We have measured the total cross sections for electron capture by bare Pb 821 ions and ionization of hydrogenlike Pb 811 ions at 33 TeV (160 GeV͞A, g 168) in solid targets of Be, C, Al, Cu, Sn, and Au. The total capture cross sections are dominated by electron capture from pair production and are compared with theoretical calculations. The 1s ionization cross sections obtained are significantly smaller than those predicted by Anholt and Becker [Phys. Rev. A 36, 4628 (1987)]. The Pb radiative lifetimes extended by g 168 have a strong effect on the survival probability of excited states against ionization in high-Z solid targets. [S0031-9007(97) PACS numbers: 34.50. Fa, 34.80.Lx Interactions involving high-Z ions in the ultrarelativistic regime ͑.10 GeV͞amu͒, where the relevant physics is best described in terms of the Lorentz factor g, are currently a frontier in high-energy atomic collision physics [1]. A theoretical description of electron capture and ionization processes has been challenging in this regime because the interaction of high-Z projectile and target species (where Za ϳ 0.5) is strong enough at small impact parameters and large g to potentially invalidate perturbation treatments. Numerous methods for treating these processes using quantum electrodynamics (QED) in the ultrarelativistic regime now exist [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10].An ultrarelativistic ion can capture an electron via three mechanisms: (i) radiative electron capture (REC), (ii) nonradiative capture (NRC), and (iii) electron capture via e 1 e 2 pair production (ECPP), in which the e 1 e 2 pair is produced by the intense electromagnetic pulse that arises when the projectile ion passes near a target nucleus. Capture cross sections s REC , s NRC , and s ECPP scale roughly as ϳZ t ͞g, ϳZ 5 t ͞g, and ϳZ 2 t ln g, respectively, where Z t is the target atomic number [2]. Each process has approximately the same dependence on the projectile atomic number, i.e., Z 5 p . The REC and NRC mechanisms, which dominate below the ultrarelativistic regime [11][12][13], become insignificant compared to ECPP when g . 100 even for high Z t . We report the first highenergy measurements ͑g 168͒ where s ECPP dominates the capture cross sections of competing mechanisms. Ionization cross sections are several orders of magnitude larger than capture, and our measurements test theory at the highest energy reported to date [2,10].The development of new relativistic ion colliders such as the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory or the Large Hadron Collider at CERN [2,8,14] requires knowledge of the capture cross sections at high enough g so that beam lifetimes can be accurately predicted. The cross section for the ECPP process is of practical interest to collider designers because the lower charge-state projectiles produced are lost from the beam circulating in a ring. A significant loss rate of these ions by ECPP and also by nuclear loss processes decreases the ion storage time. These machines will operate at an effective g of 2.3 ...
We propose to install a storage ring at an ISOL-type radioactive beam facility for the first time. Specifically, we intend to install the heavy-ion, low-energy ring TSR at the HIE-ISOLDE facility in CERN, Geneva. Such a facility will provide a capability for experiments with stored secondary beams that is unique in the world. The envisaged physics programme is rich and varied, spanning from investigations of nuclear groundstate properties and reaction studies of astrophysical relevance, to investigations with highly-charged ions and pure isomeric beams. The TSR can also be used to remove isobaric contaminants from stored ion beams and for systematic studies within the neutrino beam programme. In addition to experiments performed using beams recirculating within the ring, cooled beams can also be extracted and exploited by external spectrometers for high-precision measurements. The existing TSR, which is presently in operation at the Max-Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, is well-suited and can be employed for this purpose. The physics cases, technical details of the existing ring facility and of the beam requirements at HIE-ISOLDE, together with the cost, time and manpower estimates for the transfer, installation and commissioning of the TSR at ISOLDE are discussed in the present technical design report.
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