Prof.
Fritz Bosch
(GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH, Darmstadt, 64291, Germany)
10/10/2011, 09:00
Nuclear Physics
Fritz Bosch, GSI Helmholtzzentrum , D-64291 Darmstadt, Germany
Abstract
This talk presents a survey of experiments conducted in the last years at the ion-storage ring ESR of GSI, addressing nuclear physics, nuclear astrophysics and closely related fields. The ESR is a powerful and in many respects unique tool. Connected with a synchrotron and a fragment separator, it provides...
Dr
Meng Wang
10/10/2011, 09:35
Nuclear Physics
Plenary Invited
The nuclear physics program of the Lanzhou storage ring will be illustrated
Dr
Baohua Sun
(GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH)
10/10/2011, 10:10
Nuclear Physics
Plenary Contribution
Baohua Sun for the FRS-ESR mass collaboration
Heavy ion storage rings operated in an isochronous mode and/or equipped with the
phase-shape cooling devices can be used for high-precision, high-sensitivity and
high-efficiency mass measurements of stored nuclei. This has been achieved at GSI
Darmstadt, where two complementary methods, Schottky Mass Spectrometry (SMS) and
Isochronous Mass...
Mr
Matthew Reed
(University of Surrey)
10/10/2011, 10:35
Nuclear Physics
Plenary Contribution
An experiment was undertaken to study stored and cooled 197Au projectile-fragmentation products in March 2009. First results from this have recently been published [1]. Using the SIS-FRS-ESR setup at GSI it was possible to observe metastable nuclear excitations (isomers) with energies up to 3 MeV, and half-lives extending to minutes or longer. This talk presents briefly the published results...
Ms
Ganna Rastrepina
(GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH)
10/10/2011, 11:30
Nuclear Physics
Plenary Contribution
Storage rings offer the possibility of measuring proton- and alpha-induced reactions in inverse kinematics. The combination of his approach with a radioactive beam facility allows, in principle, the determination of the respective cross sections for radioactive isotopes. Such data are highly desired for a better understanding of astrophysical nucleosynthesis processes like the p process.
...
Frank Herfurth
(GSI)
10/10/2011, 11:55
Plenary Contribution
At the GSI accelerator complex, using the universal linear accelerator UNILAC and the synchrotron SIS, highly-charged ions up to U92+ are produced by passing a 400 MeV/u beam through a gold foil stripping off all or nearly all electrons. The HITRAP facility is built to decelerate those ions to almost rest and to provide them to the experiments.
In a number of commissioning beam times, the...
Prof.
Nasser Kalantar-Nayestanaki
(KVI, University of Groningen)
10/10/2011, 12:20
Nuclear Physics
Plenary Contribution
Nasser Kalantar-Nayestanaki, for the EXL collaboration
KVI, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands
The upcoming FAIR facility in Darmstadt, Germany, will produce intense high energy beams of exotic nuclei, electrons and anti-protons, which will be used to explore the properties of new regions of the chart of nuclides of key importance for both nuclear structure and nuclear...