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M. Ciobanu

Researcher at GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research

Publications -  39
Citations -  2729

M. Ciobanu is an academic researcher from GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: ALICE (propellant) & Large Hadron Collider. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 36 publications receiving 2421 citations.

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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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Challenges in QCD matter physics --The scientific programme of the Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment at FAIR

T. O. Ablyazimov, +602 more
TL;DR: The Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at FAIR will play a unique role in the exploration of the QCD phase diagram in the region of high net-baryon densities, because it is designed to run at unprecedented interaction rates.
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The CBM time-of-flight wall

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed two extreme regions: an outermost region (low rate/low multiplicity) covered by float glass RPCs in multi-strip fashion, and a central region (high rate/high multiplicity), consisting of densely packed readout cells made with low resistive electrodes.
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PADI, an Ultrafast Preamplifier - Discriminator ASIC for Time-of-Flight Measurements

TL;DR: In this article, the design of a general-purpose PreAmplifier-DIscriminator ASIC chip, PADI, is presented, intended to be used as Front-End-Electronics (FEE) for reading out the timing Resistive-Plate Chambers (RPCs) in the ToF wall of the CBM detector for the future FAIR facility in Darmstadt-Germany, which will comprise about 100,000 channels in a 150 m2 area.