Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Nuclear Physics Research At Surrey …from pure to applied and everything in between..

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Nuclear Physics Research At Surrey …from pure to applied and everything in between.."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nuclear Physics Research At Surrey …from pure to applied and everything in between..

2 What is (nuclear physics) research ? Pure fundamental, knowledge-driven inquisitive search for understanding…. To help obtain a basic, fundamental understanding of how things work. Part of the basic cultural fabric of society, research for research sake, beauty in nature, parallels to the arts. Usefulness….generation of income, to enhance the quality of life, (i.e., why bother at all ?)

3 Some areas…. Pure, fundamental nuclear physics research: –Exotic nuclei, some very ‘big science questions’ –What are the limits of nature ? –Underlying nuclear theory –Some surprises (e.g., nuclear halos) –How were the chemical elements created ? –Trapping (and releasing) nuclear energy.

4 Some more areas? (Some) applications of fundamental nuclear physics research: –Environmental / nuclear waste monitoring. Gamma-ray spectrometry..let’s play ‘find the uranium’ – Instrumentation development, new detectors, –Surrey ion-beam centre (PIXE, PIGE) Looking at diseases (arthritis with nuclear probes) –Looking inside stuff….

5 A recent survey of General Public in UK asked: “The nuclei of atoms make up 99.99% of all matter. So what are they made of? Electrons Quarks Photons Neutrinos DNA” Only 2% knew correct answer!! A recent survey of General Public in UK asked: “The nuclei of atoms make up 99.99% of all matter. So what are they made of? Electrons Quarks Photons Neutrinos DNA” Only 2% knew correct answer!! Is it surprising that the general public does not know this? Should we be worried? Does is matter??? Is it surprising that the general public does not know this? Should we be worried? Does is matter??? ANSWER: Quarks.

6 Atoms (‘indivisible’) …… ~10 -10 m, electrons (and their orbital structure) determine chemistry of the elements, e.g., NaCl Nuclei…..~10 -14 m across, protons determine the chemical element (Z); neutron number (N) determines the mass, (A = N+Z). > 99.9 % of the mass of the atom is in the nucleus. Nucleons (protons and neutrons ~10 -15 m) have a substructure, three quarks in each nucleon (‘ups’ and ‘downs’)…but they don’t exists on their own.

7

8 Chart of the Nuclei 1H1H 2D2D 3 He 4 He 6 Li 7 Li n 9 Be 3T3T 6 He 5 Li 6 Be 7 Be 8 Li 9 Li 10 Be 10 Li 11 Li 8 He 11 Be 12 Be 10 B 11 B 9B9B 14 Be 12 B 13 B 14 B 15 B 8B8B 7B7B 12 C 13 C 14 C 15 C 16 C 17 C 11 C 10 C 9C9C Z = No. of Protons 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 N = No. of Neutrons 012345 6789

9 October 2002 issue W.Catford et al., October 2002 issue W.Catford et al., Signal for existence of tetraneutron in 14 Be breakup reaction at GANIL

10 ‘Nuclei = combinations of protons (Z) and neutrons (N). Chart of the Nuclides = a ‘2-D’ periodic table…… <300 of the (Z,N) combinations are stable and make up’everyday’ atoms. ~7,000 other combinations are unstable nuclei. Most energetically stable nuclei in the middle, More exotic, unstable nuclei at the edges ….

11

12 Z=43 Tc Z=61 Pm Z=84 Po Elemental composition of the Solar Nebula

13

14

15 218 Po …formation of ‘exotic’ radioactive nuclei (in nature)…new elements created e.g., Pa, Actinium, Radium, Radon, Polonium etc.

16 ‘ 218 Po =Radium A’ ‘ 218 At =Radium B’ C D E 210 Po =Radium ‘F’ Radon =‘Emanation’ ‘Radium’ C’ C’’ The Natural Decay Chain for 238 U Aside: information here is used extensively in environmental monitoring; + radioactive dating – age of the earth ~10 9 yrs…evidence for evolution....

17

18

19 For a ‘typical’ nucleus, Nuclear Volume  A (= number of protons and neutrons) Since for a sphere, V = 4  R 3 /3 Thus nuclear radius, R  A 1/3  R = (1.2 x10 -15 m) A 1/3 Rutherford Scattering experiments showed this relation to hold for all nuclei studied….so what’s new to learn…. Then… 1985 – the strange case of ‘Lithium -11’ (note stable lithium isotopes are Lithium-6 and Lithium-7)

20 The probability of a beam of ‘neutron-rich’ lithium-11 isotopes colliding on carbon target was much larger than expected. Lithium beam target detector

21 Two Surrey nuclear ‘former PhD’ students

22 Nuclear ‘halos’ and Borromean Nuclei…. Nuclear ‘halos’ and Borromean Nuclei…. J.S. Al-Khalili & J.A. Tostevin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 76 (1996) 3903 Halo nuclei are examples of ‘Borromean’ systems, only bound with three Interactions…remove any one and the other two fall apart….

23 The neutron dripline in light nuclei tetra-neutron? proton dripline Borromean halo states N=8 4n4n 4n4n

24 How Far Can We Go ? What are the ‘nuclear limits’ ? What is the heaviest element ? How are the heavier elements formed ?

25 What about ‘inside’ the nucleus (i.e. nuclear ‘structure’) ? Can we see ‘inside’ the nucleus ? What does it tell us?

26

27 Nuclear Excited States – Nuclear Spectroscopy. Nuclei can exist in either the ground state or an excited state Each nucleus is different….but groups of structural patterns do appear…. Nuclear states labelled by spin and parity quantum numbers and energy. Excited states (usually) decay by gamma rays (non-visible, high energy light). Measuring gamma rays gives the energy differences between quantum states. gamma ray decay

28 Evidence for nuclear shell structure….. energy of 1 st excited state in even-even nuclei….E(2 + ). What do we expect ?

29 large gaps in single-particle structure of nuclei…MAGIC NUMBERS = ENERGY GAPS

30 (SOME) BIG NUCLEAR PHYSICS’ QUESTIONS TO BE ADDRESSED Does the ordering of nuclear quantum states change ? How robust are the magic numbers? What are the limits of nuclear existence? K-electrons L-electrons T1/2 = 10.4 s 205 Au 126 202 Pt N=82 N=126

31

32 A (big!) problem, can’t reproduce the observed elemental abundances. We can ‘fix’ the result by changing the shell structure (i.e. changing the magic numbers)….but is this scientifically valid ? N=126 N=82 Need to look at N=82 and 126 ‘exotic’ nuclei in detail….

33 Turning Lead into Gold and Platinum….

34

35

36 Super Heavy Elements? Rutherford worked with decays from Thorium and Uranium the heaviest element (Z=90 & 92) known at the time. He inferred their presence and other elements in their decay chains by characteristic alpha decay sequences….

37 Darmstadtium Roentgenium Copernicium

38 Selection of science news websites, between 6 and 10 April 2010:

39 Yu. Ts. Oganessian et al.

40 Predictions for the heaviest elements….

41 Robust theoretical predictions of nuclear quantum shell structure in the heaviest (indeed, so far unknown) elements ….these drive future experimental investigations

42 Nuclear isomers: energy traps [Phil Walker and George Dracoulis, Nature 399 (1999) 35] excited state half-lives ranging from nanoseconds to years

43

44 (‘Big’) Physics Questions from the STFC Nuclear Physics Advisory Panel What is the Nature of Nuclear Matter? What are the limits of nuclear existence? How do simple patterns emerge in complex nuclei? Can nuclei be described in terms of our understanding of the underlying fundamental interactions? What is the equation-of-state of nuclear matter? How does the ordering of quantum states change in extremely unstable nuclei? Are there new forms of structure and symmetry at the limits of nuclear existence? What are the Origins of the Elements? How, and where, were the heavy elements synthesised? What are the key reaction processes that drive explosive astrophysical events such as supernovae, and X-ray bursts? What is the equation-of-state of compact matter in neutron stars? What are the nuclear processes, and main astrophysical sites, that produce the γ-ray emitting radionuclides observed in our galaxy? How do nuclear reactions influence the evolution of massive stars, and how do they contribute to observed elemental abundances?

45 SN1987a before and after !!

46 Q  210 Pb) = 5.41 MeV E  = 5.30 MeV E( 206 Pb) = 0.11 MeV T1/2 = 138 days. ‘ 218 Po =Radium A’ ‘ 218 At =Radium B’ C D E 210 Po =Radium ‘F’ Radon =‘Emanation’ ‘Radium’ C’ C’’ The Natural Decay Chain for 238 U BUT: Evidently, heavier (radioactive) elements like Th (Z=90) ; U (Z=92) exist ? How are they made?

47 = 214 Pb = 214 Bi

48 Movie

49

50

51

52

53 Surrey Ion Beam Centre 3 MV Tandetron

54 Ion beam induced charge (IBIC) irradiation study in synthetic single crystal diamond using 2.6 MeV protons CCE [%] 406080100 Counts [x10 3 ] 0 20 40 60 +150 V (holes) -100 V (electrons) (b) 110 25 (5  4)x10 15 0.05  0.04 F (1.0  0.4)x10 15 0.18  0.08 E ( 5  1)x10 14 0.6  0.14 D (1.0  01)x10 14 2.6  0.3 C (1.1  01)x10 13 2.4  0.3 B (1.1  01)x10 12 2.6  0.3 A Dose [cm -2 ] Area [10 -3 cm 2 ] Label A. Lohstroh, P. J. Sellin, S. Gkoumas, J. M. Parkin, P. Veeramani, G. Prekas, M. C. Veale, and J. Morse, phys. stat. sol. (a) 2008, 205(9); p.2211-2215

55 Synovial Joints

56 Sections from human femoral head, showing typical scan areas Bone scan 1Bone scan 2 Trabecular bone

57 Proton beam scanned across the sample in 2D grid van Donkelaar et al., J. Anat. (2007) 210, pp186–194,

58

59 PIGE 19 F(p,p'γ ) 19 F; γ-rays of 110 and 197 keV 23 Na(p,p'γ) 23 Na & 23 Na(p,α'γ) 20 Ne; γ-rays: 440, 1634, 1636 keV 35 Cl(p,p'γ) 35 Cl and 37 Cl(p,γ) 38 Ar; γ-rays of 1220 and 1640 keV The peaks typically a result of nuclear excitation by inelastic scattering, with transitions to the ground state except for the 1634 keV peak of Na, which feeds transitions to the ground state. 3 MeV proton beam was focused to ~ 100 µm x 6 µm spot size and a beam current of ~0.5 µA

60 PIXE/PIGE Set-up Si (Li) PIXE detector Shielding large volume HPGe detector for PIGE

61

62

63

64

65 Basic Science is important –applications may take a long time to surface Radiation therapy has improved markedly in the UK. It would be improved further if we built some hadron therapy machines Can use PET scans to check where energy deposited

66 We also do this….(see poster by Leena Al-Sulaiti)

67 “Some people won’t even believe me when I tell them I’m a nuclear physicist. I think that it’s partly because I’m a woman and partly because I look younger than my age. Occasionally I can’t be bothered and say that I am a trapeze artist. They don’t believe that, either.” In the national newspapers...


Download ppt "Nuclear Physics Research At Surrey …from pure to applied and everything in between.."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google