11 research outputs found
Two-proton emission and related phenomena
One of characteristic phenomena for nuclei beyond the proton dripline is the
simultaneous emission of two protons (2\emph{p}). The current status of our
knowledge of this most recently observed and the least known decay mode is
presented. First, different approaches to theoretical description of this
process, ranging from effective approximations to advanced three-body models
are overviewed. Then, after a brief survey of main experimental methods to
produce 2\emph{p}-emitting nuclei and techniques to study their decays,
experimental findings in this research field are presented and discussed. This
review covers decays of short-lived resonances and excited states of unbound
nuclei as well as longer-lived, ground-state radioactive decays. In addition,
more exotic decays like three- and four-proton emission are addressed. Finally,
related few-body topics, like two-neutron and four-neutron radioactivity, and
the problem of the tetraneutron are shortly discussed.Comment: 109 pages, 62 figures, accepted by Progress in Particle and Nuclear
Physic
Euroschool on Exotic Beams
This is the fifth volume in a series of Lecture Notes based on the highly successful Euro Summer School on Exotic Beams. The aim of these notes is to provide a thorough introduction to radioactive ion-beam physics at the level of graduate students and young postdocs starting out in the field. Each volume covers a range of topics from nuclear theory to experiment and applications. Vol I has been published as LNP 651, Vol II as LNP 700, Vol. III as LNP 764 and Vol. IV as LNP 879
Euroschool on Exotic Beams
This is the forth volume in a series of Lecture Notes based on the highly successful Euro Summer School on Exotic Beams. The aim of these notes is to provide a thorough introduction to radioactive ion-beam physics at the level of graduate students and young postdocs starting out in the field. Each volume covers a range of topics from nuclear theory to experiment and applications. Vol I has been published as LNP 651, Vol II has been published as LNP 700, and Vol. III has been published as LNP 764