6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c2535

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Hypernuclear spectroscopy with heavy ion beams: The HypHI project at GSI and fair

T. R. SaitoJ. HoffmannM. KavatsyukHirokazu TamuraManabu MoritsuM. SakoF. E. MaasChristian SchmidtWolfgang OttYutaka MizoiS. BianchinTomofumi NagaeM. TrägerD. NakajimaT. MochizukiT. TakahashiA. OkamuraYoshihiko HayashiP. AchenbachJosef PochodzallaTakeshi KoikeS. AjimuraK. KochK. TanidaB. ÖZelS. VoltzO. BorodinaAtsushi SakaguchiTomokazu FukudaToshihiko HiraiwaC. RappoldW. TrautmannN. KurzMichiko SekimotoHitoshi SugimuraS. Minami

subject

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsRI-beamsProtonNuclear TheoryGeneral Physics and AstronomyHypernuclear spectroscopyNuclear physicsmagnetic momentsexotic hypernucleiPhysics::Accelerator PhysicsHeavy ionNeutronheavy ion beamsENERGY NUCLEAR COLLISIONSSpectroscopyNuclear Experiment

description

The HypHI experiment for precise hypernuclear spectroscopy with induced reactions of stable heavy ion beams and rare isotope beams is currently under preparation at GSI. The main goal of the HypHI project is to study neutron and proton rich hypernuclei and to measure directly hypernuclear magnetic moments at GSI and FAIR. In the first HypHI experiment (Phase 0) planned in 2009, the feasibility of precise hypernuclear spectroscopy with heavy ion beams will be demonstrated by observing π- decay channels of [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] with 6 Li projectiles at 2 A GeV impinging on a 12 C target. An overview of the HypHI project and the details of the Phase 0 experiment will be discussed.

10.1142/s021830131001723xhttps://research.rug.nl/en/publications/a97ded3e-b71c-4ad0-ab35-e236e61c766a