AP-Seminare

Recent activities at SHIPTRAP

by Michael Block (GSI Darmstadt und HI Mainz)

Europe/Berlin
SB3 2.283 (Atomic Physics Seminar Room)

SB3 2.283

Atomic Physics Seminar Room

Description
The Penning trap mass spectrometer SHIPTRAP at GSI is presently the only one of its kind worldwide where direct high-precision mass measurements of the heaviest elements are performed. In pioneering experiments on nobelium and lawrencium isotopes the strength of shell effects around the deformed subshell closure at N = 152 has been studied with SHIPTRAP. In order to extend these measurements to heavier elements with even lower production rate several improvements are being implemented. A new cryogenic gas stopping cell has recently been commissioned yielding a two times higher extraction efficiency when operated at 40 K. In addition, a novel method for high-precision mass measurements, the phase-imaging ion-cyclotron-resonance method (PI-ICR), has been developed. It provides an increase in resolving power by a factor of forty and a gain in precision by a factor of five. This performance opens the door for mass measurements with very high precision, relevant, for example, in the context of neutrino physics. In a recent experiment we have measured the mass difference of 187Re and 187Os with a precision of 30 eV. Our result is in good agreement with results obtained using micro-calorimeters and resolves a long-standing discrepancy in the literature. In my presentation I will review the experiments in the nobelium region, address the technical developments, and discuss some recent PI-ICR results.