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Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course

Atomic nuclei are made of nucleons, protons and neutrons, composed by quarks strongly interacting via gluons. How such complex objects as particles and nuclei are built? remains a fundamental question. A new "frontier" of subatomic physics is the exploration of exotic nuclei, elements and...

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Autor principal: Chomaz, P
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2006
Materias:
XX
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/961908
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author Chomaz, P
author_facet Chomaz, P
author_sort Chomaz, P
collection CERN
description Atomic nuclei are made of nucleons, protons and neutrons, composed by quarks strongly interacting via gluons. How such complex objects as particles and nuclei are built? remains a fundamental question. A new "frontier" of subatomic physics is the exploration of exotic nuclei, elements and isotopes not stable enough to have survived on Earth. Exotic nuclei populated vast unknown regions of the nuclear chart where many unexpected structures have recently been discovered. Exotic nuclei synthesized in laboratory allow large variation of the neutron and proton chemical composition of nuclear systems needed to uncover the true nature of the subatomic structures and to understand the origin of elements in the Universe. This lecture will be an introduction to the open questions and key issues on the properties and structure of atomic nuclei and nuclear matter.
id cern-961908
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2006
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spelling cern-9619082022-11-03T08:22:14Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/961908engChomaz, PIntroducion to Nuclear Physics: courseXXAtomic nuclei are made of nucleons, protons and neutrons, composed by quarks strongly interacting via gluons. How such complex objects as particles and nuclei are built? remains a fundamental question. A new "frontier" of subatomic physics is the exploration of exotic nuclei, elements and isotopes not stable enough to have survived on Earth. Exotic nuclei populated vast unknown regions of the nuclear chart where many unexpected structures have recently been discovered. Exotic nuclei synthesized in laboratory allow large variation of the neutron and proton chemical composition of nuclear systems needed to uncover the true nature of the subatomic structures and to understand the origin of elements in the Universe. This lecture will be an introduction to the open questions and key issues on the properties and structure of atomic nuclei and nuclear matter.oai:cds.cern.ch:9619082006
spellingShingle XX
Chomaz, P
Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course
title Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course
title_full Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course
title_fullStr Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course
title_full_unstemmed Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course
title_short Introducion to Nuclear Physics: course
title_sort introducion to nuclear physics: course
topic XX
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/961908
work_keys_str_mv AT chomazp introduciontonuclearphysicscourse