Search results for "Projectile"

showing 10 items of 83 documents

Mass and half-life measurements of neutron-deficient iodine isotopes

2020

The European physical journal / A 56(5), 143 (2020). doi:10.1140/epja/s10050-020-00153-5

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsALPHA-DECAYSEPARATORMass spectrometry01 natural sciences530Ionjodi0103 physical sciencesNuclear fusionNeutronddc:530010306 general physicsNuclear ExperimentPhysicsisotoopitIsotope010308 nuclear & particles physicsPERFORMANCESPECTROMETRYQuadrupoleFRS; PROJECTILEAlpha decayAtomic physicsydinfysiikkaGround stateSYSTEM
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Rate capability of a cryogenic stopping cell for uranium projectile fragments produced at 1000 MeV/u

2016

At the Low-Energy Branch (LEB) of the Super-FRS at FAIR, projectile and fission fragments will be produced at relativistic energies, separated in-flight, energy-bunched, slowed down and thermalized in a cryogenic stopping cell (CSC) filled with ultra-pure He gas. The fragments are extracted from the stopping cell using a combination of DC and RF electric fields and gas flow. A prototype CSC for the LEB has been developed and successfully commissioned at the FRS Ion Catcher at GSI. Ionization of He buffer gas atoms during the stopping of energetic ions creates a region of high space charge in the stopping cell. The space charge decreases the extraction efficiency of stopping cells since the …

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsEXTRACTIONFissionBuffer gasION-CATCHER01 natural sciencesSpace chargeIonHEAVY-IONSNuclear physicsMOBILITIESElectric fieldIonization0103 physical sciencesRate capabilityddc:530SPECTROMETER010306 general physicsNuclear ExperimentInstrumentationSUPER-FRSHIGH-PRECISION EXPERIMENTSta114010308 nuclear & particles physicsChemistryProjectileBEAMSPERFORMANCEGAS CELLSpace chargeExtraction efficiencyExtraction timeCryogenic gas-filled stopping cellAtomic physicsBeam (structure)Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Experimental program of the Super-FRS Collaboration at FAIR and developments of related instrumentation

2016

The physics program at the super-conducting fragment separator (Super-FRS) at FAIR, being operated in a multiple-stage, high-resolution spectrometer mode, is discussed. The Super-FRS will produce, separate and transport radioactive beams at high energies up to 1.5 AGeV, and it can be also used as a stand-alone experimental device together with ancillary detectors. Various combinations of the magnetic sections of the Super-FRS can be operated in dispersive, achromatic or dispersion-matched spectrometer ion-optical modes, which allow measurements of momentum distributions of secondary-reaction products with high resolution and precision. A number of unique experiments in atomic, nuclear and h…

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsMesonNeutron emissionCOHERENT EXCITATIONProjectile fragments01 natural sciences114 Physical scienceslaw.inventionNuclear physicsENERGYlaw0103 physical sciencesSCATTERINGSPECTROMETERFACILITY010306 general physicsSpectroscopyNuclear ExperimentInstrumentationPhysicsta114IsotopeSpectrometerNUCLEI010308 nuclear & particles physicsScatteringDetectorMagnetic spectrometerPERFORMANCEINVERSE KINEMATICSPRODUCTSSTATESAchromatic lensExperiments
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The FRS Ion Catcher

2013

At the FRS Ion Catcher at GSI, projectile and fission fragments are produced at relativistic energies, separated in-flight, range-focused, slowed down and thermalized in a cryogenic stopping cell. A multiple-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer (MR-TOF-MS) is used to perform direct mass measurements and to provide an isobarically clean beam for further experiments, such as mass-selected decay spectroscopy. A versatile RF quadrupole transport and diagnostics unit guides the ions from the stopping cell to the MR-TOF-MS, provides differential pumping, ion identification and includes reference ion sources. The FRS Ion Catcher serves as a test facility for the Low-Energy Branch of the Sup…

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsPhysics::Instrumentation and DetectorsFissionMass spectrometry01 natural sciencesIonHEAVY-IONSNuclear physicsENERGYGSI0103 physical sciencesddc:530NuclideNuclear Experiment010306 general physicsInstrumentationSUPER-FRSDirect mass measurementta114010308 nuclear & particles physicsChemistryProjectileMultiple-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometerExtraction timeTIMECryogenic gas-filled stopping cellQuadrupoleISOBAR-SEPARATIONFacility for Antiproton and Ion ResearchAtomic physicsProjectile fragmentationBeam (structure)Exotic nucleiSYSTEMNuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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First spatial isotopic separation of relativistic uranium projectile fragments

1994

Abstract Spatial isotopic separation of relativistic uranium projectile fragments has been achieved for the first time. The fragments were produced in peripheral nuclear collisions and spatially separated in-flight with the fragment separator FRS at GSI. A two-fold magnetic-rigidity analysis was applied exploiting the atomic energy loss in specially shaped matter placed in the dispersive central focal plane. Systematic investigations with relativistic projectiles ranging from oxygen up to uranium demonstrate that the FRS is a universal and powerful facility for the production and in-flight separation of monoisotopic, exotic secondary beams of all elements up to Z = 92. This achievement has …

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsTheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICES010308 nuclear & particles physicsChemistryProjectileNuclear TheoryTheoryofComputation_GENERALSeparator (oil production)chemistry.chemical_element[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]UraniumAccelerators and Storage RingsComputingMethodologies_ARTIFICIALINTELLIGENCE01 natural sciencesNuclear physicsComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONCardinal point0103 physical sciencesMonoisotopic massAtomic physicsNuclear Experiment010306 general physicsInstrumentationNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Study of isomeric states in $^{198,200,202,206}$Pb and $^{206}$Hg populated in fragmentation reactions

2018

International audience; Isomeric states in isotopes in the vicinity of doubly-magic 208Pb were populatedfollowing reactions of a relativistic 208Pb primary beam impinging on a9Be fragmentation target. Secondary beams of 198,200,202,206Pb and 206Hg wereisotopically separated and implanted in a passive stopper positioned in thefocal plane of the GSI Fragment Separator. Delayed γ rays were detected withthe Advanced Gamma Tracking Array (AGATA). Decay schemes were reevaluatedand interpreted with shell-model calculations. The momentumdependentpopulation of isomeric states in the two-nucleon hole nuclei206Pb/206Hg was found to differ from the population of multi neutron-holeisomeric states in 198…

Nuclear and High Energy Physicsisomeric decaysAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaPopulationNuclear Theory[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]01 natural sciencesFragmentation (mass spectrometry)Subatomic Physics0103 physical sciencesGamma spectroscopyGamma-ray spectroscopy010306 general physicseducationNuclear ExperimentPhysicseducation.field_of_studyIsotope010308 nuclear & particles physicsNuclear shell modeldirect reactionsrelativistic projectile fragmentationelectromagnetic transitionsnuclear shell modelAGATAPreSPEC-AGATAAtomic physicsBeam (structure)
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Ion-optical layout of a powerful next-generation pre-separator for in-flight separation of relativistic rare isotopes

2006

Abstract Rare isotope beams can be efficiently produced at relativistic energies via projectile fragmentation and projectile fission. Magnetic rigidity analysis in combination with atomic energy loss ( Bρ –Δ E – Bρ method) in profiled matter placed at dispersive focal planes represents the tool for spatial separation in flight. The next-generation in-flight separators at high energies will consist of multiple degrader stages to provide intense monoisotopic fragment beams of all elements up to uranium. The pre-separator layout with the first degrader system holds many technical challenges, e.g. to handle the high-power primary beams characterized by a large range in time structure, from a DC…

Nuclear physicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsRigidity (electromagnetism)BunchesChemistryFissionProjectileMagnetNuclear structureMonoisotopic massInstrumentationBeam (structure)Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Experiments on Fission Dynamics with Relativistic Heavy-ion Beams

2002

[Abstract] At GSI, Darmstadt, an experimental program on fission with relativistic heavy-ion beams is in progress. A large range of excitation energies, combined with low angular momentum and small shape distortion is accessible. Full nuclide identification of the reaction residues is achieved by applying inverse kinematics. The nuclide production and the kinematics of fission fragments from a variety of primordial and radioactive projectiles reveal new insight into the influence of shell effects and dissipation on the fission process. The present contribution gives an overview on the experimental methods, the experimental results and the prospects for future progress.

Nuclear physicsPhysicsAngular momentumInverse kinematicsFissionProjectileDistortionNuclear TheoryNuclideDissipationNuclear ExperimentExcitationJournal of Nuclear and Radiochemical Sciences
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Energy and range focusing of in-flight separated exotic nuclei – A study for the energy-buncher stage of the low-energy branch of the Super-FRS

2003

Abstract The relative momentum spread of in-flight separated exotic nuclear beams produced in fragmentation and/or fission reactions is of the order of a few percent. A new technique is presented, which reduces the momentum spread significantly, and first experimental results obtained with relativistic projectile fragments are shown. This technique is the key to experiments with slowed-down and stopped beams, in particular for the efficient stopping of relativistic exotic nuclei in gas-filled stopping cells. It will be employed at the energy-buncher stage of the low-energy branch of the Super-FRS facility. The ion-optical design of the energy buncher is presented and a brief outlook to the …

Nuclear physicsPhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsLow energyFissionProjectileNuclear TheoryPhysics::Accelerator PhysicsNuclear ExperimentInstrumentationNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms
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Actinide Production in Collisions ofU238withCm248

1982

Cross sections for the production of heavy actinides in damped collisions of $^{238}\mathrm{U}$ ions with $^{248}\mathrm{Cm}$ targets are reported and compared with similar data for other projectiles. The relatively small differences in the formation rates of a given isotope made by different projectiles indicate a balance between increased mass transfer probability with increasing projectile mass and a concurrent decrease in survivability because of an increase in excitation energy.

Nuclear physicsPhysicsNuclear reactionIsotopeProjectileQ valueNuclear TheoryGeneral Physics and AstronomyProduction (computer science)Nuclear ExperimentExcitationEnergy (signal processing)IonPhysical Review Letters
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