摘要
Nuclei consist of up to hundreds of nucleons orbiting the nucleus billions of times per second, filling 60 % of the nuclear volume, and interacting with both the strong and electromagnetic forces. One might expect complete chaos but nuclei exhibit astonishing simplicities and regularities. These can be understood with simple concepts of structure, the effects of the Pauli Principle, and the appearance of various symmetries. New horizons in nuclear structure, enabled by new technology, are radically changing our ideas about the nucleus and the models that describe it.
报告人简介
Richard Casten, Ph.D,1967, Yale University. 25 years at Brookhaven National Laboratory after post docs at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and LANL. In 1995 he went to Yale and became the Director of the Wright Nuclear Structure Laboratory, with its 20 MV Tandem accelerator from 1995-2008. He is the D. Allan Bromley Professor of Physics. Over 10000 citations and an h-index of 50. Winner of the 2011 Bonner Prize, the Alexander von Humboldt Prize (1983) and the DNP Mentoring Award (2010). Honorary Doctorates from the University of Surrey(UK) and Bucharest University(Romania).
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