26 March, 2016 will mark 60 years since the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research was founded in 1956 within which the Laboratory of Neutron Physics was established. Already four years later, in 1960, the world's first pulsed fast reactor (known by its Russian acronym as IBR) operating in a periodic mode was put into operation, followed in 1984 by IBR-2. The Lab's highlight achievements over the last decade are summarized, the state-of-the-art laboratory hardware is discussed, and the prospects for the future are reviewed.
Keywords: pulsed fast reactor, neutrino scattering, neutron—neutrino scattering, space parity violation in neutron reactions, cold neutrons PACS:28.20.−v, 29.25.Dz, 61.05.F− (all) DOI:10.3367/UFNe.0186.201603c.0265 URL: https://ufn.ru/en/articles/2016/3/c/ 000377714900003 2-s2.0-84976445223 2016PhyU...59..254L Citation: Lychagin E V, Kozlenko D P, Sedyshev P V, Shvetsov V N "Neutron physics at the INR — 60 years of the I M Frank Neutron Physics Laboratory" Phys. Usp.59 254–263 (2016)
@article{Lychagin:2016,author = {E. V. Lychagin and D. P. Kozlenko and P. V. Sedyshev and V. N. Shvetsov},title = {Neutron physics at the INR — 60 years of the I M Frank Neutron Physics Laboratory},publisher = {Physics-Uspekhi},year = {2016},journal = {Phys. Usp.},volume = {59},number = {3},pages = {254-263},url = {https://ufn.ru/en/articles/2016/3/c/},doi = {10.3367/UFNe.0186.201603c.0265}}
Received: 6th, July 2015, revised: 23rd, November 2015, accepted: 23rd, November 2015