ATOMKI is the Institute for Nuclear Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The institute is located in Debrecen and was established in 1954 by Sándor Szalay, the founding director.
ATOMKI became independent from the Institute of Experimental Physics of the Kossuth Lajos University (presently called University of Debrecen), where Sándor Szalay started and directed nuclear physics research for decades. At present, the main research fields of Atomki are atom-, nuclear-, and particle physics, ion beam analytics, technique of detection and signal processing, environmental analytics, radioactive dating, radiochemistry, and solid state physics. The director is Zsolt Dombrádi, D.Sc.
Some of its buildings were originally the National Orphanage for Teachers' Children, built in 1917.[1]
When | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
1961–1978 | 800 kV cascade accelerator | nuclear reactions |
1978–1992 | same | electron-atom collisions |
1961–1984 | 300 kV neutron generator | neutron physics |
1971- | 1 MV Van de Graaff-accelerator | atomic collisions |
1971- | 5 MV Van de Graaff-accelerator | nuclear physics astrophysics analytics atomic collisions |
1985- | cyclotron (~18 MeV for proton) | nuclear physics production of isotopes testing of materials |
1997- | electron-cyclotron resonance ion source | plasma physics atomic physics |
2013 | Discovery of neutrino particle | atomic physics
nuclear physics |
2014- | Tandetron | nuclear physics |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Old photos". ATOMKI. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
Further reading
edit- Institute of Nuclear Research of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Debrecen (PDF). 2004. p. 28. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2010. Booklet including brief history of the institute (page 7)
External links
edit47°32′37″N 21°37′31″E / 47.54369819601174°N 21.625223951786353°E