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Within this thesis, an experimental study of the photo double ionization (PDI) and the simultaneous ionization-excitation is performed for lithium in different initial states Li (1s22l) (l = s, p). The excess energy of the linearly polarized VUV-light is between 4 and 12 eV above the PDI-threshold. Three forefront technologies are combined: a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for lithium generating an ultra-cold and, by means of optical pumping, a state-prepared target; a reaction microscope (ReMi), enabling the momentum resolved detection of all reaction fragments with high-resolution and the free-electron laser in Hamburg (FLASH), providing an unprecedented brilliant photon beam at favourable time structure to access small cross sections. Close to threshold the total as well as differential PDI cross sections are observed to critically depend on the excitation level and the symmetry of the initial state. For the excited state Li (1s22p) the PDI dynamics strongly depends on the alignment of the 2p-orbital with respect to the VUV-light polarization and, thus, from the population of the magnetic substates (mp = 0, ±1). This alignment sensitivity decreases for increasing excess energy and is completely absent for ionization-excitation. Time-dependent close-coupling calculations are able to reproduce the experimental total cross sections with deviations of at most 30%. All the experimental observations can be consistently understood in terms of the long range electron correlation among the continuum electrons which gives rise to their preferential back-to-back emission. This alignment effect, which is observed here for the first time, allows controlling the PDI dynamics through a purely geometrical modification of the target initial state without changing its internal energy.
In der Doktorarbeit wurde ein Verfahren zur Ermittlung der Schwerpunkthöhe eines Fahrzeugs aus den Messwerten von Sensoren, die serienmäßig in vielen geländegängigen Fahrzeugen verbaut sind, entwickelt. Dieses Verfahren benötigt nur die Signale von Sensoren des elektronischen Stabilitätssystems (ESP) und eines Fahrwerks mit Luftfeder. Um die Höhe des Schwerpunkts zu bestimmen, wurde ein Modell entworfen, das die Drehbewegung des Fahrzeugs um seine Längsachse beschreibt. Eine der unbekannten Größen in diesem Modell ist das Produkt m_g\Deltah, wobei mit m_g die gefederte Masse des Fahrzeugs und mit Deltah der Abstand zwischen dem Schwerpunkt und der Wankachse des Fahrzeugs bezeichnet wird. Die Höhe des Schwerpunkts wird berechnet, indem zu diesem Abstand der als bekannt vorausgesetzte Abstand der Wankachse von der Straße addiert wird. Es wurden drei Varianten des Modells betrachtet. Die eine Modellvariante (stationäres Modell) beschreibt das Fahrzeugverhalten nur in solchen Fahrsituationen exakt, in denen die Wankgeschwindigkeit und die Wankbeschleunigung vernachlässigbar klein sind. In dieser Modellvariante wurden die Federkräfte mit einem detaillierten Modell der Luftfeder berechnet. Eine Eingangsgröße dieses Modells ist der Druck in den Gummibälgen der Luftfeder. Um diesen Druck zu ermitteln, wurde ein Algorithmus auf dem Steuergerät des Luftfedersystems implementiert. Um die Genauigkeit des Luftfedermodells zu testen und um die Abmessungen bestimmter Bauteile der Luftfeder zu ermitteln, wurden Messungen am Federungsprüfstand durchgeführt und eine Methode entwickelt, wie aus diesen Messungen die gesuchten Größen berechnet werden können. Bei den zwei übrigen Modellvarianten (dynamisches Modell) gelten die Einschränkung für die Fahrsituationen nicht. Die einzelnen Varianten des dynamischen Modells unterscheiden sich darin, dass das eine Mal die Feder- und Dämpferkonstanten als bekannt vorausgesetzt und das andere Mal aus den Sensorsignalen geschätzt werden. Passend zu jeder Modellvariante wurde ein Verfahren gewählt, mit dem Schätzwerte für das Produkt m_g\Deltah berechnet wurden. Des Weiteren wurde auch eine Methode entwickelt, mit der die Masse mg geschätzt wurde, ohne zuvor ein Wert für das Produkt m_g\Deltah zu ermitteln. Die Schätzwerte wurden unter Verwendung von Daten ermittelt, die bei einer Simulation und bei Messfahrten gewonnen worden sind. Das Ergebnis des Vergleiches der betrachteten Modellvarianten ist, dass die eine Variante des dynamischen Modells zum Teil falsche Werte für m_g\Deltah liefert, weil die Modellgleichungen ein nicht beobachtbares System bilden. Die andere Variante dieses Modells liefert nicht bei jeder Beladung exakte Werte, was vor allem daran liegt, dass in den Modellgleichungen dieses Modells ein konstanter Wert für die Federsteifigkeit angenommen wird. Bei Fahrzeugen mit Luftfeder ändert sich jedoch dieser Wert in Abhängigkeit von der Fahrzeugmasse. Die Werte von m_g\Deltah und mg können am genauesten mit dem stationären Modell ermittelt werden. Des Weiteren wurden Methoden entwickelt, die die Genauigkeit der durch den Schätzalgorithmus ermittelten Werte verbessern. So wurde zusätzlich zu dem Produkt m_g\Deltah und der Masse mg auch die Verteilung des Gewichtes auf die Vorder- und Hinterachse betrachtet. Es wurde ermittelt, welche Zusammenhänge zwischen dieser Verteilung und dem Produkt m_g\Deltah sowie zwischen dieser Verteilung und der Masse des Fahrzeugs bestehen. So konnte der Fehler in den Schätzwerten dieser Größen minimiert werden. Außerdem wurde auch der Zusammenhang zwischen dem Produkt m_g\Deltah und der Masse des Fahrzeugs ermittelt. Damit konnten die Schätzwerte dieser Größen genauer bestimmt werden. Aus den so gewonnenen Werten kann die Schwerpunkthöhe von einem Mercedes ML auf etwa 8cm genau berechnet werden. Diese Genauigkeit reicht aus, um das elektronische Stabilitätsprogramm auf die aktuelle Beladung des Fahrzeugs abzustimmen und damit einen Gewinn an Agilität für dieses Fahrzeug zu realisieren.
In the present work, the problem of protein folding is addressed from the point of view of equilibrium thermodynamics. The conformation of a globular protein in solution at common temperatures is quite complicated without any geometrical symmetry, but it is an ordered state in the sense of its biological activity. This complicated conformation of a single protein molecule is destroyed upon increasing the temperature or by the addition of appropriate chemical agents, as is revealed by the loss of its activity and change of the physical properties, and so on. Once the complicated native structures having biological activity are lost, it would be natural to suppose that the native structure could hardly be restored. Nevertheless, pioneers, such as Anson and Mirsky, recognized as early as in 1925 that this was not always the case. If one defines the folded and unfolded states of a protein as two distinct phases of a system, then under the variation of temperature the system is transformed from one phase state into another and vice versa. The process of protein folding is accompanied by the release or absorption of a certain amount of energy, corresponding to the first-oder-type phase transitions in the bulk. Knowing the partition function of the system one can evaluate its energy and heat capacity under different temperatures. This task was performed in this work. The results of the developed statistical mechanics model were compared with the results of molecular dynamic simulations of alanine poylpeptides. In particular, the dependencies on temperature of the total energy of the system and heat capacity were compared for alanine polypeptides consisting of 21, 30, 40, 50 and 100 amino acids. The good correspondence of the results of the theoretical model with the results of molecular dynamics simulations allowed to validate the assumptions made about the system and to establish the accuracy range of the theory. In order to perform the comparison of the results of theoretical model and the molecular dynamics simulations it is necessary to perform the efficient analysis of the results of molecular dynamics simulations. This task was also addressed in the present work. In particular, different ways to obtain dependence of the heat capacity on temperature from molecular dynamics simulations are discussed and the most efficient one is proposed. The present thesis reports the result of molecular dynamic simulations for not only alanine polypeptides by also for valine and leucine polypeptides. In valine and leucine polypeptides, it is also possible to observe the helix↔random coil transitions with the increase of temperature. The current thesis presents a work that starts with the investigation of the fundamental degrees of freedom in polypeptides that are responsible for the conformational transitions. Then this knowledge is applied for the statistical mechanics description of helix↔coil transitions in polypeptides. Finally, the theoretical formalism is generalized for the case of proteins in water environment and the comparison of the results of the statistical mechanics model with the experimental measurements of the heat capacity on temperature dependencies for two globular proteins is performed. The presented formalism is based on fundamental physical properties of the system and provides the possibility to describe the folding↔unfolding transitions quantitatively. The combination of these two facts is the major novelty of the presented approach in comparison to the existing ones. The “transparent” physical nature of the formalism provides a possibility to further apply it to a large variety of systems and processes. For instance, it can be used for investigation of the influence of the mutations in the proteins on their stability. This task is of primary importance for design of novel proteins and drug delivering molecules in medicine. It can provide further insights into the problem of protein aggregation and formation of amyloids. The problem of protein aggregation is closely associated with various illnesses such as Alzheimer and mad cow disease. With certain modifications, the presented theoretical method can be applied to the description of the protein crystallization process, which is important for the determination of the structure of proteins with X-Rays. There many other possible applications of the ideas described in the thesis. For instance, the similar formalism can be developed for the description of melting and unzipping of DNA, growth of nanotubes, formation of fullerenes, etc.
Die P-Typ-ATPasen finden sich in allen Domänen des Lebens und stellen die größte Gruppe aktiver Ionentransporter in Zellen dar. Es handelt sich bei den P-Typ-ATPasen um integrale Membranproteine, die eine große Anzahl verschiedenster Ionen aktiv über eine biologische Membran transportieren. Die für diesen Ionentransport notwendige Energie wird durch Bindung und Hydrolyse von Adenosintriphosphat (ATP) und durch Phosphorylierung des Enzyms gewonnen. Diese, im cytoplasmatischen Teil gewonnene Energie, muss für den Ionentransport von der Phosphorylierungsstelle zur räumlich entfernten transmembranen Ionenbindungsstelle übertragen werden, bei dem das Protein einem Reaktionszyklus mit zwei Hauptkonformationszuständen E1 und E2 unterliegt. Zwischen diesen beiden Zuständen finden große strukturelle Änderungen statt, durch die die Ionenaffintät und die Zugänglichkeit der Ionenbindungsstelle reguliert wird. Da dieser Mechanismus der Energiegewinnung für alle Ionenpumpen dieser Art ähnlich ist, wurde die Ca2+-ATPase und die Na+/K+-ATPase als Modellproteine für die Untersuchung molekularer Mechanismen in P-Typ-ATPasen ausgewählt. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit soll die Energietransduktion in P-Typ-ATPasen im Allgemeinen und der Protonengegentransport bzw. ein potentieller Protonentransportweg in der Ca2+-ATPase im Speziellen untersucht werden. Die beiden oben genannten Mechanismen sollen mittels computergestützter Methoden analysiert werden. Vor allem die Ca2+-ATPase ist prädestiniert für computergestützte Untersuchungen, da für diese sehr viele hochaufgelöste Röntgenstrukturdaten vorliegen, wenn auch bisher aufgrund der Größe und Komplexität des Systems nur sehr wenige theoretische Arbeiten durchgeführt wurden. Um den Energietransduktionsmechanismus in P-Typ-ATPasen zu untersuchen, wurde mittels Elektrostatik-Rechnungen der Einfluss eines elektrischen Feldes auf die verschiedenen Transmembranhelices untersucht. Dazu wurde ein Simulationssystem entwickelt, welches aus einem molekularen Kondensator besteht, der im Modell das Anlegen eines homogenen elektrischen Feldes über den Transmembranbereich simuliert. Da es sich bei dem Energietransduktionsmechanismus um einen dynamischen Prozess handelt, wurden die Elektrostatik-Rechnungen um Molekulardynamik-Simulationen erweitert. Mit diesen kann die konformelle Dynamik der P-Typ-ATPasen während der Energietransduktion in die Elektrostatik-Rechnungen einbezogen werden. Aus Spannungsklemmen-Fluorometrie-Experimenten, bei denen eine Spannung über eine Membran angelegt wird, kann geschlossen werden, dass die Helix M5 für die Energietransduktion verantwortlich ist. Mit den in dieser Arbeit durchgeführten Elektrostatik-Rechnungen konnte für verschiedene Enzymzustände der Ca2+-ATPase und für die Na+/K+-ATPase gezeigt werden, dass die Helix M5 die größten Konformeränderungen aufgrund des elektrischen Feldes aufweist. Durch die Erweiterung der Elektrostatik-Rechnungen um die Methode der Molekulardynamik-Simulation konnte zusätzlich die elektrische Feldstärke reduziert werden. Auch dabei zeigte sich, dass auf der Helix M5 die meisten Rotameränderungen durch das elektrische Feld induziert werden. Die aus Experimenten vermutete Rolle der Helix M5 als wichtiges Energietransduktionselement ließ sich mit diesen Simulationsrechnungen bestätigen. Um einen möglichen Protonenweg durch den Transmembranbereich der Ca2+-ATPase aufzuklären, wurden explizite Wassermoleküle in sechs verschiedene Enzymzustände der Ca2+-ATPase eingefügt. Aus Experimenten ist bekannt, dass in der Ca2+-ATPase ein Protonengegentransport stattfindet. Deshalb wurden für verschiedene Enzymzustände der Ca2+-ATPase mittels Elektrostatik-Rechnungen die Protonierungen der eingefügten Wassermoleküle sowie der titrierbaren Aminosäuren bestimmt. Aus den Ergebnissen dieser Rechnungen kann geschlossen werden, dass es sich bei dem Protonentransfer nicht um einen linearen Transport der Protonen handelt. Die Untersuchungen zeigen einen mehrstufigen Prozess, an dem Protonen in verschiedenen Transmembranbereichen der Ca2+-ATPase beteiligt sind. Anhand der berechneten Protonierungszustände der eingefügten Wassermoleküle und der pK-Werte der Aminosäuren im Transmembranbereich konnte weiterhin ein möglicher Protonenweg identifiziert werden.
The HADES (High Acceptance DiElectron Spectrometer) is an experimental
apparatus installed at the heavy-ion synchrotron SIS-18 at GSI, Darmstadt.
The main physics motivation of the HADES experiment is the measurement
of e+e− pairs in the invariant-mass range up to 1 GeV/c2 in heavy-ion collisions
as well as in pion and proton-induced reactions.
The HADES physics program is focused on in-medium properties of the light
vector mesons ρ(770), ω(783) and φ(1020), which decay with a small branching
ratio into dileptons. Dileptons are penetrating probes which allow to study
the in-medium properties of hadrons. However, in heavy-ion collisions, the
measurement of such lepton pairs is difficult because they are rare and have a
very large combinatorial background.
Recently, HADES has been upgraded with new detectors and new electronics
in order to handle higher intensity beams and reactions with heavy nuclei up
to Au.
HADES will continue for a few more years its rich physics program at its
current place at SIS-18 and then move to the upcoming international Facility
for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) accelerator complex. In this context
the physics results presented in this work are important prerequisites for the investigation
of in-medium vector meson properties in p + A and A+A collisions.
This work consists of five chapters. The first chapter introduces the physics
motivation and a review of recent physics results. In the second chapter, the
HADES spectrometer is described and its sub-detectors are presented. Chapter
three deals with the issue of lepton identification and the reconstruction of
the dielectron spectra in p + p collisions is presented. Here, two reactions
are characterized: inclusive and exclusive dilepton production reactions. From
the spectra obtained, the corresponding cross sections are presented with the
respective statistical and systematical errors. A comparison with theoretical
models is included as well. Conclusions are given in chapter four.
The final part of this work is dedicated to the HADES upgrade, whose goal
is among others the achievement of a reliable and fast data acquisition of the
Multiwire Drift Chambers (MDCs). Chapter five presents my contribution to
this successful project during the three years of my stay at GSI.
This dissertation is devoted to the study of thermodynamics for quantum gauge theories.The poor convergence of quantum field theory at finite temperature has been the main obstacle in the practical applications of thermal QCD for decades. In this dissertation I apply hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory, which is a gauge-invariant reorganization of the conventional perturbative expansion for quantum gauge theories to the thermodynamics of QED and Yang-Mills theory to three-loop order. For the Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of electrons and photons by expanding in a power series in mD/T, mf /T and e2, where mD and mf are the photon and electron thermal masses, respectively, and e is the coupling constant.I demonstrate that the hard-thermal-loop perturbation reorganization improves the convergence of the successive approximations to the QED free energy at large coupling, e ~ 2. For the non-Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of gluons by expanding in a power series in mD/T and g2, where mD is the gluon thermal mass and g is the coupling constant. I show that at three-loop order hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory is compatible with lattice results for the pressure, energy density, and entropy down to temperatures T ~ 2 - 3 Tc. The results suggest that HTLpt provides a systematic framework that can be used to calculate static and dynamic quantities for temperatures relevant at LHC.
The aim of this work is to develop an effective equation of state for QCD, having the correct asymptotic degrees of freedom, to be used as input for dynamical studies of heavy ion collisions. We present an approach for modeling an EoS that respects the symmetries underlying QCD, and includes the correct asymptotic degrees of freedom, i.e. quarks and gluons at high temperature and hadrons in the low-temperature limit. We achieve this by including quarks degrees of freedom and the thermal contribution of the Polyakov loop in a hadronic chiral sigma-omega model. The hadronic part of the model is a nonlinear realization of an sigma-omega model. As the fundamental symmetries of QCD should also be present in its hadronic states such an approach is widely used to describe hadron properties below and around Tc. The quarks are introduced as thermal quasi particles, coupling to the Polyakov loop, while the dynamics of the Polyakov loop are controlled by a potential term which is fitted to reproduce pure gauge lattice data. In this model the sigma field serves a the order parameter for chiral restoration and the Polyakov loop as order parameter for deconfinement. The hadrons are suppressed at high densities by excluded volume corrections. As a next step, we introduce our new HQ model equation of state in a microscopic+macroscopic hybrid approach to heavy ion collisions. This hybrid approach is based on the Ultra-relativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) transport approach with an intermediate hydrodynamical evolution for the hot and dense stage of the collision. The present implementation allows to compare pure microscopic transport calculations with hydrodynamic calculations using exactly the same initial conditions and freeze-out procedure. The effects of the change in the underlying dynamics - ideal fluid dynamics vs. non-equilibrium transport theory - are explored. The final pion and proton multiplicities are lower in the hybrid model calculation due to the isentropic hydrodynamic expansion while the yields for strange particles are enhanced due to the local equilibrium in the hydrodynamic evolution. The elliptic and directed flow are shown to be not sensitive to changes in the EoS while the smaller mean free path in the hydrodynamic evolution reflects directly in higher flow results which are consistent with the experimental data. This finding indicates qualitatively that physical mechanisms like viscosity and other non equilibrium effects play an essentially more important role than the EoS when bulk observables like flow are investigated. In the last chapter, results for the thermal production of MEMOs in nucleus-nucleus collisions from a combined micro+macro approach are presented. Multiplicities, rapidity and transverse momentum spectra are predicted for Pb+Pb interaction at different beam energies. The presented excitation functions for various MEMO multiplicities show a clear maximum at the upper FAIR energy regime making this facility the ideal place to study the production of these exotic forms of multistrange objects.
Lattice simulation of a center symmetric three dimensional effective theory for SU(2) Yang-Mills
(2010)
We present lattice simulations of a center symmetric dimensionally reduced effective field theory for SU(2) Yang Mills which employ thermal Wilson lines and three-dimensional magnetic fields as fundamental degrees of freedom. The action is composed of a gauge invariant kinetic term, spatial gauge fields and a potential for the Wilson line which includes a "fuzzy" bag term to generate non-perturbative fluctuations between Z(2) degenerate ground states. The model is studied in the limit where the gauge fields are set to zero as well as the full model with gauge fields. We confirm that, at moderately weak coupling, the "fuzzy" bag term leads to eigenvalue repulsion in a finite region above the deconfining phase transition which shrinks in the extreme weak-coupling limit. A non-trivial Z(N) symmetric vacuum arises in the confined phase. The effective potential for the Polyakov loop in the theory with gauge fields is extracted from the simulations including all modes of the loop as well as for cooled configurations where the hard modes have been averaged out. The former is found to exhibit a non-analytic contribution while the latter can be described by a mean-field like ansatz with quadratic and quartic terms, plus a Vandermonde potential which depends upon the location within the phase diagram. Other results include the exact location of the phase boundary in the plane spanned by the coupling parameters, correlation lengths of several operators in the magnetic and electric sectors and the spatial string tension. We also present results from simulations of the full 4D Yang-Mills theory and attempt to make a qualitative comparison to the 3D effective theory.
In nature, society and technology many disordered systems exist, that show emergent behaviour, where the interactions of numerous microscopic agents result in macroscopic, systemic properties, that may not be present on the microscopic scale. Examples include phase transitions in magnetism and percolation, for example in porous unordered media, biological, and social systems. Also technological systems that are explicitly designed to function without central control instances, like their prime example the Internet, or virtual networks, like the World Wide Web, which is defined by the hyperlinks from one web page to another, exhibit emergent properties. The study of the common network characteristics found in previously seemingly unrelated fields of science and the urge to explain their emergence, form a scientific field in its own right, the science of complex networks. In this field, methodologies from physics, leading to simplification and generalization by abstraction, help to shift the focus from the implementation's details on the microscopic level to the macroscopic, coarse grained system level. By describing the macroscopic properties that emerge from microscopic interactions, statistical physics, in particular stochastic and computational methods, has proven to be a valuable tool in the investigation of such systems. The mathematical framework for the description of networks is graph theory, in hindsight founded by Euler in 1736 and an active area of research since then. In recent years, applied graph theory flourished through the advent of large scale data sets, made accessible by the use of computers. A paradigm for microscopic interactions among entities that locally optimize their behaviour to increase their own benefit is game theory, the mathematical framework of decision finding. With first applications in economics e.g. Neumann (1944), game theory is an approved field of mathematics. However, game theoretic behaviour is also found in natural systems, e.g. populations of the bacterium Escherichia coli, as described by Kerr (2002). In the present work, a combination of graph theory and game theory is used to model the interactions of selfish agents that form networks. Following brief introductions to graph theory and game theory, the present work approaches the interplay of local self-organizing rules with network properties and topology from three perspectives. To investigate the dynamics of topology reshaping, coupling of the so called iterated prisoners' dilemma (IPD) to the network structure is proposed and studied in Chapter 4. In dependence of a free parameter in the payoff matrix, the reorganization dynamics result in various emergent network structures. The resulting topologies exhibit an increase in performance, measured by a variance of closeness, of a factor 1.2 to 1.9, depending in the chosen free parameter. Presented in Chapter 5, the second approach puts the focus on a static network structure and studies the cooperativity of the system, measured by the fixation probability. Heterogeneous strategies to distribute incentives for cooperation among the players are proposed. These strategies allow to enhance the cooperative behaviour, while requiring fewer total investments. Putting the emphasis on communication networks in Chapters 6 and 7, the third approach investigates the use of routing metrics to increase the performance of data packet transport networks. Algorithms for the iterative determination of such metrics are demonstrated and investigated. The most successful of these algorithms, the hybrid metric, is able to increase the throughput capacity of a network by a factor of 7. During the investigation of the iterative weight assignments a simple, static weight assignment, the so called logKiKj metric, is found. In contrast to the algorithmic metrics, it results in vanishing computational costs, yet it is able to increase the performance by a factor of 5.
This work reports on the study of the projectile x-ray emission in relativistic ion-atom collisions. Excitation of K-shell in He-like uranium ions, electron capture into H-like uranium ions and Simultaneous ionization and excitation of initially He-like uranium ions have been studied using the experimental storage ring at GSI. Information about the population of the excited states for the H- and He-like uranium ions, can be obtained by measuring the angular distribution of the decay radiation. Since the Ly_alpha2 transition is isotropic, the intensities of the Ly_alpha1 and K_alpha transitions were normalized to the Ly_alpha2 line. For the K_alpha1 and K_alpha2 transitions originating from the excitation of the He-like uranium ions, no alignment was observed. In contrast, the Ly_alpha1 radiation from the simultaneous ionization-excitation process of the He-like uranium ions shows a clear alignment. It is shown that the alignment of Ly_alpha1 was obtained by the Alignment parameter A_20. The experimental value leads to the inclusion of a magnetic term in the interaction potential. It is interesting to note that in the case of the Ly_alpha1 emission the small M2 contribution added coherently to the E1 transition amplitudes enhances the anisotropy. The capture process of target electrons into the highly-charged heavy ions was studied using H-like uranium ions at an incident energy of 220 MeV/u, impinging on N2 gas-target. It was shown that, the strongly aligned electrons captured in 2p3/2 level will couple with the available 1s1/2 electron which shows no initial directional preference. The magnetic sub-state population of the 2p3/2 electron will be redistributed according to the coupling rules to the magnetic sub-states of the relevant two-electron states. Consequently, the 1^P1 and 3^P2 states are corresponding to the the strongly aligned 2p3/2 state. This leads to the large anisotropy in the corresponding individual ground state transitions contributing to the K_alpha1 emission. Due to the fact that the 1^P1 --> 1^S0 and 3^P2 --> 1^S0 transitions are experimentally not resolved, a more detailed analysis of the angular dependence of the K_alpha1 radiation is required. From the K_alpha1/K_alpha2 ratio, the current results show that the incoherent addition of the E1 and M2 transition components yield to an almost isotropic emission of the total K_alpha1. In contrast to the radiative electron capture, the experimental results for the K-shell single excitation of He-like uranium ions indicate that only the 1^P1 level contributes to the K_alpha1 transition. For this case, the anisotropy parameter beta_20 was found to be -0.20 + 0.03 which is similar to that one calculated for pure E1 transition. This work also reports on the study of a two-electron process: the simultaneous ionization and excitation occurring in relativistic collisions of heavy highly-charged ions with gaseous targets. The investigation was performed on He-like uranium ions impinging upon xenon gas-target at an incident energy of 220 MeV/u. The measurements have been performed at the ESR gas-target using atomic xenon with a typical area density of 10^12 particles/cm^2. In contrast to the solid state target, the use of gas target offers the advantage of clear separation of the one step two-electron process due to the fact that the probability of two consecutive collision in such thin targets is negligible and the double step processes can be excluded. During the process of simultaneous ionization and excitation in He-like uranium ions, one of the ground-state electrons is promoted into the continuum and the other into the L-subshell states of the projectile. To select this process, the Lyman-series radiation has been measured at various observation angles in coincidence with up-charged projectiles (U^91+). From the yields of the Ly_alpha1 and Ly_alpha2 projectile radiation, the relative cross section for the process of simultaneous ionization and excitation was directly determined. The angle dependent measurement of the radiation yields provide information about the angular distributions of the emitted radiation and permits the determination of the alignment parameter A_{20}. This parameter gives information on the level population and the collision impact parameter. The present results (b^exp = 810 fm) show that the simultaneous ionization and excitation is a process which occurs at small impact parameter.