron population is required by automatic safety systems to detect unwanted power excursions. Recent works however pointed out that, under specific circumstances, non-Poissonian patterns could affect neutron spatial distributions. This motivated an international program to experimentally detect and characterize such fluctuations and correlations, which took place in 2017 at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Reactor Critical Facility. The main findings of this program will indeed unveil patchiness in snapshots of neutron spatial distributions -- obtained with a dedicated numerical twin of the reactor -- that support this first experimental characterization of the neutron clustering phenomenon, while a stochastic model based on reaction-diffusion processes and branching random walks will reveal the key role played by the reactor intrinsic sources in understanding neutron spatial correlations.
Direct nuclear reactions with radioactive ion beams represent an extremely powerful tool to extend the study of fundamental nuclear properties far from stability. These measurements require pure and dense targets to cope with the low beam intensities
The fundamental processes by which nuclear energy is generated in the Sun have been known for many years. However, continuous progress in areas such as neutrino experiments, stellar spectroscopy and helioseismic data and techniques requires ever more
Progress in nuclear physics is driven by the experimental observation that requires state of the art detectors to measure various kinematic properties, such as energy, momentum, position etc. of the particles produced in a nuclear reaction. Advances
In this paper we describe the development and first tests of a neutron spectrometer designed for high flux environments, such as the ones found in fast nuclear reactors. The spectrometer is based on the conversion of neutrons impinging on $^6$Li into
Production of a GeV photon beam by laser backward-Compton scattering has been playing an important role as a tool for nuclear and particle physics experiments. Its production techniques are now established at electron storage rings, which are increas