Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Be+-Assisted Antihydrogen Synthesis and Trapping

View through CrossRef
Antihydrogen, the bound state of a positron and an antiproton, is a uniquely well-suited system for testing fundamental symmetries between matter and antimatter. The Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus (ALPHA collaboration) synthesises antihydrogen atoms by slowly merging cold non-neutral positron and antiproton plasmas and traps the antiatoms in a magnetic minimum trap. While trapping efficiency has improved since its first demonstration in 2010, it plateaued after 2017.In ALPHA’s experimental conditions, antihydrogen is predominantly formed via three-body recombination, which has been theoretically and experimentally shown to strongly depend on the temperature of the positron plasma: lower positron temperatures yield higher antihydrogen trapping rates. In the ALPHA-2 trap, positrons alone reach a lower temperature limit of 15−20 K. The implementation of sympathetic cooling of positrons through collisions with laser-cooled Be+ions enabled stable lowering of these temperatures to below 10 K. This thesis describes the work towards antihydrogen synthesis with positrons prepared using this cooling method. A novel ion plasma preparation technique was developed to improve reproducibility, and a sophisticated control system with automated beam steering was implemented to ensure long-term operational stability. Moreover, the first demonstration of sympathetic cooling of positrons to < 10 K in a radially asymmetric magnetic field was carried out. Culminating in the first Be+-assisted antihydrogen synthesis and trapping. Careful optimisation of this technique resulted in a near eightfold increase in the antihydrogen trapping rate, and allowed for systematic studies of three-body recombination that were not possible before its implementation. Overall, this technique represents a paradigm shift for the ALPHA physics programme and provides a deeper understanding of antihydrogen synthesis, opening new avenues for precision studies of antimatter.
Swansea University
Title: Be+-Assisted Antihydrogen Synthesis and Trapping
Description:
Antihydrogen, the bound state of a positron and an antiproton, is a uniquely well-suited system for testing fundamental symmetries between matter and antimatter.
The Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus (ALPHA collaboration) synthesises antihydrogen atoms by slowly merging cold non-neutral positron and antiproton plasmas and traps the antiatoms in a magnetic minimum trap.
While trapping efficiency has improved since its first demonstration in 2010, it plateaued after 2017.
In ALPHA’s experimental conditions, antihydrogen is predominantly formed via three-body recombination, which has been theoretically and experimentally shown to strongly depend on the temperature of the positron plasma: lower positron temperatures yield higher antihydrogen trapping rates.
In the ALPHA-2 trap, positrons alone reach a lower temperature limit of 15−20 K.
The implementation of sympathetic cooling of positrons through collisions with laser-cooled Be+ions enabled stable lowering of these temperatures to below 10 K.
This thesis describes the work towards antihydrogen synthesis with positrons prepared using this cooling method.
A novel ion plasma preparation technique was developed to improve reproducibility, and a sophisticated control system with automated beam steering was implemented to ensure long-term operational stability.
Moreover, the first demonstration of sympathetic cooling of positrons to < 10 K in a radially asymmetric magnetic field was carried out.
Culminating in the first Be+-assisted antihydrogen synthesis and trapping.
Careful optimisation of this technique resulted in a near eightfold increase in the antihydrogen trapping rate, and allowed for systematic studies of three-body recombination that were not possible before its implementation.
Overall, this technique represents a paradigm shift for the ALPHA physics programme and provides a deeper understanding of antihydrogen synthesis, opening new avenues for precision studies of antimatter.

Related Results

Precision antihydrogen annihilation reconstructions using the ALPHA-g detector
Precision antihydrogen annihilation reconstructions using the ALPHA-g detector
Abstract The ALPHA (Antihydrogen Laser PHysics Apparatus) collaboration aims to test fundamental symmetries with matter and antimatter by testing CPT (charge conjuga...
Pulsed Production of Antihydrogen in AEgIS
Pulsed Production of Antihydrogen in AEgIS
Low-temperature antihydrogen atoms are an effective tool to probe the validity of the fundamental laws of Physics, for example the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) for antimatter, ...
The AEgIS experiment at CERN for the measurement of antihydrogen gravity acceleration
The AEgIS experiment at CERN for the measurement of antihydrogen gravity acceleration
The Antihydrogen Experiment: Gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy (AEgIS) experiment is conducted by an international collaboration based at CERN whose aim is to perform the first...
Be+ assisted, simultaneous confinement of more than 15000 antihydrogen atoms
Be+ assisted, simultaneous confinement of more than 15000 antihydrogen atoms
Abstract Antihydrogen, the bound state of a positron and an antiproton, is the only pure anti-atomic system ever studied. It is produced exclusively in the labora...
Comparison of Chemical and Hysteresis CO2 Trapping in the Nugget Formation
Comparison of Chemical and Hysteresis CO2 Trapping in the Nugget Formation
Abstract The Moxa Arch Anticline is a regional-scale northwest-trending uplift in western Wyoming and it has been chosen for CO2 capture and storage. The Nugget Sand...
Optical Fiber Tweezers: A Versatile Tool for Optical Trapping and Manipulation
Optical Fiber Tweezers: A Versatile Tool for Optical Trapping and Manipulation
Optical trapping is widely used in different areas, ranging from biomedical applications, to physics and material sciences. In recent years, optical fiber tweezers have attracted s...
Studies of Charged Particle Dynamics for Antihydrogen Synthesis
Studies of Charged Particle Dynamics for Antihydrogen Synthesis
Synthesis and capture of antihydrogen in controlled laboratory conditions will enable precise studies of neutral antimatter. The work presented deals with some of the physics perti...
A Microfluidic Device for Hydrodynamic Trapping and Manipulation Platform of a Single Biological Cell
A Microfluidic Device for Hydrodynamic Trapping and Manipulation Platform of a Single Biological Cell
To perform specific analysis for the single cell, individual cells have to be captured and separated from each other before further treatments and analysis can be carried out. This...

Back to Top