The Atomic Mass Evaluation (AME2012): Status and Perspectives

ORAL

Abstract

The atomic mass is a fundamental property of the nucleus that has wide applications in natural sciences and technology. The new evaluated mass table, AME2012, has been recently published as a collaborative effort between scientists from China, Europe and USA, under the leadership of G. Audi. It represents a significant update of the previous AME2003 evaluation by considering a large number of precise experimental results obtained at existing Penning Trap and Storage Ring facilities, thus expending the region of experimentally known masses towards exotic neutron- and proton-rich nuclei. Since the presence of isomers plays an important role in determining the masses of many nuclei, a complementary database, NUBASE2012, that contains the isomer-level properties for all nuclei was also developed. This presentation will briefly review recent achievements of the collaboration, present on-going activities, and reflect on ideas for future developments and challenges in the field of evaluation of atomic masses.

*The work at ANL was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.

Authors

  • F.G. Kondev

    • Argonne National Laboratory
    • ANL-Argonne, USA
  • G. Audi

    • CSNSM-Orsay, France
  • M. Wang

    • IMP-Lanzhou, China
  • X. Xu

    • IMP-Lanzhou, China
  • A.H. Wapstra

    • NIKHEF, Netherlands
  • M. MacCormick

    • IPN-Orsay, France
  • B. Pfeiffer

    • GSI-Darmstadt, Germany