• M. Hausmann
  • F. Attallah
  • K. Beckert
  • F. Bosch
  • H. Eickhoff
  • M. Falch
  • B. Franczak
  • B. Franzke
  • H. Geissel
  • Th Kerscher
  • O. Klepper
  • H. J. Kluge
  • C. Kozhuharov
  • K. E.G. Löbner
  • G. Münzenberg
  • F. Nolden
  • T. Radon
  • H. Schatz
  • C. Scheidenberger
  • J. Stadlmann
  • M. Steck
  • T. Winkler
  • H. Wollnik

Short-lived exotic nuclei can be produced and separated with the high-energy secondary nuclear beam facility FRS at GSI. These nuclides can be injected and stored in the storage ring ESR. The lower lifetime limit of the presently existing methods for mass measurements on these nuclides at the ESR is about a few seconds. We have developed and investigated an isochronous operational mode of the ESR, that makes mass measurements of nuclides with lifetimes down to a few μs feasible. It has been commissioned in experiments using long-lived nuclides with known masses. A mass resolving power of about 150 000 has been achieved in a first pilot experiment. A suitable detector system has been implemented and commissioned at the ESR that allows measurements of the revolution period of single particles within a few turns in the ESR.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)569-580
Number of pages12
JournalNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment
Volume446
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 May 2000

    Scopus subject areas

  • Nuclear and High Energy Physics
  • Instrumentation

ID: 47745840