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Welcome to PAN @ ND 2013 Sponsors Physics Frontier Center JINA – Who/Where? JINA – Why? Origin and fate of matter in our universe “we are made of star stuff” Understanding the cosmos on the tera-scale while interpreting observations and events on the femto scale Many open questions can now be answered because: Rapid growth of observational results Expanding computational capabilities New experimental and theoretical opportunities JINA - Collaboration Nuclear Astrophysics Theory Nuclear Experiment Astronomy What to expect Schedule Lectures Experiments Evening Activities Groups Posters Schedule On to Nuclear Physics! You are made of? Example: A Helium Atom Electron Proton Neutron Nuclear scientists study the atomic nucleus Why study nuclei? Nuclear Medicine Archeology/ Geophysics Nuclear Power What we learn about the nucleus can generate new ideas and technologies in the fields of space science, homeland security, biology/ecology, etc. Nuclei are small! An atomic nucleus is as small compared to you… …as you are compared to our ENTIRE solar system We can’t see the nucleus, so it’s hard to work with. But we’ ve still found clever ways to control and study it! Periodic Table of the Elements Each element (such as carbon) comes in many varieties, some common, some rare Protons (Elements) Isotopes: varieties of an element Carbon-12 All these carbon isotopes are chemically identical, but different numbers of neutrons gives them diverse nuclear properties Neutrons (Isotopes) Carbon-11 Carbon-10 Protons (Elements) The nuclear mission Study interesting isotopes Grey boxes are stable isotopes of an element. . Neutrons (Isotopes) Colored boxes are unstable, sometimes rare isotopes of an element. These have too many or too few neutrons to be stable. Chart of Nuclides Radioactive isotopes decay Alpha particle (He nucleus) Proton Unstable nuclei are radioactive, meaning they will decay (come apart)… Gamma ray Neutron Electron …and give off radiation of some kind! Isotopes studied often have short half-lives (< 1s) Distinction Sources of radiation What are Cosmic Rays? ● ● ● ● http://neutronm.bartol.udel.edu/catch/title.html Cosmic rays are particles from outer space ● From the sun, other stars, supernovae...? 90% are protons - primary ● But we rarely detect those... React with particles in atmosphere to create secondary We usually detect decay products - muons (more massive electron) Why study radioactive nuclei? BIG BANG STARS BURNING STARS BURNING MANY CREATED BY EXPLODING STARS MAKING RARE NUCLEI HUMAN-MADE (OUR BEST THEORY SO FAR) HUMAN-MADE Timeline What to measure? ● Size (radius) ● Shape ● Structure ● Mass (Binding Energy) ● Half-life Where to measure? Black – production in target Magenta – in-flight production FRIB (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams) FRIB NSCLdesign today MSU was chosen as the site for FRIB: a $600 million US Department of Energy project to build a world-leading laboratory over the next decade. Construction has begun and will be completed by 2021. DIANA (Dual Ion Accelerators for Nuclear Astrophysics) The DIANA collaboration has been formed to design and built an underground accelerator laboratory. The two proposed complementary high intensity accelerators will support experiments that address long-standing questions in the field providing potentially transformational results about the inner structure and working of stars.