Seminars and Colloquia
Progress in Strangeness Nuclear Physics
by
→
Europe/Rome
131 (INFN edificio C)
131
INFN edificio C
Description
In this talk I will discuss the progress made both experimentally and theoretically
towards understanding the physics of hypernuclei, that is nuclear systems that include
one or more strange baryons known as hyperons, mostly the Lambda(1116) lightest one,
and which live sufficiently long to be explored in dedicated accelerator experiments.
Some topical issues will be highlighted: light neutron-rich hypernuclei, the `hyperon puzzle'
in neutron stars, and the possible existence of a doubly-strange dibaryon known as Jaffe's H dibaryon. Time-permitting, I will also talk on antikaon-nuclear interactions and the search
for antikaon-nuclear quasibound states, including the issue of `antikaon condensation'.
towards understanding the physics of hypernuclei, that is nuclear systems that include
one or more strange baryons known as hyperons, mostly the Lambda(1116) lightest one,
and which live sufficiently long to be explored in dedicated accelerator experiments.
Some topical issues will be highlighted: light neutron-rich hypernuclei, the `hyperon puzzle'
in neutron stars, and the possible existence of a doubly-strange dibaryon known as Jaffe's H dibaryon. Time-permitting, I will also talk on antikaon-nuclear interactions and the search
for antikaon-nuclear quasibound states, including the issue of `antikaon condensation'.