Institution
University of Rajasthan
Education•Jaipur, India•
About: University of Rajasthan is a education organization based out in Jaipur, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Chemical shift & Derivative (chemistry). The organization has 15058 authors who have published 15733 publications receiving 117400 citations. The organization is also known as: Rajasthan University.
Topics: Chemical shift, Derivative (chemistry), Porphyrin, Magnetic susceptibility, Magnetic anisotropy
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the hydrogen storage in metal hydrides with particular interest in Mg as it has potential to become one of the most promising storage materials, and the possibility of commercialization of Mg based alloys has been discussed.
922 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the charged-particle spectra at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) time projection chamber and reported the average transverse momenta, total particle production, particle yield ratios, strangeness, and baryon production rates as a function of collision system and centrality.
Abstract: Identified charged-particle spectra of pi(+/-), K(+/-), p, and (p) over bar at midrapidity (vertical bar y vertical bar < 0.1) measured by the dE/dx method in the STAR (solenoidal tracker at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider) time projection chamber are reported for pp and d + Au collisions at root s(NN) = 200 GeV and for Au + Au collisions at 62.4, 130, and 200 GeV. Average transverse momenta, total particle production, particle yield ratios, strangeness, and baryon production rates are investigated as a function of the collision system and centrality. The transverse momentum spectra are found to be flatter for heavy particles than for light particles in all collision systems; the effect is more prominent for more central collisions. The extracted average transverse momentum of each particle species follows a trend determined by the total charged-particle multiplicity density. The Bjorken energy density estimate is at least several GeV/fm(3) for a formation time less than 1 fm/c. A significantly larger net-baryon density and a stronger increase of the net-baryon density with centrality are found in Au + Au collisions at 62.4 GeV than at the two higher energies. Antibaryon production relative to total particle multiplicity is found to be constant over centrality, but increases with the collision energy. Strangeness production relative to total particle multiplicity is similar at the three measured RHIC energies. Relative strangeness production increases quickly with centrality in peripheral Au + Au collisions, to a value about 50% above the pp value, and remains rather constant in more central collisions. Bulk freeze-out properties are extracted from thermal equilibrium model and hydrodynamics-motivated blast-wave model fits to the data. Resonance decays are found to have little effect on the extracted kinetic freeze-out parameters because of the transverse momentum range of our measurements. The extracted chemical freeze-out temperature is constant, independent of collision system or centrality; its value is close to the predicted phase-transition temperature, suggesting that chemical freeze-out happens in the vicinity of hadronization and the chemical freeze-out temperature is universal despite the vastly different initial conditions in the collision systems. The extracted kinetic freeze-out temperature, while similar to the chemical freeze-out temperature in pp, d + Au, and peripheral Au + Au collisions, drops significantly with centrality in Au + Au collisions, whereas the extracted transverse radial flow velocity increases rapidly with centrality. There appears to be a prolonged period of particle elastic scatterings from chemical to kinetic freeze-out in central Au + Au collisions. The bulk properties extracted at chemical and kinetic freeze-out are observed to evolve smoothly over the measured energy range, collision systems, and collision centralities.
784 citations
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TL;DR: The results indicate the potential application of this method for effluent treatment in industries and also provide strong evidence to support the adsorption mechanism proposed.
736 citations
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Betty Abelev1, Luke David Hanratty2, M. Esposito3, Edmundo Javier Garcia-Solis4 +940 more•Institutions (90)
TL;DR: The ALICE experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider as mentioned in this paper continuously took data during the first physics campaign of the machine from fall 2009 until early 2013, using proton and lead-ion beams.
Abstract: ALICE is the heavy-ion experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The experiment continuously took data during the first physics campaign of the machine from fall 2009 until early 2013, using proton and lead-ion beams. In this paper we describe the running environment and the data handling procedures, and discuss the performance of the ALICE detectors and analysis methods for various physics observables.
691 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors have discussed the storage and applications of hydrogen in the present energy scenario and how to solve the problems of production, storage, storage and transportation of hydrogen.
672 citations
Authors
Showing all 15080 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rakesh K. Jain | 200 | 1467 | 177727 |
J. Pluta | 120 | 659 | 52025 |
Sudhir Raniwala | 113 | 591 | 44168 |
Rashmi Raniwala | 113 | 579 | 44076 |
Sanjay Jain | 103 | 881 | 46880 |
Mirko Planinic | 94 | 467 | 31957 |
Manish Sharma | 82 | 1407 | 33361 |
Nikola Poljak | 78 | 393 | 20795 |
Hari M. Srivastava | 76 | 1126 | 42635 |
Radhey S. Gupta | 71 | 377 | 18078 |
Ashwani Kumar | 66 | 703 | 18099 |
Amit Kumar | 65 | 1618 | 19277 |
Rashmi Gupta | 52 | 428 | 50962 |
Allan R. Oseroff | 48 | 121 | 7029 |
Vinod K. Aswal | 46 | 556 | 9917 |