3rd Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Volume 54, Number 10
Tuesday–Saturday, October 13–17, 2009;
Waikoloa, Hawaii
Session 1WA: Workshop on Physics of Exotic Nuclei
9:00 AM–12:30 PM,
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Room: Kohala 1
Chair: Baha Balantekin, University of Wisconsin
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.HAW.1WA.1
Abstract: 1WA.00001 : Japan-US collaboration in Nuclear Physics
9:00 AM–9:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Akito Arima
(Japan Science Foundation, President)
I will mention some highlights from the history of Japan-US
collaboration in Nuclear Physics. Although I have memories of
my personal strong ties with many friends in US, I shall rather
skip them, and focus on three major collaborative works which
have made significant impacts on the developments of nuclear
physics. The first one is the INS (Institute for Nuclear
Study, University of Tokyo) - Berkeley collaboration. As well
known, this led to the beginning of Rare Isotope (RI) beam
experiments as a global trend and consequently the discovery of
neutron halo by Tanihata et al. This Berkeley experiment was
inspired by the Japanese Numatron project, which has remained
only a plan. The second one would be RHIC. The RHIC is
probably one of the most successful products of the INS-
Berkeley project at least conceptually. Nagamiya has led US
efforts over years, which has produced QGP finally, while he
has moved back to Japan before this moment. The third point I
would like to mention is the RIKEN Brookhaven Center. This has
been supported by T.D. Lee strongly, and has contributed to the
developments of spin physics, QGP experiments, Lattice QCD
calculation. It also encouraged US young theoreticians by the
supportive program with US universities. I now see many active
physicists who were under this program. Now we have JUSTIPEN
(Japan-US Theory Institute of Physics with Exotic Nuclei)
program by DOE through the University of Tennessee. Since the
summer of 2007, over fifty physicists including experimentalists
have come to Japan for theoretical studies, and many workshops
have been organized. Thanks also to its Japanese matching fund
EFES(International Research Network on Exotic Femto Systems), a
large number of Japanese physicists visited US, having many
workshops and collaborations. At the era of RIBF completion
and FRIB initialization, the Japan-US collaboration becomes of
more significance, and I hope that this workshop and the joint
meeting this week will accelerate the developments of this
frontier field of physics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.HAW.1WA.1