München 2004 – wissenschaftliches Programm
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A: Atomphysik
A XI: HV XI
A XI.1: Hauptvortrag
Freitag, 26. März 2004, 12:00–12:30, HS 133
Status of PHELIX laser and first experiments — •S. Borneis1, R. Bock1, E. Brambrink1,2, H. Brand1, J. Caird3, E. M. Campbell4, E. Gaul5, W. Geithner1, S. Goette1, C. Haefner1, T. Hahn1, H. M. Heuck1,6, D.H.H. Hoffmann1,2, D. Javarkova1, H.-J. Kluge1, T. Kuehl1, S. Kunzer1,7, T. Merz1,2, P. Neumayer1, M. D. Perry4, D. Reemts1, M. Roth1,2, S. Samek1,8, G. Schaumann1,2, F. Schrader1, W. Seelig2, A. Tauschwitz1, R. Thiel1, D. Ursescu1, P. Wiewior1,9, and U. Wittrock6 — 1Gesellschaft fuer Schwerionenforschung (GSI), Darmstadt — 2Technical University of Darmstadt — 3Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Livermore, USA — 4General Atomics, San Diego, USA — 5University of Texas, Austin, USA — 6FH Muenster — 7FH Darmstadt — 8University of Krakow, Poland — 9Julius-Maximilians University of Wuerzburg
GSI Darmstadt currently builds a 1 Kilojoule/1 Petawatt laser system - PHELIX - in close collaboration with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and the CEA in France. With PHELIX GSI will offer to the science community the world-wide unique combination of a high-current, high-energy (GeV/u) heavy-ion beam with an intense laser beam. This will open the door to a variety of fundamental science issues in the field of atomic physics, plasma physics and nuclear physics. We will report the current status of the project as well as the laser architecture that is based on 31.5 cm diameter Nova and Phebus amplifiers. First experiments will also be briefly reviewed.