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Scott MarleyMarley

Associate Professor of Physics

Ph.D., 2012 - Western Michigan University

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Department of Physics & Astronomy
211-C Nicholson Hall, Tower Dr.
Baton Rouge, LA 70803-4001
225-578-8278-Office
smarley@lsu.edu

Research Interests

I'm an experimental nuclear physicist who is interested the structure and decay properties of unstable atomic nuclei. To study some of the most exotic isotopes that exist in nature requires experiments using accelerated beams of radioactive ions and a variety of detection techniques. I primarily utilize nucleon transfer reactions in efforts to better understand how the strong interaction defines nuclear structure.

I am also interested in research to investigate the structure and beta-decay properties of very neutron-rich nuclei. In addition to nuclear energy and nonproliferation applications, many of these nuclei play a key role in the formation of the heavy elements in stellar environments during the astrophysical rapid neutron-capture process ("r-process").

My experimental research includes transfer reaction studies using the (HELIOS) with radioactive beams from the at Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) as well as stable beam experiments at the at the University of Notre Dame. I am a part of a collaboration which performs decay spectroscopy of neutron-rich fission fragments at the (CARIBU) facility at ANL.

Current and Select Publications

  • S. Bedoor, et al, 鈥淪tructure of 14B and the Evolution of N=9 Single-Neutron Isotones鈥 Phys. Rev. C 88, 011304 (2014).

  • N. Kinoshita, et al, 鈥淎 Shorter 146Sm Half-Life Measured and Implications for 146Sm-142Nd Chronology in the Solar System鈥, Science 335 (6076), 1614-1617 (2012).

  • B. B. Back et al, "First Experiment with HELIOS: The Structure of 13B", Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 132501 (2010).

  • A.H. Wuosmaa, et al, 鈥淪tructure of 7He by Proton Removal from 8Li with the (d,3He) Reaction鈥, Phys. Rev. C 78, 041302 (2008).