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    <title>Dr. Gordon Drake's Research Group</title>
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      <text xml:space="preserve" bytes="3545">University of Windsor - Canada

[[Image:IMGP8659.JPG|650px]]

== About Us ==
Dr. G.W.F. Drake's research group is a team of graduate students, undergraduate students and postdoctoral fellows based at the University of Windsor in Canada's southern-most border city.  

We develop new tools to probe the properties of atoms and nuclei by combining the high precision theoretical techniques developed in-house with the high precision measurements made possible by the modern methods of laser spectroscopy.  We also work in close collaboration with Dr. Zong-Chao Yan and his colleagues at the University of New Brunswick, and Wuhan University in China.

The results calculated using techniques developed at the University of Windsor help fuel an industry of research at Argonne National Laboratory, TRIUMF, GSI (Darmstadt), and other laboratories and universities around the world.

The theoretical techniques employed include variational calculations with large correlated basis sets to solve the Schroedinger equation, and the evaluation of relativistic and quantum electrodynamic contributions to atomic processes.

== Research Summary ==
The unifying theme of our research is the development of new
measurement tools through the combined application of both high precision theory and experiment to atoms.  Two examples are a
significant new value for the fine structure constant, which is one
of the fundamental constants of nature, and table-top measurements
of the size of the atomic nucleus.  Recent successes at Argonne
(U.S.), GSI (Germany) and TRIUMF (Canada) have focused on the
so-called neutron-rich &quot;halo&quot; nuclei. These exotic structures have
extra planetary neutrons surrounding a tightly bound core of
neutrons and protons.  The significance of the results is that they
enable one to distinguish amongst the various theoretical models
proposed for the effective forces holding the nucleus together.  By
studying structures that fall apart easily, we learn about the
forces holding them together.  A fascinating new project for the
future involves a search for new physics beyond the standard model
of elementary particles, as revealed by angular correlations
following beta decay of the halo nucleus.

Two recent advances have made these initiatives possible.  First,
our work has yielded unprecedented levels of accuracy in calculating
the properties of atoms from first principles.  Some of this
requires the high performance computing facilities of SHARCNET,
together with fundamental advances in methods to calculate essential
corrections due to relativity and quantum electrodynamics.  I have
formed an international collaboration of other researchers in Canada
and China to carry out this work, with the help of dedicated
resources from SHARCNET.

Second, we work in close collaboration with the top experimental
groups at particle accelerators around the world to exploit the
techniques of modern laser resonance spectroscopy to perform
measurements of exquisite accuracy and sensitivity.  The ability to
trap and study just a single atom plays a key role.  A long sequence
of joint papers published in Physical Review Letters has resulted
from these collaborations. Our theoretical results dominate the
literature in this area, and they are providing the motivation for
experimental groups to advance the state-of-the-art for high
precision laser metrology.  Measurements of the nuclear charge
radius are now available all the way from helium-3 to helium-8,
lithium-6 to lithium-11, and beryllium-8 to beryllium-12.
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