ISOLDE contains both temporary and fixed experimental setups. Temporary setups in the ISOLDE facility are there for shorter time periods, and generally focus on detecting specific decay modes of nuclei. The fixed experimental setups have a permanent position at the facility. They include:
COLLAPS The
COLinear
LAser
SPectro
Scopy (COLLAPS) experiment has been operating at ISOLDE since the late 1970s and is the oldest active experiment at the facility. COLLAPS studies
ground and
isomeric state properties of highly-unstable (
exotic), short-lived nuclei, including measurements of their
spins,
electro-
magnetic moments and
charge radii. The experiment uses the technique of collinear spectroscopy using lasers to access necessary
atomic transitions.
EC-SLI The
Emission
Channeling with
Short-
Lived
Isotopes (EC-SLI) experiment uses the
emission channelling method to study
lattice locations of
dopants and
impurities in
crystals and
epitaxial thin films. This is done by introducing short-lived isotope probes into the crystal and measuring the electron intensity affected to determine whether they have been affected by the decay particles emitted.
IDS The
ISOLDE
Decay
Station (IDS) experiment is a setup that allows different experiment systems to be coupled to the station, using spectroscopy techniques such as fast timing or
time-of-flight (ToF). The station, operational since 2014, is used to measure decay properties of a wide range of radioactive isotopes for a variety of applications. Results from the IDS have been useful for astrophysics, as they measured the probability of a particular decay seen in
red giant stars.
ISS The
ISOLDE
Solenoidal
Spectrometer (ISS) experiment uses an ex-
MRI magnet to direct RIBs at a light target. Conditions produced by this reaction replicate those present in astrophysical processes, and measuring the properties of the atomic nuclei will also provide a better understanding of nucleon-nucleon interactions in exotic nuclei. The experiment was commissioned in 2021 and finished construction during the
Long Shutdown 2. Since the start of its operation, ISOLTRAP has measured the mass of hundreds of short-lived radioactive nuclei, as well as confirming the existence of
doubly magic isotopes. The setup was upgraded in 2011 to include a multi-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer (MR-ToF), allowing the detection of more exotic isotopes.
LUCRECIA The LUCRECIA experiment is based on a
Total Absorption gamma Spectrometer (TAS), which measures the gamma transitions in an unstable parent nucleus. From these measurements, nuclear structure is analysed and used to confirm theoretical models and make
stellar predictions.
Miniball The Miniball experiment is a gamma-ray spectroscopy setup consisting of a high-resolution
germanium detector array. The experiment is used to analyse the decays of short-lived nuclei involved in
Coulomb excitation and transfer reactions. Results from Miniball at ISOLDE that found evidence of pear-shaped heavy nuclei was named in the
Institute of Physics (IoP) "top 10 breakthroughs in physics".
MIRACLS The
Multi
Ion
Reflection
Apparatus for
Co
Llinear
Spectroscopy (MIRACLS) experiment determines properties exotic radioisotopes by measuring their
hyperfine structure. MIRACLS uses laser spectrometer on ion bunches trapped in a MR-ToF, to increase the flight path of the ions. Currently, the experiment is being designed and constructed.
SEC The
Scattering
Experiments
Chamber (SEC) experiment facilitates diversified reaction experiments, and is complimentary to the ISS and Miniball, due to SEC not detecting
gamma radiation. The station is used to study low-lying
resonances in light atomic nuclei through transfer reactions.
VITO The
Versatile
Ion polarisation
Technique
Online (VITO) experiment is a beamline used to investigate the
weak interaction and determine properties of short-lived unstable nuclei. The experiment uses the technique of
optical pumping to produce laser-polarised RIBs allowing for versatile studies. There are three independent studies on the VITO beamline including a β-
NMR spectroscopy station.
WISArD The
Weak
Interaction
Studies with 32
Ar Decay (WISArD) experiment investigates the weak interaction to search for physics beyond the
Standard Model (SM). The WISArD setup reuses some of the
WITCH experiment's infrastructure, as well as its superconducting magnet. The experiment measures the angular correlation between particles emitted by a parent and daughter nucleus to calculate non-SM contributions. ==Solid-state physics laboratory==