You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
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.
The International Conference on Exotic Nuclei and Atomic Masses (ENAM) has gained the status of the premier meeting for the physics of nuclei far from stability. The selected and refereed papers presenting the main results constitute valuable proceedings that offer everyone working in this field an authoritative and comprehensive source of reference.
This handbook is a comprehensive, systematic source of modern nuclear physics. It aims to summarize experimental and theoretical discoveries and an understanding of unstable nuclei and their exotic structures, which were opened up by the development of radioactive ion (RI) beam in the late 1980s. The handbook comprises three major parts. In the first part, the experiments and measured facts are well organized and reviewed. The second part summarizes recognized theories to explain the experimental facts introduced in the first part. Reflecting recent synergistic progress involving both experiment and theory, the chapters both parts are mutually related. The last part focuses on cosmo-nuclear physics—one of the mainstream subjects in modern nuclear physics. Those comprehensive topics are presented concisely. Supported by introductory reviews, all chapters are designed to present their topics in a manner accessible to readers at the graduate level. The book therefore serves as a valuable source for beginners as well, helping them to learn modern nuclear physics.
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.
The first measurement of angular distribution of emitted protons was announced at this conference. In addition, the conference covered the recent developments in the field of exotic decays competing with ß+ decay in proton rich nuclei. Topics included: experiments on one proton emission, theory on one proton emission, two proton emission, alpha emission, beta delayed proton emission and gamma spectroscopy, nuclear astrophysics, and experimental techniques.
This volume presents the experimental and theoretical methods of studying soft interaction physics in high energy collisions. The topics include: dynamical and Bose-Einstein correlations, multiplicity fluctuation, soft photons, disoriented chiral condensate, self-similarity and self-affine behaviors, wavelet analysis, intermittency, chaos, and phase transition.
The first measurement of angular distribution of emitted protons was announced at this conference. In addition, the conference covered the recent developments in the field of exotic decays competing with ß+ decay in proton rich nuclei. Topics included: experiments on one proton emission, theory on one proton emission, two proton emission, alpha emission, beta delayed proton emission and gamma spectroscopy, nuclear astrophysics, and experimental techniques.
The International Conference on Proton Emitting Nuclei and Related Topics, PROCON 07, was held at in Lisbon, in June 2007. It was the third meeting in the series, after ones held at Oak Ridge and Legnaro. The conference provided the opportunity to review the most recent developments in the study of neutron deficient exotic nuclei at the borders of stability. There was a fruitful exchange of information between experimental and theoretical physicists regarding future measurements.