281 research outputs found
Hyperfine-induced effects on the linear polarization of the K emission from helium-like ions
The linear polarization of the characteristic photon emission from
few-electron ions is studied for its sensitivity with regard to the nuclear
spin and magnetic moment of the ions. Special attention is paid, in particular,
to the K (1s 2p_{3/2} ^{1,3}P_{1,2} \to 1s^2 ^1S_0) decay of
selected helium-like ions following the radiative electron capture into
initially hydrogen-like species. Based on the density matrix theory, a unified
description is developed that includes both, the many-electron and hyperfine
interactions as well as the multipole-mixing effects arising from the expansion
of the radiation field. It is shown that the polarization of the K
line can be significantly affected by the mutipole mixing between the leading
and hyperfine-induced components of 1s2p ^3P_2, F_i \to 1s^2 ^1S_0,
F_f transitions. This - mixing strongly depends on the nuclear
properties of the considered isotopes and can be addressed experimentally at
existing heavy-ion storage rings
FAIR - from a few-body perspective
In the next years the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research FAIR will be constructed at the GSI Helmholtzzentrum fur Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt, Germany. This new accelerator complex will allow for unprecedented and pathbreaking research in hadronic, nuclear, and atomic physics as well as in applied sciences. This manuscript will discuss some of these research opportunities, with a focus on few-body physics
SPARC Collaboration: New Strategy for Storage Ring Physics at FAIR
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
Test of Time Dilation Using Stored Li+ Ions as Clocks at Relativistic Speed
We present the concluding result from an Ives-Stilwell-type time dilation
experiment using 7Li+ ions confined at a velocity of beta = v/c = 0.338 in the
storage ring ESR at Darmstadt. A Lambda-type three-level system within the
hyperfine structure of the 7Li+ triplet S1-P2 line is driven by two laser beams
aligned parallel and antiparallel relative to the ion beam. The lasers' Doppler
shifted frequencies required for resonance are measured with an accuracy of < 4
ppb using optical-optical double resonance spectroscopy. This allows us to
verify the Special Relativity relation between the time dilation factor gamma
and the velocity beta to within 2.3 ppb at this velocity. The result, which is
singled out by a high boost velocity beta, is also interpreted within Lorentz
Invariance violating test theories
Nuclear excitation by electron capture followed by fast x-ray emission
The resonance strength of the two-step process of nuclear excitation by
electron capture followed by decay of the nucleus can be significantly
increased in highly charged ions if the resonant capture proceeds via an
excited electronic state with subsequent fast x-ray emission. For fully ionized
and , the {x-ray} decay
stabilizes the system against internal conversion of the captured electron,
with an increase of both nuclear lifetimes and resonance strengths of up to two
orders of magnitude compared with the case when occupied atomic orbitals
prevent the x-ray de-excitation. Applications of this effect to the measurement
of the not yet experimentally observed nuclear excitation by electron capture
and to dense astrophysical plasmas are discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, 2 table
A Squid-Based Beam Current Monitor For FAIR
A Cryogenic Current Comparator (CCC) wasdeveloped for the upcoming FAIR-Project, providing anon-destructive online monitoring of the beam current inthe nA-range. The CCC was optimized for a lowestpossible noise-limited current resolution together with ahigh system bandwidth. Therefore, the low temperatureproperties of ferromagnetic core materials used in thepick-up coil were investigated and differentSuperconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID)-systems were tested.In this contribution we present results of the completedCryogenic Current Comparator for FAIR working in alaboratory environment, regarding the improvements inresolution and bandwidth due to the use of suitableferromagnetic core materials and optimized SQUIDsystemcomponents
Observation of the hyperfine transition in lithium-like Bismuth : Towards a test of QED in strong magnetic fields
We performed a laser spectroscopic determination of the hyperfine
splitting (HFS) of Li-like and repeated the measurement
of the HFS of H-like . Both ion species were
subsequently stored in the Experimental Storage Ring at the GSI
Helmholtzzentrum f\"ur Schwerionenforschung Darmstadt and cooled with an
electron cooler at a velocity of . Pulsed laser excitation of
the hyperfine-transition was performed in anticollinear and collinear
geometry for and , respectively, and
observed by fluorescence detection. We obtain for , different from the literature
value, and for .
These values provide experimental evidence that a specific difference between
the two splitting energies can be used to test QED calculations in the
strongest static magnetic fields available in the laboratory independent of
nuclear structure effects. The experimental result is in excellent agreement
with the theoretical prediction and confirms the sum of the Dirac term and the
relativistic interelectronic-interaction correction at a level of 0.5%
confirming the importance of accounting for the Breit interaction.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
XUV Fluorescence Detection of Laser-Cooled Stored Relativistic Ions
An improved moveable in vacuo XUV fluorescence detection system was employed for the laser cooling of bunched relativistic ( β = 0.47) carbon ions at the Experimental Storage Ring (ESR) of GSI Helmholtzzentrum Darmstadt, Germany. Strongly Doppler boosted XUV fluorescence (∼90 nm) was emitted from the ions in a forward light cone after laser excitation of the 2s–2p transition (∼155 nm) by a new tunable pulsed UV laser system (257 nm). It was shown that the detected fluorescence strongly depends on the position of the detector around the bunched ion beam and on the delay (∼ns) between the ion bunches and the laser pulses. In addition, the fluorescence information could be directly combined with the revolution frequencies of the ions (and their longitudinal momentum spread), which were recorded using the Schottky resonator at the ESR. These fluorescence detection features are required for future laser cooling experiments at highly relativistic energies (up to γ ∼ 13) and high intensities (up to 10 11 particles) of ion beams in the new heavy ion synchrotron SIS100 at FAIR
Measurements of proton-induced reactions on ruthenium-96 in the ESR at GSI
8th International Conference on Nuclear Physics at Storage Rings Stori11, October 9-14, 2011 Laboratori Nazionale di Frascati, Italy.
Storage rings offer the possibility of measuring proton- and alpha-induced reactions in inverse kinematics. The combination of this approachwith a radioactive beamfacility allows, in principle, the determination of the respective cross sections for radioactive isotopes. Such data are highly desired for a better understanding of astrophysical nucleosynthesis processes like the p-process. A pioneering experiment has been performed at the Experimental Storage Ring (ESR) at GSI using a stable 96Ru beam at 9-11 AMeV and a hydrogen target. Monte-Carlo simulations of the experiment were made using the Geant4 code. In these simulations, the experimental setup is described in detail and all reaction channels can be investigated. Based on the Geant4 simulations, a prediction of the shape of different spectral components can be performed. A comparison of simulated predictions with the experimental results shows a good agreement and allows the extraction of the cross section
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