The browser you are using is not supported by this website. All versions of Internet Explorer are no longer supported, either by us or Microsoft (read more here: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/windows/end-of-ie-support).

Please use a modern browser to fully experience our website, such as the newest versions of Edge, Chrome, Firefox or Safari etc.

Joakim

Joakim Cederkäll

Professor

Joakim

CALIFA, a Dedicated Calorimeter for the (RB)-B-3/FAIR

Author

  • D. Cortina-Gil
  • H. Alvarez-Pol
  • T. Auman
  • V. Avdeichikov
  • M. Bendel
  • J. Benlliure
  • D. Bertini
  • A. Bezbakh
  • T. Bloch
  • M. Boehmer
  • M. J. G. Borge
  • J. A. Briz
  • P. Cabanelas
  • E. Casarejos
  • M. Carmona Gallardo
  • Joakim Cederkäll
  • L. Chulkov
  • M. Dierigl
  • D. Di Julio
  • I. Duran
  • E. Fiori
  • D. Gonzalez
  • A. Gorshkov
  • A. Heinz
  • M. Hei
  • W. Henning
  • G. Ickert
  • A. Ignatov
  • B. Jakobsson
  • H. T. Johansson
  • Th Kroell
  • R. Kruecken
  • S. Krupko
  • N. Kurz
  • T. Le Bleis
  • B. Loeher
  • E. Nacher
  • T. Nilsson
  • C. Parrilla
  • A. Perea
  • N. Pietralla
  • B. Pietras
  • R. Reifarth
  • J. Sanchez del Rio
  • D. Savran
  • S. Sidorchuk
  • H. Simon
  • L. Schnorrenberger
  • O. Tengblad
  • P. Teubig
  • R. Thies
  • J. A. Vilan
  • M. von Schmid
  • M. Winkel
  • S. Winkler
  • F. Wamers
  • P. Yanez

Summary, in English

The (RB)-B-3 experiment (Reactions with Relativistic Radioactive Beams) at FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research) is a versatile setup dedicated to the study of reactions induced by high-energy radioactive beams. It will provide kinematically complete measurements with high efficiency, acceptance and resolution, making possible a broad physics program with rare-isotopes. CALIFA (CALorimeter for In-Flight detection of gamma-rays and high energy charged pArticles), is a complex detector based on scintillation crystals, that will surround the target of the (RB)-B-3 experiment. CALIFA will act as a total absorption gamma-calorimeter and spectrometer, as well as identifier of charged particles from target residues. This versatility is its most challenging requirement, demanding a huge dynamic range, to cover from low energy gamma-rays up to 300 MeV protons. This fact, along with the high-energy of the beams determine the conceptual design of the detector, presented in this paper, together with the technical solutions proposed for its construction.

Department/s

  • Nuclear physics

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Pages

99-101

Publication/Series

Nuclear Data Sheets

Volume

120

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Subatomic Physics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0090-3752