1.
|
|
2.
|
Voltage scanning and technical upgrades at the Collinear Resonance Ionization Spectroscopy experiment
/ Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis, Michail (CERN ; Leuven U.) ; Reilly, Jordan R. (Manchester U.) ; Koszorús, Ágota (CERN) ; Wilkins, Shane G. (MIT) ; Lalanne, Louis (Leuven U.) ; Geldhof, Sarina (Leuven U.) ; Nichols, Miranda (Goteborg, ITP) ; Wang, Quanjun (Lanzhou U. (main)) ; van den Borne, Bram (Leuven U.) ; Chorlton, David (Manchester U.) et al.
To optimize the performance of the Collinear Resonance Ionization Spectroscopy (CRIS) experiment at CERN-ISOLDE, technical upgrades are continuously introduced, aiming to enhance its sensitivity, precision, stability, and efficiency. Recently, a voltage-scanning setup was developed and commissioned at CRIS, which improved the scanning speed by a factor of three as compared to the current laser-frequency scanning approach. [...]
arXiv:2303.15312.-
2023-05-17 - 10 p.
- Published in : Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res., B 541 (2023) 86-89
Fulltext: 2303.15312 - PDF; Publication - PDF;
In : 19th International Conference on Electromagnetic Isotope Separators and Related Topics (EMIS 2022), Daejeon, Korea, 3 - 7 Oct 2022, pp.86-89
|
|
3.
|
|
4.
|
Opportunities for Fundamental Physics Research with Radioactive Molecules
/ Arrowsmith-Kron, Gordon (Michigan State U.) ; Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis, Michail (CERN ; Leuven U.) ; Au, Mia (CERN ; Mainz U.) ; Ballof, Jochen (CERN ; Michigan State U.) ; Berger, Robert (Philipps U. Marburg) ; Borschevsky, Anastasia (U. Groningen, VSI) ; Breier, Alexander A. (Kassel U.) ; Buchinger, Fritz (McGill U.) ; Budker, Dmitry (Darmstadt, GSI ; UC, Berkeley) ; Caldwell, Luke (JILA, Boulder ; U. Colorado, Boulder ; Colorado U.) et al.
Molecules containing short-lived, radioactive nuclei are uniquely positioned to enable a wide range of scientific discoveries in the areas of fundamental symmetries, astrophysics, nuclear structure, and chemistry. Recent advances in the ability to create, cool, and control complex molecules down to the quantum level, along with recent and upcoming advances in radioactive species production at several facilities around the world, create a compelling opportunity to coordinate and combine these efforts to bring precision measurement and control to molecules containing extreme nuclei. [...]
arXiv:2302.02165.-
2024-07-12 - 119 p.
- Published in : Rep. Prog. Phys. 87 (2024) 084301
Fulltext: PDF;
|
|
5.
|
|
6.
|
|
Laser spectroscopy of neutron-deficient thulium isotopes
/ Cheal, Bradley (Oliver Lodge Laboratory, University of Liverpool, UK.) ; Rodriguez, Liss (Experimental Physics Department, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland / Max-Planck-Institut fur Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany.) ; Bai, Shiwei (School of Physics and State Key Laboratory of Nuclear Physics and Technology, Peking Uni- versity, Beijing, China.) ; Blaum, Klaus (Max-Planck-Institut fu ̈r Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany.) ; Campbell, Paul (School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.) ; Garcia Ruiz, Ronald (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.) ; Imgram, Philip (Institut fur Kernphysik, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.) ; Koenig, Kristian (Institut fur Kernphysik, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.) ; Lellinger, Tim (Experimental Physics Department, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland / Institut fur Kernphysik, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.) ; Muller, Patrick (Institut fur Kernphysik, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.) et al.
CERN-INTC-2022-041 ; INTC-I-245.
-
2022.
Fulltext
|
|
7.
|
|
8.
|
Structural trends in atomic nuclei from laser spectroscopy of tin
/ Yordanov, Deyan T. (Orsay, IPN ; CERN) ; Rodríguez, Liss V. (Orsay, IPN ; Heidelberg, Max Planck Inst.) ; Balabanski, Dimiter L. (ELI-NP, Bucharest) ; Bieroń, Jacek (Jagiellonian U.) ; Bissell, Mark L. (Manchester U.) ; Blaum, Klaus (Heidelberg, Max Planck Inst.) ; Cheal, Bradley (Liverpool U.) ; Ekman, Jörgen (Malmo U.) ; Gaigalas, Gediminas (Vilnius U.) ; Garcia Ruiz, Ronald F. (CERN ; MIT) et al.
Tin is the chemical element with the largest number of stable isotopes. Its complete proton shell, comparable with the closed electron shells in the chemically inert noble gases, is not a mere precursor to extended stability; since the protons carry the nuclear charge, their spatial arrangement also drives the nuclear electromagnetism [...]
2020 - 9 p.
- Published in : Commun. Phys. 3 (2020) 107
Accepted Author Manuscript: PDF; Fulltext from Publisher: PDF;
|
|
9.
|
|
10.
|
|