18–22 Aug 2025
Europe/Berlin timezone

Nuclear masses play a central role in nuclear astrophysics, significantly impacting the origin of the elements and observables used to constrain ultradense matter. A variety of techniques are available to meet this need, varying in their emphasis on precision and reach from stability. These are complemented by theory tools that identify key masses and extrapolate beyond experimental reach.

The nuclear astrophysics community has regularly met to discuss the importance of nuclear masses and the path forward for the field, building connections between techniques, research groups across continents, and experiment to theory. In recent years there have been major advances in experiment, nuclear theory, and computational astrophysics. This workshop has the goal of training and showcasing the next generation of nuclear mass spectrometrists, summarizing the state-of-the-art in nuclear mass measurement and theory, and charting a course for the next 25 years of nuclear masses for nuclear astrophysics.

Specific goals of the meeting are to (1) Train and connect the scientists who will be leading nuclear mass measurements for astrophysics over the next decades, (2) Produce a whitepaper charting the course to leverage the complementarity of experimental techniques, while using nuclear and astrophysics theory to guide measurements in order to maximize science output and ultimate reach across the nuclear landscape. 

The meeting will be organized an early career researcher workshop during the first two days, followed by a three-day workshop for all participants. The last days of the meeting is dedicated to kickoff the writing of a whitepaper on “Nuclear Masses in Astrophysics for the Next 25 Years”.

Financial support for travel expenses will be available thanks to the event's sponsorship by EMMI and IReNA.

Starts
Ends
Europe/Berlin
Registration
Registration for this event is currently open.