A3F-CNS Summer School 2022

Asia/Tokyo
Shinrin-Koen Heitage Resort

Shinrin-Koen Heitage Resort

https://www.hotel-heritage.co.jp/en/
Description

Dear Colleagues,

The 21th CNS International Summer School (A3F-CNSSS22), hosted by Center for Nuclear Study, the University of Tokyo, will be held for Aug.20 - 24, 2022. The school is co-hosted by JSPS A3-Foresight program, Kyushu Univ. Super Heavy Element Center, and is supported by RIKEN Nishina Center and the Research Council of Norway. The school is cooperated by ANPhA.

The venue of the school is Shinrin-Koen Heritage Resort. The school aims to foster the young generation of nuclear physicists. Before the covid pandemic, the participants of the school met together to discuss the lectures and beyond  at the relaxed atmosphere after each  school day, which  enhanced  the mutual understanding between participants. Currently, even though the pandemic has yet to settle, we will resume the tradition while  maintaining  social distance. Participants in-person are encouraged to discuss physics during  and  after the classes.

Registration fee below for participants in-person is asked to pay in cash at the on-site registration.

  • Staff scientists    3,000 JPY
  • PD                       2,000 JPY
  • Others                 1,000 JPY

The lecturers of the A3F-CNSSS22 include,

  • Prof. Stefan Frauendorf (NortreDome USA), (on-line) , " Quantal Rotation (TBC)"

  • Prof. Shunsuke Kurosawa (Tohoku Univ, Japan), "Scintillation counter (TBC)"

  • Prof. Satoshi  N. Nakamura (Univ. of Tokyo, Japan), "Hypernuclei"

  • Prof. Sunniva Siem (Univ. of Oslo), (on-line), "Experimental Level densities and Photon strength functions, and medical application of nuclear physics"

  • Dr. Vetle Ingeberg (Univ of Oslo), "Oslo method"

  • Prof. Angela Bracco (Univ. of Milano), (on-line), "Physics with AGATA (TBC)"

  • Dr. Shintaro Go (RIKEN, Japan), “Overview of RIBF/Spectroscopy of exotic nuclei”

  • Prof. Yutaka Utsuno (JAEA/CNS, Japan), "Large-scale shell-model calculations: from low-lying spectra to compound states"

The registration is now open from Registration section of the web page.

As the past A3F-CNSSS, we will have young scientist sessions where the Ph.D students and Post-docs contribute to the oral presentation.  From 2018 we select a few persons from the presentations as the winners of “CNSSS Young Scientist Awards”. The certificate will be given to the winners. 

  We plan to support the accommodation fee and travel expenses, although it is limited. The support will primarily come to those who perform an oral presentation. If you wish our support, please make a registration and submit your abstract from the web page of A3F-CNSSS22 by July 29st (Fri).

 

We’re looking forward to seeing you at the school.

 

With best regards

A3F-CNSSS22 Local Organizing Committee

Registration
Registration of the A3F-CNSSS22
Participants
  • Akane Sakaue
  • Andy Chae
  • Angela Bracco
  • Aron Jansson Nordberg
  • Athul K P
  • Azusa Inoue
  • Cau Vo huu
  • Chanhee Kim
  • Ching Hwa Wee
  • Daiki Nishimura
  • Daisuke Uehara
  • Dong Bai
  • Dong Tran Vu
  • Fumitaka Endo
  • Gen Takayama
  • George Hudson-Chang
  • Gulla Torvund
  • Gyoungmo Gu
  • Haozhao Liang
  • Haruki Matsuura
  • He Wang
  • Hideki Ueno
  • Hidetoshi Yamaguchi
  • Hideyuki Sakai
  • Hiroyuki Tajima
  • Jenny Marie Wamstad Finsrud
  • Jiatai Li
  • Johan Emil Linnestad Larsson
  • Jon Kristian Dahl
  • Juzo Zenihiro
  • Keisuke Nakamura
  • Keita Kawata
  • Ken-ichiro YONEDA
  • Kenta Yoshimura
  • Kentaro Yako
  • Kodai Okawa
  • Koshi Higuchi
  • Kota Yanase
  • Kouhei Washiyama
  • Line Gaard Pedersen
  • Masanori Dozono
  • Meng-Hock Koh
  • Miki Fukutome
  • Minghao Zhang
  • Minglong Li
  • Minju Kim
  • Mirai Fukase
  • Moemi Matsumoto
  • Mohamad Nor Nurhafiza
  • Myeong-Hwan Mun
  • Naoya Ozawa
  • Nobu Imai
  • Nobuo Hinohara
  • Nori Aoi
  • Noritaka Shimizu
  • Noémie Fritz
  • Oskar Hafstad
  • PARVEEN BANO
  • Qian Zhang
  • Qibo Chen
  • Reiko Kojima
  • Riku Ichihashi
  • Riku Matsumura
  • Robin Grongstad
  • Roman Luca Wixinger
  • Rurie Mizuno
  • Ryohsuke Yoshida
  • Sadao MOMOTA
  • Satoshi N. Nakamura
  • Seiya Hayakawa
  • Seonho Choi
  • Shin'ichiro Michimasa
  • Shingo Ogio
  • Shinsuke OTA
  • Shintaro Go
  • Shintaro Nagase
  • Shuai Sun
  • Shunsuke Kurosawa
  • Shutaro Hanai
  • SIWEI HUANG
  • Sohyun Kim
  • Stefan Frauendorf
  • Stefano Fracassetti
  • Sukhendu Saha
  • Sunniva Siem
  • Susumu Shimoura
  • Taiga Haginouchi
  • Takaharu Otsuka
  • Takashi Nakatsukasa
  • Takeshi Saito
  • Taku Gunji
  • Teruhito Nakashita
  • Thomas Chillery
  • Tomohiro Uesaka
  • Tomotsugu Wakasa
  • Tomoya Harada
  • Tomoya Naito
  • Trine Kvam Olafsen
  • Vetle Wegner Ingeberg
  • Vikas Katoch
  • Yasuhiro Sakemi
  • Yixin Guo
  • Yukie Maeda
  • Yuko Sekiguchi
  • Yutaka Utsuno
  • Yutian Li
  • Yuto Hijikata
    • 09:30 09:35
      Greeting from the Dean 5m
      Speaker: Prof. Masahiro Hoshino (The University of Tokyo)
    • 09:35 10:25
      Large-scale shell-model calculations: from low-lying spectra to compound states 50m
      Speaker: Yutaka Utsuno (Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
    • 10:25 10:40
      coffee break 15m
    • 10:40 11:30
      Scintillation counter (1/3) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Kurosawa Shunsuke (Tohoku University)
    • 11:30 13:30
      Lunch 2h
    • 13:30 15:00
      Young Scientist Session 1
      • 13:30
        Measurement of $^{130}{\rm{Sn}}(d,p)$ and $^{130}{\rm{Te}}(d,p)$ reactions with TiNA for Neutron Capture Rate in r-process Nucleosynthesis 15m

        Neutron capture rate on neutron-rich nuclei is one of the most uncertain nuclear physics parameters to understand the r-process nucleosynthesis in the universe. According to the network simulation of the nucleosynthesis, the neutron capture on $^{130}{\rm{Sn}}$ significantly affects the final abundances of the r-process. To reduce the uncertainty, we performed the experiment to study the neutron capture rate of $^{130}{\rm{Sn}}$ using the surrogate ratio method at the BigRIPS-OEDO beamline in RIKEN’s RIBF. In this experiment, we measured $^{130}{\rm{Sn}}(d,p)$ and $^{130}{\rm{Te}}(d,p)$ reactions separately in inverse kinematics to determine the ratio of the gamma emission probabilities from the respective unbound states. The protons recoiled from the CD$_{2}$ solid target were detected by a recoil particle detector array, TiNA.
        The present status of the analysis will be discussed.

        Speaker: Taiga Haginouchi (Tohoku University)
      • 13:45
        Study of the contribution of the $^{7}$Be($d$, $p$) reaction to the $^{7}$Li problem in the Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis 15m

        Our research goal is to measure the cross-section of the $^{7}$Be($d$, $p$) reaction in search of a solution to the cosmological $^{7}$Li problem (CLP). The CLP is the overestimation of primordial $^{7}$Li abundance in the standard Big-Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) model compared to observed abundances, a major unresolved problem in modern astrophysics. A recent theoretical BBN model emphasized the primordial $^{7}$Li abundance is about three times larger than the recent precise observation [1], [2]. $^{7}$Li nuclei were considered to be produced predominantly by the electron capture decay of $^{7}$Be after the termination of nucleosynthesis in the standard BBN model. We focus on the $^{7}$Be($d$, $p$) reaction since it is considered one of the contributors to $^{7}$Be destruction in the BBN [3]. We developed a method to produce $^{7}$Be (half life = 53.22 days) target to measure the reaction cross-section in normal kinematics. The experiment was performed at the Tandem Electrostatic Accelerator, Kobe University [4]. A 2.36 MeV proton beam irradiated a natural-Li target to transmute $^{7}$Li particles to $^{7}$Be particles via the $^{7}$Li($p$, $n$)$^{7}$Be reaction [5]. We produced 3.03$\times$10$^{13}$ $^{7}$Be particles in the target after two days of proton irradiation. After the target production, the beam ion was changed to deuterons and the $^{7}$Be($d$, $p$) reaction measured at energies 0.6, 1.0, and 1.6 MeV. The outgoing protons were measured by layered-silicon telescopes placed at 30 and 45 degrees. In this talk, I will report the experimental setup and preliminary results of this study, including the $^{7}$Be($d$, $p$) cross-section.\
        \
        References\par
        [1] R. H. Cyburt {\it et al.}, J. Cosmol. Astropart. Phys. {\bf 11}, 012 (2008).\par
        [2] Brian D. Fields {\it et al.}, J. Cosmol. Astropart. Phys. 03(2020)010.\par
        [3] S. Q. Hou {\it et al.}, Phys. Rev. C {\bf 91}, 055802 (2015).\par
        [4] "Kobe University Tandem Electrostatic Accelerator" \url {https://www.maritime.kobe-u.ac.jp/en/study/tandem_e.html} (Accessed 4th August 2022)\par
        [5] K. K. Sekharan et al., Nucl. Instr. Meth. {\bf 133}, 253-257 (1976).

        Speaker: Azusa Inoue (Research Center for Nuclear Physics, Osaka university)
      • 14:00
        Direct measurement of the ${}^{26}$Si($\alpha$,p)${}^{29}$P reaction at CRIB for the nucleosynthesis in the X-ray bursts 15m

        Nuclear reactions in the $\alpha$p-process including the ${}^{26}$Si($\alpha$, p)${}^{29}$P are important for the nucleosynthesis in X-ray bursts. However, there are not sufficient experimental data of the reactions because radioactive-isotope (RI) beam is required to perform the experiment and the cross section is low. In order to acquire the sufficient nuclear data of the ${}^{26}$Si($\alpha$, p)${}^{29}$P, a direct measurement was performed at CNS RI beam separator (CRIB), located at RIKEN Nishina Center. We used inverse kinematics with a thick target method for the measurement. In this experiment, multiplexer circuit, Mesytec MUX, was used to acquire data. The details of the experimental conditions and the preliminary results of the analysis are discussed.

        Speaker: Kodai Okawa
      • 14:15
        Direct measurement of astrophysical S(E) for the 9Be(p,a)6Li and 9Be(p,d)8Be reactions at low energy 15m

        The p-9Be reactions play a key role in accurate prediction of primordial abundance of beryllium, and its abundance can be used to exquisitely probe the nucleosynthesis and mixing mechanism of stars. In the present work, astrophysical S(E) factors of the 9Be(p,d)8Be and 9Be(p,α)6Li reactions have been obtained from thick-target yield Yield(Ei) for proton energies from 18 to 100 keV. A full R-matrix analysis was performed to fit both the 9Be(p,d)8Be and 9Be(p,α)6Li reactions, simultaneously. The resulting astrophysical S(E) factors agree well with direct measurements, leading to S(0) = 17.3 ± 2.1 and 13.9 ± 1.8 MeV·b for the 9Be(p,d)8Be and 9Be(p,α)6Li reactions, respectively. The reaction rates were also calculated in the temperature range from 0.01 to 1 T9, which improve the precision of standard database NACRE and NACRE II.

        Speaker: Dr Qian Zhang (Center for Nuclear Study, University of Tokyo, Japan)
    • 15:00 15:50
      Oslo Method (1/2) 50m
      Speaker: Dr Vetle Ingeberg (Univ. of Oslo)
    • 15:50 16:05
      break 15m
    • 16:05 16:55
      Oslo method (2/2) 50m
      Speaker: Dr Vetle Ingeberg (Univ. of Oslo)
    • 16:55 17:10
      coffee break 15m
    • 17:10 18:00
      Quantal Rotation (1/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Franendorf Stefan (Univ. of Notre Dome)
    • 19:00 21:00
      Discussion time
    • 09:35 10:25
      Scintillation counter (2/3) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Kurosawa Shunsuke (Tohoku University)
    • 10:25 10:40
      coffee break 15m
    • 10:40 11:30
      Hypernuclei (1/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Satoshi. N. Nakamura (Univ. of Tokyo)
    • 11:30 13:30
      Lunch 2h
    • 13:30 14:20
      RIBF overview 50m
      Speaker: Dr Shintaro Go (RIKEN Nishina Center)
    • 14:20 18:20
      RIBF Facility Tour
    • 09:35 10:25
      Hypernuclei (2/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Satoshi. N. Nakamura (Univ. of Tokyo)
    • 10:25 10:40
      break 15m
    • 10:40 11:30
      Hypernuclei (3/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Satoshi. N. Nakamura (Univ. of Tokyo)
    • 11:30 13:30
      Lunch 2h
    • 13:30 15:00
      Young Scientist Session 2
      • 13:30
        Background Gamma Measurement for Low Energy Astrophysical Reaction at FRENA 15m

        Facility for Research in Experimental Nuclear Astrophysics (FRENA), an upcoming tandem accelerator facility at Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Kolkata, India. This is a low energy (0.2-3 MV) high current facility primarily designed for nuclear astrophysical studies. Most of the astrophysical reactions have very low cross-sections with large error bars$^{[1]}$. So the background studies in this region is very crucial for accurate measurements. The wall thickness of FRENA is ~1.2m thick in order to reduce the cosmic background but those walls become a source for gamma background from natural isotopes like 238U, 40 K and, 232Th $^{[2]}$. In this work, a detailed background measurement is performed during beam on and off conditions. Different scintillator detectors (NaI & LaCl$_2$) are used to measure gammas at different positions of the accelerator building. With and without reduced background by Lead brick array (Pb, Z=82) and detail CPS calculation is done to understand the counts coming from a particular element. The machine parts themselves are made up of SS-304 (mainly consisting of Chromium, Nickel, and Carbon), Tantalum and copper. During beam on condition, neutrons are generated in beam dump and these neutrons interact with different isotopes present vicinity, gives gamma photon as background. Some of them have long half-life too$^{[3]}$. Caen digitizer (DT5730) was used as data acquisition system. The same will be used in the future for the FRENA experiments. An experiment is planned to study the formation of $^{106,108}$Cd at FRENA.

        References
        [1] Claus E. Rolfs & William S. Rodney. (2005). Cauldrons in the Cosmos.
        [2] Glenn F. Knoll. 2001-01. Radiation Detection and Measurement.
        [3] arXiv:2203.01995v1 [nucl-ex]

        Speaker: Mr Sukhendu Saha (Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, HBNI, India)
      • 13:45
        Development of a new way to measure the thickness of solid hydrogen target by using intermediate to high energy ion beams. 15m

        Background and Purpose:An efficient way to measure the nuclear radii is to measure the reaction cross section between the incident nucleus and the proton target (especially solid hydrogen). Currently, the method of measuring the length of solid hydrogen and multiplying it by the density to obtain the mass thickness is not sufficiently accurate because of the several % uncertainty in the published density of solid hydrogen. Therefore, we have developed a new method to measure the thickness of solid hydrogen with a high accuracy of about 0.several %.

        Method:In our new method, the mass thickness is derived directly from the energy loss of the beam passing through solid hydrogen. Since the accuracy of the theoretical calculation of $\Delta E$ is not sufficient, the mass thickness cannot be obtained accurately by comparing it with the measured value. Therefore, we devised a method to derive the thickness of solid hydrogen by comparing the energy loss of polyethylene ${\rm{}(CH_2)}$ and ${\rm{}(C+H)}$, carbon and solid hydrogen, and performed the measurement.

        Experiment:We irradiated $\rm{}({^{18}O}, ^{27}Al)$ with a primary beam of 200-300 MeV/u and a secondary beam near Ni to $\rm{}{CH_2}$ and $\rm{}{C+H}$, respectively, and measured energy loss in the target at HIMAC, QST at Chiba.

        Speaker: Mr Gen Takayama (Osaka-u)
      • 14:00
        A position sensitive Schottky cavity doublet for use in the Rare RI Ring. 15m

        Despite being proposed over half a century ago, various aspects of the r-process synthesis of heavy elements remain unknown1. One such mystery is that of the true astrophysical site. Intense neutron flux is required to set sufficient conditions for synthesis. In order to clarify the conditions of the r-process, mass measurements of neutron rich isotopes involved in the r-process chain are crucial to constrain mass models thereby improving accuracy of simulations which rely on extrapolated values 2. The Rare Radio-Isotope storage ring (R3) at RIKEN, Japan currently carries out isochronous mass spectrometry via a time-of-flight (tof) measurement over multiple revolutions. Due to low production rates, reliable beam diagnostics are essential to achieving the high yield necessary to create sufficient statistics. Currently no sophisticated beam monitor is permanently installed, therefore a novel position-sensitive Schottky cavity doublet has been developed at GSI, Darmstadt to be tested at R3. With design based on the existing successful cavities at GSI, it can additionally perform mass determination via frequency measurement; this method has been proven to provide excellent resolution3. This would remove the need to reliably extract particles to complete a tof measurement, increasing the potential yield. Position sensitivity enhances the precision of this method by correcting for velocity spread of particles offset from the isochronous condition. Moreover, it could enable measurement of the magnetic rigidity inside the ring which is used for mass determination and recorded with a thick gas based detector upstream. Removing the need for this detector would greatly reduce energy loss and increase precision. In this work, the theory and operation of the novel Schottky cavity doublet is presented.

        [1] E. M. Burbidge, G. R. Burbidge, W. A. Fowler, and F. Hoyle, ‘Synthesis of the Elements in Stars’, Rev. Mod. Phys., vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 547–650, Oct. 1957, doi: 10.1103/RevModPhys.29.547.

        [2] J. J. Cowan et al., ‘Origin of the heaviest elements: The rapid neutron-capture process’, Rev. Mod. Phys., vol. 93, no. 1, p. 015002, Feb. 2021, doi: 10.1103/RevModPhys.93.015002.

        [3] P. Kienle et al., ‘High-resolution measurement of the time-modulated orbital electron capture and of the β+ decay of hydrogen-like 142Pm60+ ions’, Physics Letters B, vol. 726, no. 4, pp. 638–645, Nov. 2013, doi: 10.1016/j.physletb.2013.09.033.

        Speaker: George Hudson-Chang (Riken Nishina Center)
      • 14:15
        Generator coordinate method with variational basis generation 15m

        The generator coordinate method (GCM) has been utilized to describe the nuclear collective motion including the cluster structure. The GCM trial function is given by a coherent superposition of Slater determinants (SDs) fixed within some collective space, which has been a priori selected. The energy variation is then made only for the weight function. In this talk, we present a GCM with the basis SDs optimized as well according to the variational principle. With such simultaneous optimization of the basis states, one does not have to specify beforehand the relevant collective or cluster degrees of freedom covered by the set of basis SDs. We apply the method to a schematic model and discuss the difference between our method and the other beyond-mean-field methods.

        Speaker: Moemi Matsumoto (Tohoku University)
      • 14:30
        Finite range Simple effective interaction with tensor terms 15m

        The crossing of the $2p_{3/2}$ and $1f_{5/2}$ proton s.p. energy levels in neutron-
        rich Ni isotopes and the magic character of the atomic number Z=28 in
        this isotopic chain is a subject of current interest from both, experimental and theoretical points of view[1,2]. The finite range Simple effective interaction(SEI) is able to reproduce the experimentally observed crossing even without requiring a tensor term. Using SEI, the crossing of the $1f_{5/2}$ and $2p_{3/2}$ s.p. proton levels in the isotopic chain of Ni and the spin inversion in the ground-state of Cu-isotopes are found to be a function of nuclear matter(NM) incompressibility. The role of the incompressibility is also noticed in the study of sd- level splitting in Ca isotopic chain using the SEI model. Experimental studies[3,4] establish that the proton $2s_{1/2}$ and $1d_{3/2}$ s.p. levels invert going from $^{40}Ca$ to $^{48}Ca$. However, the observed proton gaps between the $1h_{11/2}$ and $1g_{7/2}$ shells in Sn and Sb isotopic chain, and the neutron gaps between the $1i_{13/2}$ and $1h_{9/2}$ shells in N=82 isotones[5] require explicit consideration of a tensor part with SEI as the central contribution is not enough to initiate the required level splittings. In this work, we will analyze the observed proton and neutron single-particle energy gaps in Sn and N=82 isotopic and isotonic chains respectively by adding a short-range tensor force to SEI within the Quasi-local Density Functional Theory (QLDFT) formalism and compared the results with the available experimental data[5] as well as with the predictions of other mean field models such as the SIII and SAMI-T Skyrme forces and the D1MTd Gogny interaction.
        References
        [1] L. Olivier, S. Franchoo, M. Niikura, Z. Vajta, D. Sohler, P. Doornenbal,
        A. Obertelli, Y. Tsunoda, T. Otsuka, G. Authele, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.
        119, 192501 (2017).
        [2] E. Sahin, F. L. Bello Garrote, Y. Tsunoda, T. Otsuka, G. de Angelis, A.
        Grgen, M. Niikura, S. Nishimura, Z. Y. Xu, H. Baba et al., Phys. Rev.
        Lett. 118, 242502 (2017).
        [3] P. Doll, G. J.Wagner, K. T. Knöpfle, and G. Mairle, Nucl. Phys. A 263,
        210 (1976).
        [4] C. A. Ogilvie et al., Nucl. Phys. A 465, 445 (1987).
        [5] J P Schiffer, S J Freeman , J A Caggiano, C Deibel, A Heinz , et al.,
        Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 162501(2004).

        Speaker: Ms Parveen Bano (Sambalpur University)
    • 15:00 15:50
      Physics with AGATA (TBC) (1/2) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Angela Bracco (Univ. of Milano)
    • 15:50 16:00
      break 10m
    • 16:00 16:50
      Experimental Level densities and Photon strength functions 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Sunniva Siem (Oslo University)
    • 16:50 17:05
      break 15m
    • 17:05 17:55
      Quantal Rotation (2/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Frauendorf Stefan (Univ. of Notre Dome)
    • 17:55 18:05
      break 10m
    • 18:05 18:55
      Quantal Rotation (3/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Stefan Fruendorf (Univ. of Notre Dome)
    • 19:00 21:00
      Discussion time
    • 09:35 10:25
      Spectroscopy of exotic nuclei 50m
    • 10:25 10:40
      break 15m
    • 10:40 11:30
      Scintillation counter (3/3) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Shunsuke Kurosawa (Tohoku University)
    • 11:30 13:30
      Lunch 2h
    • 13:30 15:00
      Young Scientist Session 3
      • 13:30
        Nuclear Structure Study of Neutron-Rich Xe Nuclei by $\beta$-$\gamma$ Decay Spectroscopy 15m

        Shape evolution from spherical to deformed nuclear system as a function of neutron number has been studied to reveal the change of residual nuclear interactions in finite quantum many-body system. Neutron-rich Xe nuclei with $A$ ~ 140 are located at the northeast transitional-mass region of the doubly-magic $^{132}$Sn ($Z$ = 50 and $N$ = 82). Various nuclear structures with prolate collectivity and octupole correlation are expected to appear in these nuclei which are known in neighboring nucleus $^{144}$Ba ($Z$ = 56 and $N$ = 88). Experiment was performed as a part of EURICA campaign based on $\beta$- and isomer-decay spectroscopy. Neutron-rich nuclei were produced at RIBF, RIKEN by in-flight fission of $^{238}$U beam with energy of 345 MeV/nucleon and intensity of ~5 pnA, bombarding on a 3 mm Be target. The fragments were separated and identified through BigRIPS separator and ZeroDegree spectrometer. Ion and $\beta$ ray were detected by WAS3ABi which consists of 5 DSSSD with 60 vertical and 40 horizontal strips. The parent $\beta$ decaying nucleus was identified by the same detected position of ion and $\beta$ ray at the WAS3ABi. Gamma ray was detected by using EURICA, a $\gamma$ ray detector array consisting of 12 cluster-type Ge detectors. In this work, neutron-rich odd Xe nuclei with $A$ ~ 140 are investigated by the $\beta$ decay and the $\beta$-delayed neutron decay of I isotopes. Nuclear structure of Xe isotopes will be discussed by comparing to the theoretical calculation.

        Speaker: M. N. Nurhafiza (Dept. of Phys., Osaka Univ.)
      • 13:45
        Study of the excited $^9$Li core in $^{11}$Li 15m

        $^{11}$Li nucleus is one of the flagship drip-line nuclei in the field of nuclear physics. A spatially extended structure of neutrons in $^{11}$Li, which is now widely known as “halo” structure, opened the very active field of research with unstable nuclear beams. $^{11}$Li have the nature of Borromean.[1] In many cases, $^{11}$Li is considered as a 3-body system of $^9$Li + 2 neutrons. However, recent theoretical studies pointed out that contribution of the excited $^9$Li core can be significant. According to the interpretation of [2], the ground state of $^{11}$Li has components which contain excited state of the core. In Ref [3], they showed that the E1 cluster sum rule value should be reduced by about 15% due to the $^9$Li core excitation. Currently no experiment has succeeded in providing a direct information of the excited $^9$Li core in $^{11}$Li.

        In this work, with the data of SAMURAI18 experiment, the quasi-free $^{11}$Li(p,pn)$^9$Li* reaction was employed to study the excited $^9$Li core. Because of spin-parity constraints, the first bound excited state of $^9$Li cannot contribute much and the 2nd state, which is unbound, can give the major contribution. Therefore, the $^9$Li excited core will decay into the $^8$Li + neutron. Using the invariant mass spectrum and dalitz plot of $^8$Li + 2 neutrons, we could get the direct information of the exited $^9$Li core in $^{11}$Li.

        [1] M. V. Zhukov, et al., Phys. Rep. 231, 151 (1993).
        [2] G. Potel, F. Barranco, E. Vigezzi, and R. A. Broglia, Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 172502 (2010)
        [3] Y. Kikuchi, et al., Phys. Rev. C 87, 034606 (2013).

        Speaker: Mr Yutian Li (Riken Nishina Center)
      • 14:00
        A new Silicon Array for CAT-M 15m

        The active target CAT-M (CNS Active Target - Medium/Manul) is being used in an experimental campaign for the study of the ISGMR (Isoscalar Giant Monopole Resonance), also called “Breathing Mode”.
        The experimental campaign is performed at HIMAC (Heavy Ion Medical Accelerator in Chiba), and beam time has been assigned to three different measurements. The first two experiments have been successfully carried out: the nucleus of $^{136}$Xe was studied in July 2021, and the nuclei of $^{80,86}$Kr in February 2022. Data are currently under analysis at RCNP.
        The apparatus was improved in order to maximize the detection performance of the active target. In particular, two major upgrades will be described in this presentation which consist in the introduction of a dipole magnet inside the active target field cage, and the installation of a new silicon array on CAT-M lateral flanges (next measurement).
        In the past experiments the magnet was placed inside the field cage in order to reduce the noise coming from the delta rays generated by the high-energy beam crossing the active region. Electrons resulting from the interaction of the beam with the gaseous target are confined in a thin region along the beam direction, and will not interfere with the tracking process. This is the first time a magnet was used inside an active target field cage, and the noise suppression was significant: tracks are clearly identifiable, and total trigger rate drastically reduced.
        The next measurement will take place in September 2022, and the lateral flanges of CAT-M will host the DSSSD (Double-Sided Silicon Strip Detectors) array of Leuven. This array is composed by twelve Si detectors of $10$cm x $10$cm surface, segmented in 64 strips and with a thickness of $1000\mu$m. It will not only guarantee a large coverage of the solid angle and a good energy resolution ($\sim$0.5% @5MeV), but also a better position sensitivity given by the high-density readout strips.

        Speaker: Stefano Fracassetti (KU Leuven)
      • 14:15
        ISGMR measurement in Kr isotope with CAT-M 15m

        The incompressibility in nuclear matter ( $K_0$ and $K_\tau$ ) play an important role in clarifying the equation of state ( EOS ) of nuclear matter in extreme environments such as neutron stars.
        $K_0$ and $K_\tau$ can be directly determined from the nuclear incompressibility $K_A$ measured from isoscalar giant monopole resonance (ISGMR) measurements. $K_A$ can be expressed as follows from the nuclear droplet model,
        $ K_A=K_0+K_s A^{-1/3} + \left( K_\tau + K_{\tau s} A^{-1/3}\right)\alpha^2 + K_C Z^2 A^{-4/3}$.
        $K_s$ and $K_{\tau s}$ are surface terms and $K_C$ is the Coulomb term; $K_C$ can be assumed to be known because the model error is very small.
        In previous studies, measurements of $^{90}\mathrm{Zr}$, $^{208}\mathrm{Pb}$, $\mathrm{Sn}$ and $\mathrm{Cd}$ isotopes, which are double magic nuclei, have shown that $K_0=240\pm20$ MeV and $K_\tau=-550\pm100$ MeV, and The error of $K_\tau$ is as large as 20\%. Also a recent study with $A\sim90$ reported $K_0=202$ MeV, which is a significant deviation from existing measurements.

        The reason is that the surface effects ( $K_s$ and $K_{\tau s}$ ) cannot be evaluated.
        Therefore, it is important to perform systematic ISGMR measurements with various nuclei, including unstable nuclei, and to quantitatively evaluate the surface effects specific to each nucleus.
        The ISGMR measurement in unstable nuclei requires the measurement of low-energy recoil particles that are scattered forward angle using the RI beam.
        On the other hand, there is a trade-off relation between target thickness and measurable range.
        Therefore, a gas active target is best suited for systematic measurements.

        We have developed an active target for systematic measurement of ISGMR, CAT-M, which consists of a small TPC for beam particle measurement (Beam TPC), a TPC for recoil particle measurement (Recoil TPC), and a dipole magnet for $\delta$-ray removal associated with heavy-ion beam irradiation.
        In this study, as a systematic measurement using $\mathrm{Kr}$ isotopes, we performed ISGMR measurements using $^{86}\mathrm{Kr}$ and $^{80}\mathrm{Kr}$ $(d, d')$ reactions.
        In this presentation, we report the details of the experiments and the performance of CAT-M.

        Speaker: Fumitaka Endo (Tohoku Univ)
    • 15:00 15:50
      Physics with AGATA (TBC) (2/2) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Angela Bracco (Univ. of Milano)
    • 15:50 16:00
      break 10m
    • 16:00 16:50
      Medical applications of nuclear physics 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Sunniva Siem (Oslo University)
    • 16:50 17:05
      break 15m
    • 17:05 17:55
      Quantal Rotation (4/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Stefan Frauendorf (Univ. of Notre Dome)
    • 19:00 21:00
      Discussion time
    • 09:35 10:25
      Hypernuclei (4/4) 50m
      Speaker: Prof. Satoshi N. Nakamura (Univ. of Tokyo)
    • 10:25 10:40
      break 15m
    • 10:40 11:30
      Large-scale shell-model calculations: from low-lying spectra to compound states 50m
      Speaker: Yutaka Utsuno (Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
    • 11:30 11:50
      Closing Ceremony 20m
    • 11:50 13:20
      Lunch 1h 30m