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, simultaneous confinement of more than 15000 antihydrogen atoms

View through CrossRef
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 laboratory, as it has never been observed in nature. This unique system is of great interest for searching for tentative differences between matter and antimatter. Antihydrogen has been routinely trapped since 2010 and accumulated since 2017, enabling, for example, the first precision spectroscopic study of the anti-atom in 2018 and the first observation of the influence of gravity in 2023. Here we report an eight-fold increase in the trapping rate of antihydrogen, enabled by sympathetic cooling of positrons with laser-cooled beryllium ions. With beryllium sympathetic cooling, we now accumulate over 15000 antihydrogen atoms in under seven hours. This technique transforms our ability to study systematic and sidereal effects in existing experiments while paving the way for studies that would otherwise remain out of reach.
Title: Be+ assisted, simultaneous confinement of more than 15000 antihydrogen atoms
Description:
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 laboratory, as it has never been observed in nature.
This unique system is of great interest for searching for tentative differences between matter and antimatter.
Antihydrogen has been routinely trapped since 2010 and accumulated since 2017, enabling, for example, the first precision spectroscopic study of the anti-atom in 2018 and the first observation of the influence of gravity in 2023.
Here we report an eight-fold increase in the trapping rate of antihydrogen, enabled by sympathetic cooling of positrons with laser-cooled beryllium ions.
With beryllium sympathetic cooling, we now accumulate over 15000 antihydrogen atoms in under seven hours.
This technique transforms our ability to study systematic and sidereal effects in existing experiments while paving the way for studies that would otherwise remain out of reach.

Related Results

Be+-Assisted Antihydrogen Synthesis and Trapping
Be+-Assisted Antihydrogen Synthesis and Trapping
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 L...
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, ...
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...
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...
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...
Surface segregation, structural features, and diffusion of NiCu bimetallic nanoparticles
Surface segregation, structural features, and diffusion of NiCu bimetallic nanoparticles
Bimetallic core-shell nanoparticles such as NiCu are of great interest not only due to their excellent stability, selectivity, and magnetic and catalytic properties, but also becau...
Cold Atom Physics: Trapping Methods And Detection Schemes.
Cold Atom Physics: Trapping Methods And Detection Schemes.
"The work presented in this thesis is concerned with the manipulation of laser- cooled rubidium atoms and the detection of small numbers of cold atoms using very sensitive light de...
Hard Coating is Because of Oppositely Worked Force-Energy Behaviors of Atoms
Hard Coating is Because of Oppositely Worked Force-Energy Behaviors of Atoms
Coatings of suitable materials having thickness of few atoms to several microns on the viable substrates are the basic need of society and they attend the regular attention of scie...

Back to Top