2–5 Feb 2026
INFN - Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro
Europe/Rome timezone
Organized by INTRANS, the Instrumentation and Training task of EURO-LABS for Nuclear Spectroscopy and Reaction Dynamics

Session

Wednesday 3

4 Feb 2026, 14:50

Conveners

Wednesday 3

  • Giovanna Montagnoli (Dip. di Fisica e Astronomia, Univ. di Padova, and INFN-PD)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Jonathan Williams (TRIUMF)
    04/02/2026, 14:50
    Invited Talk

    TIGRESS, an array of up to 16 Compton-suppressed high purity germanium clover detectors (based on the EXOGAM design, with additional segmentation), has enabled many in-beam experiments studying nuclear structure and astrophysics at TRIUMF over the last two decades. In recent years TIGRESS has been operated alongside the EMMA recoil spectrometer, enabling significant improvements in reaction...

    Go to contribution page
  2. Corina Andreoiu
    04/02/2026, 15:20
    Invited Talk

    Shape coexistence—the occurrence of states with distinct nuclear shapes at similar excitation energies—has been observed in many regions of the nuclear chart [1-4] and is closely tied to the emergence of “islands of inversion”. Recent results indicate that even the neutron-rich doubly magic nucleus 78Ni exhibits signatures of deformation and shape coexistence [5], suggesting the onset of a new...

    Go to contribution page
  3. Samantha Ann Buck (University of Guelph)
    04/02/2026, 15:50
    Oral Contribution

    Recent decades have witnessed exponential growth in both the quality and volume of experimental nuclear data, driven by advancements in detector technologies and accelerator capabilities. Gamma- ray spectroscopy, in particular, has benefited from these technological improvements, enabling the collection of increasingly complex and high-dimensional datasets from large-scale spectrometers such...

    Go to contribution page
  4. Dipali Basak (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
    04/02/2026, 16:05
    Oral Contribution

    A new $^{12}$C+$^{12}$C fusion reaction cross-section is measured via $\gamma$-rays detection within the LUNA experiment at the Bellotti Ion Beam Facility (BIBF), located at the deep underground laboratory of Gran Sasso National Laboratory. At low energies, the background inherent in detection techniques introduces significant uncertainty in the measured cross-section. Thus, reduction of...

    Go to contribution page
Building timetable...