43 research outputs found

    A new ion beam cooler and buncher for ISOLTRAP and mass measurements of radioactive argon isotopes

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    A new ion beam cooler and buncher for ISOLTRAP and mass measurements of radioactive argon isotopes - ISOLTRAP is a Penning trap mass spectrometer installed at ISOLDE/CERN. It is set up to measure the mass of short-lived nuclides with a relative accuracy delta m / m of typically 1* 10^-7. In this work an ion beam cooler and buncher based on a linear radio frequency quadrupole trap has been installed and characterized. By this the overall efficiency of the ISOLTRAP spectrometer was increased by three orders of magnitude. This allows for measuring nuclides that are only produced in minute quantities as for instance 33Ar. In this work the mass of 33,34,42,43Ar has been measured with a relative accuracy of about 1* 10^-7. 33Ar with its half-live of only 174 ms is the shortest-lived nuclide ever investigated in a Penning trap. The high accuracy of the mass measurement of 33Ar made a stringent IMME test for the A=33, T=3/2 isospin quartets possible

    SPARC Collaboration: New Strategy for Storage Ring Physics at FAIR

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    SPARC collaboration at FAIR pursues the worldwide unique research program by utilizing storage ring and trapping facilities for highly-charged heavy ions. The main focus is laid on the exploration of the physics at strong, ultra-short electromagnetic fields including the fundamental interactions between electrons and heavy nuclei as well as on the experiments at the border between nuclear and atomic physics. Very recently SPARC worked out a realization scheme for experiments with highly-charged heavy-ions at relativistic energies in the High-Energy Storage Ring HESR and at very low-energies at the CRYRING coupled to the present ESR. Both facilities provide unprecedented physics opportunities already at the very early stage of FAIR operation. The installation of CRYRING, dedicated Low-energy Storage Ring (LSR) for FLAIR, may even enable a much earlier realisation of the physics program of FLAIR with slow anti-protons.Comment: IX International Workshop on "APPLICATION OF LASERS AND STORAGE DEVICES IN ATOMIC NUCLEI RESEARCH", Recent Achievements and Future Prospects, May 13 - 16, 2013, Pozna\'n, Polan

    Commissioning of the HITRAP Cooling Trap with Offline Ions

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    Highly charged heavy ions at rest offer a wide spectrum of precision measurements. The GSI Helmholtzzentrum fĂŒr Schwerionenforschung GmbH is able to deliver ions up to U92+. As the production of these heavy, highly charged ions requires high kinetic energies, it is necessary to decelerate these ions for ultimate precision. The broad energy distribution, which results from the deceleration in the HITRAP linear decelerator, needs to be reduced to allow for further transportation and experiments. The HITRAP cooling trap is designed to cool, i.e., reduce, this energy spread by utilizing electron cooling. The commissioning of this trap is done with Ar16+-ions from a local EBIT ion source. By analyzing the signal of stored ions after ejection, properties such as ion lifetime, charge exchange, and ion motions can be observed. Here, we provide an overview of the recent results of the commissioning process and discuss future experiments

    Towards an Intrinsic Doppler Correction for X-ray Spectroscopy of Stored Ions at CRYRING@ESR

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    We report on a new experimental approach for the Doppler correction of X-rays emitted by heavy ions, using novel metallic magnetic calorimeter detectors which uniquely combine a high spectral resolution with a broad bandwidth acceptance. The measurement was carried out at the electron cooler of CRYRING@ESR at GSI, Darmstadt, Germany. The X-ray emission associated with the radiative recombination of cooler electrons and stored hydrogen-like uranium ions was investigated using two novel microcalorimeter detectors positioned under 0∘ and 180∘ with respect to the ion beam axis. This new experimental setup allowed the investigation of the region of the N, M → L transitions in helium-like uranium with a spectral resolution unmatched by previous studies using conventional semiconductor X-ray detectors. When assuming that the rest-frame energy of at least a few of the recorded transitions is well-known from theory or experiments, a precise measurement of the Doppler shifted line positions in the laboratory system can be used to determine the ion beam velocity using only spectral information. The spectral resolution achievable with microcalorimeter detectors should, for the first time, allow intrinsic Doppler correction to be performed for the precision X-ray spectroscopy of stored heavy ions. A comparison with data from a previous experiment at the ESR electron cooler, as well as the conventional method of conducting Doppler correction using electron cooler parameters, will be discussed

    Update on the diagnosis and treatment of neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) – revised recommendations of the Neuromyelitis Optica Study Group (NEMOS). Part II: Attack therapy and long-term management

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