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Contact: Ken Kingery, NSCL, Office: 517-908-7482, Kingery@nscl.msu.edu
Published April 30, 2012
For Immediate Release
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Theoretical physicists from an international collaboration have successfully described the physics underpinning the structure of the heaviest oxygen isotope ever seen in the laboratory, oxygen-26. The theoretical results hold great promise for the understanding of nuclear forces in systems with many interacting protons and neutrons.
Contact: Ken Kingery, NSCL, Office: 517-908-7482, Kingery@nscl.msu.edu
Published April 12, 2012
For Immediate Release
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Nuclear physicists recently witnessed an atomic nucleus do something that nobody had ever seen one do before – two neutrons at the same time.
Emitting them, that is.
The 2012 Graduate Brochure is here! Inside, you will find everything you need to know about applying and attending graduate school at NSCL and MSU. From faculty profiles to a profile of the city and campus, from the application process to the careers available to graduates, you'll find it all right here.
Watch as WKAR visits the lab to speak to Outreach Coordinator Zach Constan about the Physics of Atomic Nuclei (PAN) Summer Program!