This award will support contiued collaborative research among the following researchers: Dr. J.B. Natowitz, Cyclotron Institute, Texas A&M University, Drs. Albert Demeyer and Daniel Drain, Institute of Nuclear Physics, Lyon and Dr. Alain Giorni, Institute of Nuclear Sciences, Grenoble, France. The objective of the research is the study of nuclear properties at high excitation energy. The experimental program to be pursued will focus on measurements of the properties of nuclei having hundreds of MeV of excitation energy produced in heavy ion induced reactions. Among the properties to be determined are the heat capacities, limiting temperatures and modes of de-excitation or disassembly. Studies of hot nuclei near the limits of self-bound nuclear systems allows stringent tests of theoretical models of the nucleus and provide new information on nuclear dynamics and the nuclear equation of state at elevated temperature. The AMPHORA detector array at Grenoble and new detection equipment available at Texas A&M will be the primary research tools employed in this work. The project will benefit from the significant expertise of Dr. Natowitz on this topic, as well as the sharing of U.S. and French accelerators and equipment. The latter will greatly help in obtaining the necessary beam time, and in full construction of an optimal experimental set up.8914710 Beck This award will support collaborative research between Dr. Jean Galtier and Dr. Brigitte Meyer-Berthaud, Universite des Sciences et Techniques du Languedoc, Montpellier, France, and Dr. Charles Beck, University of Michigan, Ann Arber and Dr. William Stein, State University of New York-Binghamton, centering the origin and early evolution of seed plants. These two research groups have access to especially large and important collections of some of the earliest known seed plants, members of the extinct Lower Carboniferous seed fern family, Calamopityaceae, from the New Albany Shale of the United States, and the Lydiennes Formation of the Montagne Noire of France. In the recent years, it has become increasingly clear that input from fossil early seed plants is essential for correctly inferring seed plant phylogeny. However, to be successful more comprehensive geological and geographic perspectives on calamopityacean and other early seed plant remains must be developed. This award will provide travel support to allow the investigators to integrate their research efforts in several areas including: i) detailed systematic analysis of very similar material described independently by the two groups, ii) a concerted effort to improve the methods by which information on these forms is collected, including development of morphometric analytical techniques for assessing homology in the primary vascular system, iii) development of plans for a comprehensive database on early seed plant remains suitable for a wide range of research problems, and iv) a phylogenetic analysis of seed plant origins concentrating on the fossil evidence of this group's early members.

Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
1990-02-01
Budget End
1993-07-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
$18,850
Indirect Cost
Name
Texas A&M University Main Campus
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
College Station
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77843