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GSI-Nachrichten 01-2001
Nur auf Englisch erhältlich.
Inhalt
Download der vollständigen Artikel als PDF-Dateien - englische Version
Direct Observation of Bound Beta Decay at the FRS/ESR
In a recent experiment, which combined
GSI's fragment seperator FRS and the experimental storage ring ESR, bound beta
decay was directly observed for the first time. Bound beta decay is the time-mirrored
process of orbital electron-capture decay. In bound beta decay the electron,
generated in the decay of the mother nucleus, is bound in an inner atomic shell
(predominantly the 1s-shell) of the daughter atom. The experiment was performed
with bare TI81+ions stored and cooled in the ESR. Using Schottky mass spectroscopy,
the decay of the mother nucleus and the feeding of the bound beta daughter Pb81+
could be measured simultaneously.
More...

View into a dipole and quadrupol magnet of the ESR
The Heavy Even-Even Nucleus 270-110 and its Decay
Products
In a recent experiment
by the SHIP-collaboration, the even-even
nucleus 270-110 was synthesized for the first time. The investigation of such
heavy even-even nuclei provides rather clear data for a comparison with theoretical
predictions. Due to the absence of unpaired nucleons, alpha decay and/or spontaneous
fission are unhindered, and the low energy level scheme is expected to be comparatively
simple.The reaction Ni64+Pb207 was used to produce the new nucleus. A total of
eight decay chains were observed during one week of irradiation time. From the
number of events and the integrated beam dose a production cross-section of about
13 pb was deduced. More...

Decay chains observed in the production of 270-110. The left chain,
which starts with longer-lived alpha-decay, is attributed to the decay of a high
spin K isomer in 270-110; the right chain is consistent with the decay of the
short-lived ground state.
Coulomb Break-Up of Boron-8 and the Solar Neutrino
Flux
In an experiment performed at GSIs KAOS
spectrometer, the Coulomb breakup of B8 into Be7 was investigated. The experiment
allowed the cross section for the inverse reaction, the production of B8+gamma
from Be7+p, to be deduced, which is usually parametrized by the astrophysical
S17-factor - the index indicates the mass numbers of the reaction partners proton
and Be7. The S17-factor is a key parameter for predicting the high energy component
of the solar neutrino flux. The deduced S17-values agree with the presently adopted
S17-factor obtained from capture experiments and with the result from a recent
Coulomb break-up experiment performed at lower energies.
More...

Schematic view of the experimental set-up at the KAOS spectrometer.
The B8 beam enters from the left and hits the Pb208 break-up target. the outgoing
protons and Be7 fragments are detected in two pairs of position-sensitive silicon
detectors before, and in two multiwire-proportional chambers after the detector.
The TOF-wall serves as a trigger detector. The non-interacting B8 projectiles
hit only the right-hand part of the TOF wall.
Hades Prepares for First Physics Experiments
During the past two years, visitors
to the HADES cave at GSI could follow the evolution of the High Acceptance Di-Electron
Spectrometer from a lone superconducting torus magnet to an impressive array
of advanced detectors. These detectors, along with an international collaboration
of scientists and engineers, are now poised to begin a physics program that
will serve as one of GSI's major experimental endeavors over the next several
years. HADES intends to explore the properties and behavior of hadrons in the
nuclear medium by studying collisions ranging from pions and protons as projectiles
to heavy nuclei. Observables include the masses, decay widths, and spectral
functions of vector mesons, which decay into electron-positron pairs (di-electrons)
while in the dense nuclear medium of the collision. Pion and proton beams are
useful for studying these mesons at normal nuclear density, while the fireball
formed in collisions of heavy nuclei permits the study at higher densities.
These collisions represent an intermediate region of the QCD phase diagram between
the conditions of the early universe and those found in the interiors of neutron
stars. Di-electrons are well-suited probes for studying in-medium hadron properties,
since they do not interact with the surrounding nuclear matter and leave the
reaction zone nearly unhindered.
More...

A look inside the HADES detector. Two coil casings of the 6fold
superconducting magnet are in the foreground, while the RICH mirror’s black
carbon fiber shell is located on the right. Also visible are the long, black
scintillators of the time-of-flight walls, as well as 5 of the 6 pre-shower
sectors. In front of and behind the toroidal magnetic field multiwire drift
chambers (MDCs) for particle tracking will be installed. A support frame for
one sector of MDC3 is already in position behind the lower coil case.
Research Highlights from 30 Years of GSI
In everyday life the matter which surrounds
us seems to be continuous. Only by physics methods a hierarchy of structures becomes
visible. Many solid bodies have a crystalline or polycrystalline structure. If
we look closer at matter, we realize that these crystals are made of atoms; looking
closer at atoms we discover that they have electron shells and an atomic nucleus.
The nucleus itself again consists of nucleons, positively charged protons and
electrically neutral so-called neutrons. Since the 1970’s we know that also
nucleons have a substructure. Together with the well known electrons these particles—dubbed
quarks—are considered today to be the elementary building blocks of matter.
The research program at GSI includes work in all these areas.
More...

The various hierarchies in the structure of matter. Every hierarchy
level is characterized by typical dimensions. Quarks and electrons are, according
to the present level of knowledge, considered the elementary building blocks of
matter.
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