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Future prospects and needs for nuclear structure studies with high intensity stable beams

Future prospects and needs for nuclear structure studies with high intensity stable beams. i) Using stable beams facilities and new generation of detection techniques, the low energy nuclear physics community has proven to be impressively productive

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Future prospects and needs for nuclear structure studies with high intensity stable beams

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  1. Future prospects and needs for nuclear structure studies with high intensity stable beams

  2. i) Using stable beams facilities and new generation of detection techniques, the low energy nuclear physics community has proven to be impressively productive with new results and future perspectives! ii) Some of the key questions in the nuclear structure field are and will remain for the coming 10 years well addressed using the state of the art detection systems and higher intensity stable beams!

  3. 114 ? 120 ? 126 ? 184 82 126 50 82 28 20 50 8 28 20 8 SHE: Where the isle of stability is located? what are the corresponding shell effects ? Well identified research program: -Systematic search of SHE -Study of the ‘stabilizing’ shell structure -Study of complete fusion - fission processes

  4. Single particle migration Shell effect changes Medium-spin studies of neutron-rich nuclei using g-spectroscopy with Deep-Inelastic reactions: With the factor 10 to 100 increasein beam intensity medium spin states are accessible in nuclei of the regionswhere known neutron shell effect are disappearingand new ones are appearing! (N=20, N=28, N=32 , N=50)

  5. A domain rich of new exotic phenomena to be discovered ENERGY GDR Jacobi shape transition fission Rotational damping Chaos Assisted tunneling superdeformation Hyperdeformation Tetrahedral nuclei SPIN

  6. 24Mg 12C 12C Search for g transitions between highly deformed molecular states! Experimental challenge! as the gamma branching ratio very small(10-5-10-6)

  7. Nuclear Structure in medium mass N=Z nuclei 114Xe 67Se 88Ru 70Br 66As 64Ge 58Cu • Coherent pn octupole correlations • Isospin mixing • E1 decay in mirror nuclei • Isospin symmetries and mirror pairs • Spectroscopy at the dripline • pn pairing and delayed alignment 50Fe 21Ne

  8. Off-beam spectroscopy - Decay studies:up to few 100pmA • (target technology and spectrometer with appropriate rejection power). Cross section down to 1pb will be reachable! • In-beam g and e- spectroscopy :up to few 100pnA • (highly segmented detectors, digital electronics,time stamping) Cross section below 100pb will be reachable! Secondary reactions (coulex) at the focal plan: (inverse kinematics, dedicated recoil spectrometer and secondary beam transport) Example: With a pmA primary beam, the Coulomb excitation of superheavy elements or N=Z nuclei, produced with cross section down to the mb becomes feasible

  9. The low energy nuclear structure community has well defined and promising research programs for the future. Many of them are based on measurements to be carried out using higher intensity stable beams. The in-beam studies will benefit from the high segmentation of new detection Systems and from digital electronics, in order to allow the increase of beam intensity by one order to two orders of magnitude ( up to few 100pnA). Other approaches using detection systems after a separator (focal plan) require a stable beam facility with very high intensities ( up to 100pmA) In all the cases a dedicated detection system is needed to run experiments with longer beam time. Existing European facilities Legnaro, JYFL, GSI (unilac), Ganil (CSS1) Projects of very high intensity injectors for SPES and SPIRAL2

  10. ‘It is certain that even after the construction of second generationradioactive beam facilitiescritical measurements using stable beams will be required. Furthermore, it is almost certain that measurements and discoveries made with radioactive species will stimulate new programs requiring stable beams.’ My suggestion for you would be to have a European working group to assess the research perspectives of the existing stable beam facilities, their needs for development, their specificities or complementarities (from the point of view of the physics program). A report from this working group and its recommendations will be very useful for the community. Stable beams with moderate intensity (up to few 100pnA) for a wide range of ions should be made available, within the coming years at some of the existing stable beam facilities in order to take advantage of the ongoing detector and electronics developments. A facility with higher intensity stable beam (up to 1pmA) should exist in Europe : taking advantage (in a way that should be discussed) of the developments of driver accelerators for the future radioactive beam facilities.

  11. HISIB ( High Intensity Stable Ion Beams) Working Group Marie-Helene Moscatello (GANIL) Annamaria Porcellato (Legnaro) Uli Ratzinger (GSI) Sigurd Hofmann (GSI) Rauno Julin (JYFL) Faisal Azaiez (IPN-Orsay) Jacomo Deangelis (Legnaro) Rolf-Dietmar Herzberg (Liverpool) Task: Produce a document to NUPECC (before the end of the year) -Physics -Collaboration -Physics requirements ( accelerator,target,instruments….) -Study the up-grade of existing or new accelerators to mach the physics requirements

  12. HISG-WG: meeting 4th of June 2004 at Orasy -General questions related to the group task -Specifications from physics: - SHE search - Decay studies - Secondary reactions at focal plan! - In-beam studies -Accelerators: -existing facilities and their possible up-grade -Future projects of new facilities -work sharing and planning

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