Prospects for exotic beam facilities in North America

被引:9
作者
J.A. Nolen
机构
[1] Physics Division,
[2] Argonne National Laboratory,undefined
[3] Argonne,undefined
[4] IL 60439,undefined
[5] USA,undefined
来源
The European Physical Journal A - Hadrons and Nuclei | 2002年 / 13卷 / 1-2期
关键词
PACS. 29.17.+w Electrostatic, collective, and linear accelerators – 29.25.Rm Sources of radioactive nuclei – 29.20.-c Cyclic accelerators and storage rings;
D O I
10.1140/epja1339-43
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
There are several nuclear physics laboratories in North America that have on-going research using energetic and stopped radioactive beams. These include the large ISOL-type programs ISAC at TRIUMF and HRIBF at Oak Ridge and the in-flight fragmentation program at the NSCL of Michigan State University. There are also smaller, more specialized, programs using a variety of techniques at the 88-inch cyclotron of Berkeley, ATLAS at Argonne, the Cyclotron Institute of Texas A&M University, the Nuclear Structure Laboratory at Notre Dame University, and the Nuclear Structure Laboratory at SUNY/Stony Brook. There are also three projects on the horizon in North America for new capabilities in both the near term and more distant future. The intensities of the in-flight fragment beams at the NSCL will be increased dramatically very soon as the Coupled Cyclotron Project will be completed and commissioned for research by mid-2001. A new project, ISAC-II, has been approved in Canada. For the longer term, the United States is considering construction of a major new facility, the Rare Isotope Accelerator (RIA), which would have a very high-intensity heavy-ion driver linac. The RIA facility is proposed to utilize both ISOL and in-flight production mechanisms.
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页码:255 / 261
页数:6
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