Conveners
Tuesday 4
- Francesco Recchia (Dip. di Fisica e Astronomia, Univ. di Padova, and INFN-PD)
-
Panu Ruotsalainen03/02/2026, 16:45Invited Talk
The nuclear spectroscopy program at the Accelerator Laboratory of the University of Jyväskylä has for decades relied on combining a germanium-detector array with a recoil separator, enabling the use of the highly sensitive recoil-gating and recoil-decay tagging techniques. Since 2019, the JUROGAM 3 spectrometer [1] has been operated together with the vacuum-mode MARA and gas-filled RITU...
Go to contribution page -
Kseniia Rezynkina (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)03/02/2026, 17:15Oral Contribution
Studying the nuclei along and near the N=Z line is the best way to find answers to some fundamental questions in nuclear physics, such as charge-dependence of the nuclear interaction [1,2]. The differences between the isobaric analogue states act as a magnifying glass on the structural changes in the mirror nuclei as a function of angular momentum. For instance, it has been demonstrated [3]...
Go to contribution page -
Denise Lazzaretto03/02/2026, 17:30Oral Contribution
Three experiments were recently performed at the Accelerator Laboratory of the University of Jyväskylä (JYFL-ACCLAB) to produce the $T_\mathrm{z}$=$-3/2$ nuclei $^{29}$S, $^{45}$Cr and $^{37}$Ca that were studied with the MARA [MARA2008] separator and the JUROGAM III [JUROGAM2020] germanium array. These nuclei were produced in the $3$-neutron evaporation channel in $^{20}$Ne+$^{12}$C,...
Go to contribution page -
Jennifer Cipagauta Mora (University of Groningen)03/02/2026, 17:45Oral Contribution
Multinucleon Transfer (MNT) reactions offer a promising path to produce neutron-rich isotopes [1]. Many facilities worldwide are studying this process to better understand the underlying mechanisms as well as the competing reaction channels.
At the Accelerator Laboratory of the University of Jyväskylä, we studied these processes using the gas-filled recoil separator RITU [2] in combination...
Go to contribution page -
A. Violanti (NKUA)03/02/2026, 18:00Oral Contribution
Nuclei in the rare-earth region with proton numbers between 50–82 and neutron numbers between 82–126 are of particular interest due to the evolution of their nuclear shapes and the interplay between collective motion and single-particle behavior. To investigate these two modes of nuclear motion, the even–even isotope 176Yb and the even–odd isotope 177Yb were selected for study using gamma-ray...
Go to contribution page