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V. Bonvicini

Researcher at Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

Publications -  317
Citations -  6203

V. Bonvicini is an academic researcher from Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cosmic ray & PAMELA detector. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 317 publications receiving 5705 citations. Previous affiliations of V. Bonvicini include University of Trieste.

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The ALICE experiment at the CERN LHC

K. Aamodt, +1154 more
TL;DR: The Large Ion Collider Experiment (ALICE) as discussed by the authors is a general-purpose, heavy-ion detector at the CERN LHC which focuses on QCD, the strong-interaction sector of the Standard Model.
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ALICE: Physics Performance Report, Volume II

Pietro Cortese, +978 more
- 13 Sep 2006 - 
TL;DR: The ALICE Collaboration as mentioned in this paper is a general-purpose heavy-ion experiment designed to study the physics of strongly interacting matter and the quark-gluon plasma in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC.
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Low-dose phase contrast x-ray medical imaging

TL;DR: Low absorbing details within breast tissue, invisible with conventional techniques, are detected by means of the proposed phase contrast imaging method, and the use of a bending magnet radiation source relaxes the previously reported requirements on source size.
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The Large Observatory For X-ray Timing: LOFT

Marco Feroci, +204 more
TL;DR: The Large Observatory For X-ray Timing (LOFT) was selected by the European Space Agency (ESA) Cosmic Vision Theme "Matter under extreme conditions", namely: does matter orbiting close to the event horizon follow the predictions of general relativity? What is the equation of state of matter in neutron stars? LOFT, selected by ESA as one of the four Cosmic Vision M3 candidate missions to undergo an assessment phase, will revolutionise the study of collapsed objects in our galaxy and of the brightest supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei.
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The e-ASTROGAM mission: Exploring the extreme Universe with gamma rays in the MeV – GeV range

A. De Angelis, +74 more
TL;DR: The e-ASTROGAM (enhanced ASTROGAM) project as mentioned in this paper is a breakthrough Observatory space mission, with a detector composed by a Silicon tracker, a calorimeter, and an anticoincidence system, dedicated to the study of the non-thermal Universe in the photon energy range from 0.3 MeV to 3 GeV.