Newsletter February 2019
Dear colleagues and friends of the HI-Jena,
welcome to the February 2019 issue of our institute newsletter.
Below you find informations and news about recent activities of the HI Jena.
Kind Regards,
Helmholtz Institute Jena
Preparations for first experiments at CRYRING from the local source

The CRYRING@ESR project is gradually approaching the end of its commissioning period and first experiment installations are already being ready for beam. In the past engineering runs, CRYRING has stably demonstrated storage of ions produced in the local injector beamline, with currents up to the space-charge limit and with an ion beam lifetime defined only by residual gas induced loss channels. Moreover, it proofed its capability for energy-ramping of the stored ions and of electron cooling, such that well-behaved beams of ions with narrow beam profiles and sharply defined energy can be delivered to the experimenters disposition. In the meantime, the new CRYRING laser laboratory has prepared all systems for a prototype beamtime on fluorescence spectroscopy using Mg+ beams from the local injector. The run shall commence already in March 2019.
CRYRING is a low-energy heavy-ion storage ring and the first installation realized in the FAIR project. With a local injector, the facility can already now run on its own and provide e.g. testing ring and experimental components and establishing procedures for data handling and analysis. However, Its full leverage will be unleashed, once it will be able to receive beams from ESR in all ion species, that the GSI accelerator complex is able to produce. Establishing this particle transfer from ESR is presently planned for late 2019. The low beam energy of the heavy, highly charged stored ions allows for precision spectroscopy of atomic processes and dynamics, as well as probing relevant reactions of nucleosynthesis networks in the Gamow window.
So far, three first experiments had received G-PAC approval with "A" rating and are presently being prepared together with collaboration partners from HI Jena, U Gießen, U Heidelberg and many others.
Michael Lestinsky and Frank Herfurth
News and Announcements
New DFG Research Unit with HI Jena participation
The German Research Foundation DFG funds the Research Unit "FOR 2783: Probing the Quantum Vacuum at the High-Intensity Frontier." In this research unit theorists and experimentalists from the Helmholtz Institute Jena, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, LMU Müchen and Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf team up to study signatures of quantum vacuum nonlinearities. The main focus of the reseach unit is on vacuum birefringence, photon-scattering phenomena, and electron-positron pair production.
Order in the periodic table — Measurement of ionization potentials of heavy elements confirms: actinide series ends with lawrencium
An international group of researchers including participants from GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt and its two branches, the Helmholtz Institutes Mainz and Jena, have determined the first ionization potentials of the artificially created elements fermium, mendelevium, nobelium, and lawrencium. The data unambiguously show that the actinide series ends with lawrencium. The results have been published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS).
The chemical elements fermium, mendelevium, nobelium, and lawrencium have the atomic numbers 100 to 103 in the periodic table of the elements. They do not occur naturally on earth, but can be artificially created, in nuclear fusion reactions at particle accelerators, for example. This process features low rates of production — at most a few atoms per second. All are unstable, decaying again within seconds to minutes. This renders studies of their chemical properties difficult, requiring complex experimental investigations of individual atoms.
In the current experiments the scientists looked at the first ionization potentials of the elements. This quantity measures the energy required to remove the least tightly bound electron from the outer shell of a neutral atom. The researchers expected the ionization potential to increase until nobelium is reached, which would correspond to a completely filled electron shell. For the following element, lawrencium, which possesses only a single, less strongly bound electron, a decrease in the ionization potential was expected.
Corresponding values for nobelium and lawrencium were already available from previous experiments. The present work expands the data set to the heaviest four members of the actinide elements, thus completing the data set of 14 elements of the whole actinide series. “The measured values are in agreement with the predictions of current relativistic calculations that were carried out in parallel with the experiment, and with the measurements carried out on nobelium using laser spectroscopy by a further collaboration working at GSI,” explained Professor Christoph Düllmann, head of the Superheavy Elements Chemistry departments at GSI and the Helmholtz Institute Mainz. “With this experiment we were able to unequivocally demonstrate that the actinide series ends with lawrencium, in analogy to the lighter lanthanide series, which is located above the actinides in the periodic table.”
The researchers were able to create and measure the artificial elements at the Tandem accelerator and the attached isotope separator at the Japanese research organization JAEA in Tokai, Japan. The first ionization potentials were determined using a surface ionization process. A gas stream in a Teflon tube carried the elements to a tantalum chamber with a surface heated to up to 3,000°C, where they could be ionized. Comparing the number of atoms fed in with that of ionized atoms provided a value for the efficiency of the ionization, from which the first ionization potential of the elements could be determined.
Research institutes from Germany, the Netherlands, Japan, Israel, and Switzerland participated in this work. (cp)
This press release with pictures is available here.
Upcoming events
Annual Meeting of the Helmholtz Programm "Matter and Technologies"
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
The fifth annual meeting of the programme Matter and Technologies will take place at Helmholtz Institute Jena from Tuesday, March 5, 2019 to Thursday, March 7, 2019.
The day before the workshop, Monday, March 4, 2019, there will be the opportunity for topical meetings. In addition the students connected to the programme will organize the Fifth MT student retreat, starting around noon on Monday.
More information and registration can be found on the meeting homepage. Please mind the registration deadline of February 18, 2019; abstracts for poster presentations have to be submitted by February 15, 2019.
COST-THOR Spring School on Science Communication
Prague, Czech Republic
Please see the associated poster and fact sheet.
Further information can also be found on the school’s website.
HGS-HIRe SUMMER STUDENT PROGRAM at GSI / FAIR
GSI Helmholtz Center, Darmstadt, Germany
The Summer Program is offered to students on the advanced undergraduate level (Bachelor, Master or Diploma) in physics and related natural science and engineering disciplines from Europe and GSI/FAIR partner countries. The majority of the offered projects will concern investigations and preparations towards our future project FAIR and its scientific experiments.
It would be nice, if you can bring this option to the attention of qualified students in lectures and seminars, etc. or privately or indirectly by informing your colleagues and collaboration members.
Further information for applicants can be found on this link: https://hgs-hire.de/summer-program
Poster: https://theory.gsi.de/stud-pro/HGS-HIRe/Poster2019.pdf
Applications and recommendations must reach us before FEBRUARY 15.
Seventh Joint Lecture Week of RS-APS and HGS-HIRe
Kloster Hardehausen, 34414 Warburg, Germany
This lecture week will be organized by RS-APS in cooperation with HGS-HIRe.
Topic: Imaging Techniques from the Optical to the X-Ray Regime
Recently finished theses
Optische Kohärenztomographie mit extrem ultravioletter Strahlung
S. Fuchs
(2018)
https://www.db-thueringen.de/receive/dbt_mods_00037866
Characterisation of a Laser Wakefield Accelerator with Ultra-Short Probe Pulses
M. Reuter
(2018)
https://www.db-thueringen.de/receive/dbt_mods_00038073
Charge State Tailoring for Relativistic Heavy Ion Beams
F. Kröger
(2018)
Recent publications
Crystal orientation-dependent polarization state of high-order harmonics
Y. S. You, J. Lu, E. F. Cunningham, C. Rödel, and S. Ghimire
Opt. Lett. 44, 530 (2019)
doi: 10.1364/OL.44.000530
All-optical signatures of quantum vacuum nonlinearities in generic laser fields
A. Blinne, H. Gies, F. Karbstein, C. Kohlfürst, and M. Zepf
Phys. Rev. D 99, 016006 (2019)
doi: 10.1103/PhysRevD.99.016006
All-optical structuring of laser-driven proton beam profiles
L. Obst-Huebl, T. Ziegler, F.-E. Brack, J. Branco, M. Bussmann, T. E. Cowan, C. B. Curry, F. Fiuza, M. Garten, M. Gauthier, S. Göde, S. H. Glenzer, A. Huebl, A. Irman, J. B. Kim, T. Kluge, S. D. Kraft, F. Kroll, J. Metzkes-Ng, R. Pausch, I. Prencipe, M. Rehwald, C. Rödel, H.-P. Schlenvoigt, U. Schramm, and K. Zeil
Nat. Commun. 9, 5292 (2018)
doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-07756-z
Coreless SQUID-based cryogenic current comparator for non-destructive intensity diagnostics of charged particle beams
V. Zakosarenko, M. Schmelz, T. Schönau, S. Anders, J. Kunert, V. Tympel, R. Neubert, F. Schmidl, P. Seidel, T. Stöhlker, D. Haider, M. Schwickert, T. Sieber, and R. Stolz
Supercond. Sci. Technol. 32, 014002 (2018)
doi: 10.1088/1361-6668/aaf206
Electron-positron pair production in slow collisions of heavy nuclei beyond the monopole approximation
I. A. Maltsev, V. M. Shabaev, R. V. Popov, Y. S. Kozhedub, G. Plunien, X. Ma, and Th. Stöhlker
Phys. Rev. A 98, 062709 (2018)
doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.98.062709
Fundamental limitations of the polarization purity of x rays
K. S. Schulze
APL Phot. 3, 126106 (2018)
doi: 10.1063/1.5061807
Investigating the influence of incident laser wavelength and polarization on particle acceleration and terahertz generation
A. H. Woldegeorgis, B. Beleites, F. Ronneberger, R. Grosse, and A. Gopal
Phys. Rev. E 98, 061201 (2018)
doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.98.061201
Microcalorimeters for X-Ray Spectroscopy of Highly Charged Ions at Storage Rings
S. Kraft-Bermuth, D. Hengstler, P. Egelhof, C. Enss, A. Fleischmann, M. Keller, and T. Stöhlker
Atoms 6, 59 (2018)
doi: 10.3390/atoms6040059
Controlling the Self-Injection Threshold in Laser Wakefield Accelerators
S. Kuschel, M. B. Schwab, M. Yeung, D. Hollatz, A. Seidel, W. Ziegler, A. Sävert, M. C. Kaluza, and M. Zepf
Phys. Rev. Lett. 121, 154801 (2018)
doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.154801
Table-top nanoscale coherent imaging with XUV light
J. Rothhardt, G. Tadesse, W. Eschen, and J. Limpert
J. Opt. 20, 113001 (2018)
doi: 10.1088/2040-8986/aae2d8
Hard X-ray generation from ZnO nanowire targets in a non-relativistic regime of laser-solid interactions
Z. Samsonova, S. Höfer, R. Hollinger, T. Kämpfer, I. Uschmann, R. Röder, L. Trefflich, O. Rosmej, E. Förster, C. Ronning, D. Kartashov, and C. Spielmann
Appl. Sci. 8, 1728 (2018)
doi: 10.3390/app8101728
Controlling quantum random walk with a step-dependent coin
S. Panahiyan, and S. Fritzsche
New J. Phys. 20, 083028 (2018)
doi: 10.1088/1367-2630/aad899
Generation of keV hot near-solid density plasma states at high contrast laser-matter interaction
O. N. Rosmej, Z. Samsonova, S. Höfer, D. Kartashov, C. Arda, D. Khaghani, A. Schoenlein, S. Zähter, A. Hoffmann, R. Loetzsch, A. Saevert, I. Uschmann, M. E. Povarnitsyn, N. E. Andreev, L. P. Pugachev, M. C. Kaluza, and C. Spielmann
Phys. Plasmas 25, 083103 (2018)
doi: 10.1063/1.5027463