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Perrot, L.

Paper Title Page
G-02 Status of the Caviar Detector at LISE-GANIL 360
 
  • L. Perrot
    IPNO/IN2P3/CNRS, Orsay
  • S. Grévy, C. Houarner, R. Hue, C. Marry
    GANIL, Caen
  • S.M. Lukyanov, Yu. Penionzhkevich
    JINR, Dubna
 
 

Physics that motivated the building of the LISE magnetic spectrometer, main ideas exposed in the scientific council of GANIL June 4th 1981 by M. Brian and M. Fleury, were: atomic physics studies with stripped ions and the study of new isotopes produced by the fragmentation of beams. The LISE line is a doubly achromatic spectrometer (angle and position), with a resolution better than 10-3. Since the first experiment done in 1984, several improvements of the spectrometer were performed: use of a achromatic degrader (1987, used for the first time in the world), building of the achromatic deviation and the Wien Filter (1990), building of a new selection dipole and associated vertical platform (1994), building of the new LISE2000 line (2001), use of the CAVIAR detector (2002), building of the CLIM target (2007). Despite an extreme international competition, the LISE spectrometer remains a world-leader equipment using more than 50 % and up to 90 % of the beam time available at GANIL. This paper presents the status of CAVIAR detector which consists of a MWPC dedicated to in flight particle position at the first dispersive plane of LISE. Since two years, intensive efforts were done with the objective to make available a “plug and play” detector for nuclear physic experiment. We will describe the system from MWPC up to acquisition system. As example few experimental results will be presented.

 
G-03 HEBT Lines for the SPIRAL2 Facility 365
 
  • L. Perrot, J.L. Biarrotte
    IPNO/IN2P3/CNRS, Orsay
  • P. Bertrand, G. Normand
    GANIL, Caen
  • D. Uriot
    SACM/IRFU/DSM/CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette
 
 

The SPIRAL2 facility at GANIL-Caen is now in its construction phase, with a project group including the participation of many French laboratories (CNRS, CEA) and international partners. The SPIRAL2 facility will be able to produce various accelerated beams at high intensities: 40 MeV Deuterons, 33 MeV Protons with intensity until 5mA and heavy ions with q/A=1/3 up to 14.5MeV/u until 1mA current. We will present the status of the beam dynamics studies recently performed for the high energy beam transport lines of the facility. Various studies were performed on beam-dump concerning beam dynamics, safety and thermo-mechanicals aspects. New experimental areas using stable beams and the cave dedicated to radioactive ion production will be presented according the scientific program.