LEIF – Report 14
(European
network HPRI-CT-1999-40012)
Low
Energy Ion Beam Facilities
4th Annual
LEIF-network meeting
28th
June -
1st July 2003
Stormont Hotel, Belfast
Northern
Ireland, United Kingdom
Report on the
4th Annual meeting
of the
Infrastructure co-operation network LEIF
‘Low Energy Ion beam Facilities’
HPRI-CT-1999-40012
Content :
I Organisers
comments
II Progress
reports on the LEIF-projects (LP1-LP6)
III NMB-meeting
IV Young
Scientist forum
V Annex
Programme
of the meeting
List of participants
Agenda (NMB-meeting)
I) Organisers comments
This report summarises the activities and the subjects that have been
discussed during the 4th Annual Meeting of the European network
LEIF. The conference was organised by the Queens University of Belfast, held at
the Stormont Hotel Belfast in Northern Ireland, United Kingdom, from 28th
of June to 1st of July 2003.
The LEIF-meeting was opened on Saturday morning with an internal session of the LEIF network management board NMB. Here, recent activities and future actions have been discussed. In particular, we focused on the financial aspects, on the conferences during the last period of the contract as well as on future perspectives on an European level.
On Monday, invited experts, who are active in different neighbouring fields, reported on recent progress and the perspectives of their fields. In particular, one session was devoted to learn about medical device issues and damaging and modification of DNA and biomolecular systems. Further topics concerned the precise control of ions in electrostatic traps, the role of charged particles in the atmosphere as well as the interaction of intense lasers with matter. Last but not least we heard about new perspectives in metrology and QED and new experiments at upcoming facilities like the free-electron lasers or low energy anti-proton collisions. This exchange with nearby-fields is recognised as an important tool to open our domain to other fields and to possibly identify subjects where highly charged ions may possibly lead to important applications.
The young scientist forum
(YSF) organised a specific 2-hour session, where scientific talks have been
presented and where future activities (organisation of a physics symposium
combined with an advanced LabVIEW course) have been identified.
The last meeting day was
dedicated to the NewLEIF–proposal, which was submitted to the European
Commission in April 2003. It was the aim to discuss the proposed activities in
detail and to make an inventory of promising ideas in our field. Furthermore,
alternative possibilities for a future organisation in the case of a
non-acceptance of the proposal were discussed.
We would like to thank all
colleagues, in particular those from the organising institution, for their help
in making this meeting a lively and interesting one. The enjoyable surroundings
allowed for many scientific and private discussions in a stimulating
atmosphere.
Belfast, Caen R.W. McCullough
September 2003 B.A.
Huber
II) Progress reports on the LEIF projects (LP1
– LP6)
During the
Sunday evening session, the persons in charge of the LEIF-projects LP1 to LP6
presented the activities carried out during the preceding period and proposed
the activities for the remaining period of the LEIF network. A short summary is
given in the following.
Project LP1: Information policy (T.J.M. Zouros, Heraklion)
It is the objective of this activity to provide the community in collision physics with detailed information about low-energy ion beam facilities, on the physics with low-energy ions in general and on specific actions organised by LEIF. The two main tasks are the maintenance and improvement of the LEIF-Website and the edition of a LEIF-newsletter on a regular basis.
In the last period, progress has been made on both subjects. Concerning the LEIF-Website, many pages have been newly constructed and improved, like individual pages of the participants or the ‘facility page’, where now all infrastructures are characterised allowing for an easy comparison. Many other pages, like ‘calendar of events’, ‘publications’, ‘conferences’, ‘job announcements’, ‘reports’ etc. have been updated and extended.
Several summaries of articles which describe the progress in instrumentation or outstanding scientific results have been published in the LEIF-Newsletter, edition 3 and 4. In this context, the participants of the conference have been encouraged to send in their contributions for the preparation of 2 further editions.
The principal tasks of this project concern the management of the network LEIF, the application of quality standards in the different domains of our work and the development of future perspectives. In all of these activities an essential effort has been undertaken.
Several conferences and meetings have been organised aiming to foster the integration of our community (2 meetings of the proposal writer committee, 1 meeting which aimed to bring together scientists from basic research and industry in the field of ion-surface collisions, the 4th annual meeting).
During a period of 3 months a ‘writing committee’ was strongly involved in the preparation of a new proposal ‘NewLEIF’, which should allow the continuation of the actual LEIF-activities. It is based on the instrument I3 (Integrated Infrastructure Initiative) and proposes the creation of a distributed large scale facility. The proposal was submitted on April 15th to the European Community. Although the evaluation turned out to be rather positive, the proposal was not funded due to the budget limitations.
The quality approach has been concretised by formulating a LEIF-quality referential which defines the rules and procedures of the different LEIF activities. This referential, which has been published on the Website, requires an updating and improvement due to the ‘experimental feedback’.
In order to organise and optimise future technical developments, a corresponding list has been updated and further improved.
This project aims to organise and to provide
online access to all network participants at experimental facilities of the
institutions involved in LEIF. This will save travelling costs and enhance
efficiency for the use of experimental facilities. For this purpose it is
necessary to standardise the different systems and to allow for a fast data
transfer system.
At the Ionenstrahllabor Berlin (ISL, part of the Hahn-Meitner Institute / HMI in Berlin), the control system CODIAN has been developed for operation of different ECR sources and beam line components. Configured by a database, CODIAN can be easily adopted to different laboratory set-ups without major software modifications.
At the 2002 LEIF LabVIEW workshop in Berlin (see 3. LEIF Annual Report),
the criteria for implementing CODIAN as a standard in the laboratories
participating in LEIF have been established. The new all permanent-magnet ECRIS
SOPHIE, which has been developed within a LEIF cooperation between the Institut
für Allgemeine Physik (IAP) at TU Wien and the Justus-Liebig
Universität in Gießen, is now the first ECRIS outside HMI to be controlled
via CODIAN. In contrast to the setups at the HMI, where interface electronics
like CAMAC or distributed I/O systems (e.g. FieldPoint) are used, for the
control of SOPHIE DAQ I/O cards from National Instruments and serial interfaces
were chosen.
During a visit of Mr. J. Bundesmann from HMI on April 23-27, 2003, it
took only a few days to configure and test the control system, which is now
ready to be used when routine operations of SOPHIE will start.
As other laboratories have also expressed their
preference for DAQ I/O cards, the experience gained with the set-up at TU Wien
will help to further distribute CODIAN within the LEIF network. A workshop is
planned to be held at TU Wien in August/September 2003 to continue the process
of introducing CODIAN and other standardised tools for experimental work within
the LEIF network.
Project LP4: Multi-coincidence detectors (U. Werner, Bielefeld)
The main objectives concern the transfer of
detector know-how, an inventory of state-of-the-art detectors and an optimised
development of future detectors.
The constructed detector Website has been updated and further improved. Within the proposal ‘NewLEIF’ a joint research activity has been defined which concerns the development of new-generation multi-particles detectors well adapted to the study of complex systems. This project which also includes partners from outside the LEIF-network gives a rather complete overview about the actual needs and the proposed solutions and different approaches. An extracted content of this proposal will be integrated into the detector Webpage. This updating will be completed by a second questionnaire which will be sent out to all LEIF-participants in September 2003.
Project LP5: Ion beam production (P. Hvelplund, Aarhus)
Within this project an inventory of state-of-the-art ion sources should be established and in particular specific ion source schemes for complex systems which allow for a control of the ion temperature should be studied and their development co-ordinated.
In the reporting period several collaborations on ion source development have been continued or newly initiated. This concerns all-permanent magnet ion sources for highly charged atomic ions (Giessen, Belfast, Innsbruck and Vienna) as well as efficient sources for the production of multiply charged molecular or cluster ions (Caen, Aarhus, Stockholm). In the later case, an ion source has been transported from Caen to Aarhus in order to perform test measurements at the ELISA facility.
Furthermore, new combinations of
sources with electrostatic traps have been tested in order to evaluate their
potential for temperature controlling.
The needs and ideas for
future ion source developments have been summarised in the NewLEIF proposal as
a specific joint research project. In particular, the Stockholm groups has
developed a scheme for the construction of a double electrostatic storage ring
including a merged beam section.
Project LP6: Beam control and deceleration (R. Morgenstern, Groningen)
The main objective of this project concerns the
production of schemes of ion beams at very low kinetic energies as well as the
purification of ion beams with respect to the electronic state of the ions.
Great progress has been made concerning the
production of eV-beams of high quality(Berlin, Caen) which is documented in
recent publications. Furthermore, a new low energy beam line which has been
developed at AIM / Grenoble is actually installed at the ARIBE facility in
Caen.
New ideas on ion beam guiding by nano-capillaries are actually tested in Berlin which might be adapted to finally focus slow beams of highly charged ions to small spot sizes.
Similar problems have been discussed during the
LEIF-workshop ‘Slow collisions of multiply charged ions with surfaces: From
fundamental aspects to industrial applications’, held in Paris beginning of May
2003, where new ion optical concepts for high-quality focusing systems have
been presented by industrial representatives. Several groups are trying to find
acceptable solutions for the production of low-energetic nano-beams of highly
charged ions for applications in nano-structuring of surfaces.
III) NMB-meeting
The NMB-meeting was organised on Saturday morning, the corresponding agenda is given in the annex. With the exemption of two participants (UBI, TUW), which were excused, all contractors have been present.
First, the co-ordinator
reported on the documents which have been sent to the European Commission and
which concerned the scientific and financial reporting for the 3rd
period. The submission date was delayed by about 1 month. In order to avoid
such problems in the future it was decided that the information sheets, which
have to be sent by the contractors and persons in charge for different tasks,
should be sent by 15th January 2004 at the latest.
A statistical analysis
shows that the number of common projects, of working visits and of common
publications increased strongly during the last 3 years, a fact which is
encouraging and which demonstrates the effect of integration.
The list of milestones
and of deliverables which is defined in the LEIF-project programme, has been
reviewed for the individual LEIF-projects and the persons in charge have been
asked to make an effort in cases where some of the defined deliverables are not
yet available.
The financial situation
has been discussed in detail. In the first three years (out of four) LEIF has
spent about 60% of the total attributed budget. Therefore, in the last period,
no specific financial problem should arise. In cases where one contractor needs
some additional money this could be got from other contractors. It was agreed
that slight adjustments of the amounts of money to be attributed to the
different groups can be made by the co-ordinator. It was made clear that 15% of
the total budget (75 kEuro) can be transferred by the European Commission only
after the final report has been accepted in 2004.
The co-ordinator
reported about the status of the NewLEIF-proposal. He thanked in particular the
persons who have been involved in the editing procedure (H. Cederquist, R.W.
McCullough, R. Morgenstern, J. Ullrich and A. Dorn, HP. Winter) and discussed
the evaluation procedure, the number of submitted proposals, the content of a
consortium agreement and possible future alternatives.
Administrative aspects
of the Belfast meeting have been discussed, in particular the list of invited
users and experts and the representatives of groups which have signed up for
the NewLEIF proposal.
In view of the healthy
financial situation of the network the following meetings have been proposed:
In Vienna (TUW): 1st
LEIF - Young Scientist Forum
(1 day)
In Vienna (TUW): 2nd
LEIF – LabVIEW workshop (1
day)
Both activities should
be organised together in late August or early September in Vienna.
Financial support for young scientists will be
provided to a reasonable amount.
In Stockholm (MSL): Extended
final LEIF-meeting (4 days)
The final meeting will
take place in Stockholm in December 2003 and will the Nobel-prize lectures on
Monday the 8th of December.
Again we intend to include users and experts and we will highlight the outcome
of the different LEIF-activities.
IV) Young Scientist Symposium (J.
Greenwood)
The Young Scientists's Symposium was organised
to give the opportunity for YSs to
give talks to their peers. Other conference participants were
discouraged from attending
this session to produce a less intimidating atmosphere, especially for
those speakers whose
first language was not English. Five speakers gave excellent
presentations to an audience
of around 25. They were able to demonstrate their ability to keep within
the time
limits and to successfully answer questions.
Following this session an informal meeting of the YSs was held to give
the speakers some
feedback on their performance and to discuss other issues regarding
participation of the
YSs in the LEIF Network. This gave an opportunity to find out what needs
could be
identified which could be addressed by LEIF. These included formal
mechanisms
for applying for exchange visits to other laboratories and meetings, as
well as the organisation of
technical workshops to meet their training needs.
It was decided to investigate the possibility of holding a YS LEIF
meeting in Vienna
at the end of August.
Annex
A) Programme of the meeting
B) List
of participants
C) Agenda (NMB-meeting)
A) Programme Outline
FRIDAY 27TH JUNE Arrival & Check-in
SATURDAY 28TH JUNE
08.30 - 10.30 Meeting of the Network Management Board
Thornhill
Room
11.00 Coach Tour Giant’s Causeway / Bushmills
Distillery / Antrim Coast
£20
per person
7.30 Dinner – Dunmisk Suite
SUNDAY 29th JUNE LEIF user day - Barnett Suite
Poster
Session (4 – 6pm)
MONDAY 30th JUNE Opening new fields – Barnett Suite
Tour
and reception at the Northern Ireland Assembly
(Walk
from hotel at 6.10 pm, approx 1km)
TUESDAY 1st JULY NewLEIF proposal – Barnett Suite
BBQ
at Cultra Inn at 8.00 pm
(Coach
Transfer 7.00 pm)
SUNDAY 29th June:
LEIF User Day – Barnett Suite
08.45 – 09.00 WELCOME – Bob McCullough
09.00 – 09.18 SOPHIE
14.5 GHz ECR ion source
Ernst Galutscheck (Technical University of
Vienna, Austria)
09.18 – 09.36 Dielectronic
recombination in He-like and H-like ions
Brian O’Rourke (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)
09.36 – 9.54 Isoelectronic study of triply-
excited Li-like ions
Theo Zouros (University of Crete & FORTH, Greece)
09.54 – 10.12 Exploding H2O molecules by highly charged ions
Zoran Pesic (Hahn Meitner
Institute, Berlin, Germany)
10.12– 10.30 Fragmentation of small molecules
Bärbel Siegmann
(University of Bielefeld, Germany)
10.30 –
11.00 Coffee/Tea
11.00
– 11.18 Interaction between comets and highly charged ions of the solar wind
Dennis Bodewits (KVI, Groningen, Netherlands)
11.18
– 11.36 Decay
and cooling of biomolecules in an electrostatic storage ring
Shigeo Tomita (University of Aarhus, Denmark)
11.36
– 11.54 Interaction
of low energy electrons with DNA and RNA bases
Paul Scheier (Leopold Franzens University of
Innsbruck, Austria)
11.54 –
12.12 Ion
irradiation of Astrophysical Ice Analogues
Anita Dawes (University College London, UK)
12.12
– 12.30 Ion
irradiation of medical implant surfaces
Roland Trassl (Justus Liebig University of Giessen,
Germany)
12.30 – 2.00 pm LUNCH
SUNDAY 29th June:
LEIF USER DAY – Barnett Suite
2.00 – 2.18 C60
and C70 – a comparison
Henrik Cederquist (University of Stockholm,
Sweden)
2.18 – 2.36 Fragmentation of multicharged C60
using a cone trap
Serge Martin
(University of Lyon, France)
2.36
– 2.54 Electron spectroscopy and fragmentation of C60 in collisions
with singly charged ions
Alain Bordenave-Montesquieu (University of Tolouse, France)
2.54
– 3.12 Ion-surface nanostructuring
Henning Lebius (CEA, Caen, France)
3.12–
3.30 Interaction of HCI with diamond surfaces
Jean Pierre Briand (ERI, France)
3.30 –
4.00 Coffee/Tea
4.00 – 6.00 POSTER SESSION (Velcro hooks
provided)
7.00 – 8.00 DINNER – Dunmisk Suite
SESSION IV LEIF Progress Reports Chair: Bernd Huber
8.00 – 8.15 LP1 Information Policy
Theo
Zouros (University of Crete & FORTH,
Greece)
8.15 – 8.30 LP2 Management and Quality
Henning Lebius (CEA, Caen, France)
8.30 – 8.45 LP4 Multi-particle detectors
Udo Werner (University of Bielefeld, Germany)
8.45 – 9.00 LP5 Ion Beam
Formation
Preben Hvelplund (University of Aarhus, Denmark)
9.00 –
9.15 LP6
Beam Control and Deceleration
Reinhard Morgenstern ( KVI, Netherlands)
9.15 –
9.30 LP3
Online Access
Hannspeter Winter (Technical University of Vienna,
Austria)
POSTER SESSION: Lobby area outside Barnett Suite
POSTER BOARDS 1200mm x 1200mm
Velcro Hooks only
The
response of the RNA base Uracil to ion-induced and laser-induced intense
fields.
Coincidence
studies on nucleic acid base fragmentation induced by HCI
Ion-surface
reactions
Charging
of insulators in grazing collisions
The
QUB all permanent magnet EBIT
Biomolecules
in accelerators and storage rings.
MALDI
and ion irradiation studies of biomolecules
12. X. Lu (QUB, Belfast UK)
Numerical
simulations of the charge balance in an EBIT
Multiply charged molecular ions from an ECR ion
source
14. B. Manil (CIRIL, Caen, France)
Competitive
fission channels in highly charged sodium clusters
Coincident
electron and recoil momentum spectroscopy for low energy ion atom collisions
16. G. Laurent (CIRIL, Caen, France)
Electron
emission following fast ion-D2 collisions
Photodestruction
of adenosine 5-monophosphate (AMP) nucleotide ions in vacuo: statistital vs.
Non-statistical
processes
18. I. Kuester (UBI, Bielefeld, Germany)
Ion
induced ionization and fragmentation of CS2
19. B. Sulik (ATOMKI, Debrecen, Hungary)
Fullerene
studies by the ATOMKI-ECRIS
20. B. Sulik (ATOMKI, Debrecen, Hungary)
Fermi
shuttle ionization: new results
21. R. Trassl (JLU Giessen, Germany)
Ion-ion
collisions with Fullerenes
22. Bo Liu (UAAR, Aarhus, Denmark)
Electron
Attachment to “Naked” and Microsolvated Nucleotide
Anions: Detection of Long-Lived Dianions
23. Stefan Facsko (FZR, Rossendorf, Germany)
Potential
energy retention of slow multiply charged Ar ions in Si(100) surfaces
24. Henning Lebius (CIRIL, Caen, France)
Irradiation
of thin SiO2 layers by heavy ions at low and high kinetic energy
25. Nigel Mason (Open University, UK)
Ion
irradiation in astrophysics and the life sciences
26. Jarlath McKenna (QUB, Belfast, UK)
Ionization of C+ in intense femtosecond laser fields
27. Jofre Gutierrez-Pedregosa (QUB, Belfast, UK)
Strong Field Multiple Ionization of
Negative Ions
28. Theo J.M. Zouros (UoC, FORTH, Greece)
Zero-degree Auger projectile electron
spectroscopy of 1.5 MeV Li+on H2 collisions
29. Theo J.M. Zouros (UoC, FORTH, Greece)
Isoelectronic (Z=5-9) study of the 2s2p2 2D triply excited
state formed in collisions of
quasi-free electrons with 1s2s 3S He-like ions
30. Steven Knoop (KVI, Groningen, Netherlands)
Multi-Electron
Capture from Cold Na Atoms
MONDAY
30th June: OPENING NEW
FIELDS – Barnett Suite
SESSION V Chair: Hannspeter Winter
08.45 – 09.20 Ions
in electrostatic beam traps
Oded Heber (Weizmann Institute, Israel)
09.20 – 09.55 Ions
and highly charged particles in the atmosphere
Thomas Leisner (Technical University of
Ilmenau, Germany)
09.55 – 10.30 Intense laser matter interactions
Paul McKenna ( University of Strathclyde, UK)
10.30 –
11.00 Coffee/Tea
SESSION VI Chair:
Nigel Mason
11.00
– 11.35 Medical
Device Issues
David Woolfson (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)
11.35
– 12.10 Electron and photon induced damage to biomolecular systems
Melvyn Folkard (Gray Cancer Institute, London, UK)
12.10
– 12.45 DNA
structure and its modification by UV radiation
Jerry Davies (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)
12.45 – 2.00 LUNCH
2.00 – 2.35 Low
energy ions in Metrology and QED
Paul
Indelicato (LKB-Paris)
2.35 – 3.10 Atomic Physics with FEL radiation
Robert Moshammer (MPIK, Heidelberg, Germany)
3.10 – 3.45 Ionisation experiments with low
energy antiprotons
Toshiyasu Itchioka (University of Aarhus, Denmark)
3.45 –
4.15 Coffee/Tea
4.15 - 6.00 YOUNG SCIENTISTS FORUM – Barnett Suite (see next page for programme)
6.30 – 8.00 Reception and Tour of
Stormont Assembly Buildings (leaving
hotel at 6.10)
8.30 DINNER
Young Scientist’s Forum
Monday 30 June 4.15
– 6.00pm
The aim of this
symposium is for postgraduate students or postdoctoral assistants to be given
the opportunity to present their research work to their peers in the form of a
seminar. It is hoped this will give valuable experience in an arena which is
much less imposing than that of a normal conference. Following this session it
is hoped that all the Young Scientists (including the audience) will
participate in an informal discussion and feedback on good practice for the
presentation of seminars. It is also hoped that any other issues faced by Young
Scientists could be identified and if possible acted on within the NEWLEIF
infrastructure.
Talks
18 min + 2 min questions
Speakers
4.15.
Rolf Hellhammer (Hahn-Meitner-Institut,
Berlin, Germany)
Guided transmission of highly
charged ions in polymer foils
4.35.
Karl Kramer (University
of Giessen, Germany)
Electron impact ionization of
uracil
4.55.
Stefan Feil (University
of Innsbruck, Austria)
Cross sections and ion kinetic
energies for electron impact ionization of C2H2 and C2H4
5.15.
Xiaojun Lu (Queen’s
University Belfast, UK)
Numerical Simulation of the
charge balance in an EBIT
5.35.
Patrick Rousseau (LCAM,
Universit Paris Sud, Orsay, France)
TUESDAY 1st JULY:
NEWLEIF FRAMEWORK VI PROPOSAL –
Barnett Suite
SESSION VII Chair:
Bernd Huber
08.45 – 09.10 N1
Management of NewLEIF
Bernd Huber (CEA, Caen, France)
09.10
– 09.40 JRA5
Techniques for Nanostructuring Insulator Surfaces
Hannspeter Winter (Technical University of
Vienna, Austria)
09.40 – 9.50 N2 Dissemination/Public Relations
Theo Zouros (University of Crete & FORTH,
Greece)
9.50
– 10.00 N3
Collaborations and Exchange
Preben Hvelplund (University of Aarhus, Denmark)
10.00
– 10.10 N4 Field Monitoring
Nico Stolterfoht (HMI, Berlin,
Germany)
10.10
– 10.20 N5
Quality Club
Henning Lebius (CEA, Caen, France)
10.20
– 10.30 N6 Remote Participation
Roland Trassl (Justus Liebig University of Giessen)
10.30
– 10.40 N7
Young Scientist Forum
Jason Greenwood (Queen’s University Belfast,
UK)
10.40 – 11.10 Coffee/Tea
SESSION VIII Chair: K-G
Rensfeld
11.10 – 11.30 Transnational Access
K-G Rensfeld (MSL, Stockholm, Sweden)
11.30 – 11.40 A1 ARIBE
Laurent Maunoury (CEA, Caen, France)
11.40 – 11.50 A2 ELISA
Steen Nielsen (University
of Aarhus, Denmark)
11.50 –
12.00 A3
DESIREE
Henning Schmidt (University
of Stockholm, Sweden)
12.00 –
12.10 A4
H-EBIT FACILITY
Robert Moshammer/Alexander
Dorn (MPIK, Heidelberg, Germany)
12.10 – 12.20 A5 QULEIF
Bob McCullough (Queen’s University Belfast)
12.20 – 2.00 LUNCH
TUESDAY 1st JULY: NewLEIF Framework
VI Proposal
2.00 – 2.30 JRA1
High Quality Sources for Complex Ions
Henrik Cederquist (University of Stockholm,
Sweden)
2.30 – 3.00 JRA2 Advanced Low Energy Ion Beam
Technologies
Bob McCullough (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)
3.00
– 3.30 JRA3 Complex and Cold ( Biomolecular) Targets
Reinhard Morgenstern (KVI, Groningen, Netherlands)
3.30
– 4.00 Coffee/Tea
SESSION X Chair:
Roland Trassl
4.00
– 4.30 JRA4 Multi-coincidence detectors
Alexander Dorn (MPIK,
Heidelberg, Germany)
4.30 – 5.00 Large field and ultra high
resolution ion beam structuring
Elmar Platzgummer (IMS,
Vienna, Austria)
5.00 – 5.30 Concluding Session
Bernd Huber (CEA, Caen, France)
8.00 BARBEQUE AT CULTRA INN
(bus
leaving hotel at 7.00 pm returning 11.00 pm)
WEDNESDAY
2ND JULY 2003; CHECK-OUT AND DEPARTURE
B) List of participants
|
Family
name |
First
Name |
Affiliation |
e-mail |
|
Bodewits |
Dennis |
KVI-Groningen |
C) Agenda of the
NMB-meeting
Belfast, Saturday 28th June 2003, 8h30 –
10h30 (Thornhill room)
1)
Scientific report
for the 3rd period
2)
LEIF-Milestones
and Deliverables
3)
Financial
situation and 4th year’s distribution
4)
NewLEIF proposal
(status and future)
5)
Information
concerning the Belfast meeting
6)
Final meeting in
Stockholm (Dec. 03)
7)
Miscellaneous
Standardisation of software packages