Prof.
Alan Amthor
(Bucknell University)
14/05/2015, 14:00
Oral Presentation
Realistic ion optical models are a critical component in the design and operation of the next generation of in-flight, heavy ion separators for the production and study of exotic nuclei. Current methods for detailed optical modeling of large acceptance, in-flight separators will be presented in the context of the design efforts for ARIS (the Advanced Rare Isotope Separator, to be constructed...
Dr
Masafumi Matsushita
(Center for Nuclear Study, University of Tokyo)
14/05/2015, 14:30
Oral Presentation
The recent developments of technique in providing RI beams have been made many advances in radioactive isotope science. The RI beam facility (RIBF) has expanded the variety of nuclides, which provides numerous kinds of exotic isotope beams with A > 100. However, available beams in RIBF are restricted to an energy region typically above 200 AMeV or stopped beams. The variety of reaction has not...
Dr
Toshiyuki Sumikama
(Tohoku University)
14/05/2015, 14:50
Oral Presentation
RI beam factory at RIKEN provides an RI beam as a projectile fragments. Because the fragments are produced from an primary beam with 345 MeV/u, an energy of reaction-type experiments is usually higher than ~100 MeV/u. However, a low energy RI beam with 15 MeV/u is required for an investigation of the shell evolution via transfer reactions. The low energy RI beam also provides opportunities of...