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RISP Experimental System Using Rare Isotope Beams
Author(s) -
Young Kwan Kwon,
Gi Dong Kim,
J. Y. Moon,
YoungJin Kim
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
physics and high technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1225-2336
DOI - 10.3938/phit.24.050
Subject(s) - isotope , computer science , physics , nuclear physics
The experimental system at the Rare Isotope Science Project (RISP) is designed to use stable heavy-ion beams and rareisotope (RI) beams from the production and the separation systems (in-flight (IF) separator and isotope separation online (ISOL) systems) at the project’s accelerator complex for research in pure and applied science. The facilities for pure sciences are being designed to carry out experiments in the beam energy range from a few keV to hundreds of MeV/nucleon for fundamental science research. The RISP will establish various spectrometers, such as a recoil spectrometer (KOBRA), a large acceptance spectrometer (LAMPS), a highresolution spectrometer (HRS), a zero-degree spectrometer (ZDS), and a high-precession mass measurement system (HPMMS) with a collinear laser spectroscopy system (CLS). For applied sciences, b-NMR and mSR systems will be employed for material science. Bio-medical and neutron science facilities are also being considered.

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