Abstract In this review we describe the Accelerator Mass Spectrometry activities in Munich and some of the achievements of the past 40 years. These comprise subjects in geology, technetium distribution in the environment, dosimetry and atomic bomb survivors, input into the Solar System from close and recent supernovae, the search for primordial superheavy nuclei, the search for violations of the Pauli exclusion principle as well as the determination of the half-life of beryllium-10, a cosmogenic isotope extensively used for geology and other sciences.
Korschinek et al. (Sat,) studied this question.