<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/news/learning-what-makes-the-nucleus-tick.aspx" dsn="blogs"><homehero/><unit>Faculty &amp; Staff,Research</unit><pubDate>04/12/2021</pubDate><title>Learning what makes the nucleus tick</title><description><p>MSU theoretical nuclear physicist Witold Nazarewicz has a simple way to describe the complex work he does at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, or FRIB. In a new paper for Physical Review Letters, Simin Wang, a former research associate at FRIB, and Nazarewicz show how FRIB can spot signatures of unusual nuclear events and use those as windows into the nucleus.</p></description><author/><hero-image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/365C9B0A-A7D0-4951-A29DD5FC65E95671_newsarticlehero.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></hero-image><image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/365C9B0A-A7D0-4951-A29DD5FC65E95671_medium.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></image><tags><tag>Nuclear physics</tag><tag>beryllium-6 isotope</tag><tag>faculty</tag><tag>nuclear event signatures</tag><tag>research</tag></tags></item>