0000000000544261
AUTHOR
Eunkang Kim
Opportunities and limitations of in-gas-cell laser spectroscopy of the heaviest elements with RADRIS
International audience; The radiation detection resonance ionization spectroscopy (RADRIS) technique enables laser spectroscopic investigations of the heaviest elements which are produced in atom-at-a-time quantities from fusion-evaporation reactions. To achieve a high efficiency, laser spectroscopy is performed in a buffer-gas environment used to thermalize and stop the high-energy evaporation residues behind the velocity filter SHIP. The required cyclic measurement procedure in combination with the applied filament collection for neutralization as well as confinement of the stopped ions and subsequent pulse-heat desorption constrains the applicability of the technique. Here, some of these…
A Progress Report on Laser Resonance Chromatography
Atoms 10(3), 87 (2022). doi:10.3390/atoms10030087
Advancing Radiation-Detected Resonance Ionization towards Heavier Elements and More Exotic Nuclides
Atoms 10(2), 41 (2022). doi:10.3390/atoms10020041