Trapped Antihydrogen - Towards Spectroscopy

Lead Research Organisation: Swansea University
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Antihydrogen, the bound state of a positron and an antiproton, has recently been created under controlled conditions in the laboratory. The proposal seeks to build upon this by creating and trapping very cold antihydrogen using a magnetic gradient trap. This is an arrangement of magnetic fields that acts upon the small magnetic moment of the antiatom to produce a trapping force. However, such traps are shallow, and are currently only capable of holding neutral species with kinetic energies equivalent to a temperature below 1 Kelvin. To trap antihydrogen efficiently it must be produced at this temperature, or below. This requires several major changes and upgrades to our apparatus. These include a complete new magnet and cryogenic system, an octupole coil arrangement for the neutral trap, a new antihydrogen annihilation detector and upgrades to the performance of the positron accumulator. These changes are very technical in nature and the detailed case for support seeks to explain and justify them. However, all experiments with antihydrogen are difficult, so the question we address here is; why bother? We will explain this using the example of symmetry.It has been apparent for a while that fundamental asymmetries are hidden deep within nature. For example, in the 1950's it was discovered that the weak nuclear interaction violates parity conservation. However, the defective parity mirror can be mostly repaired by adding so-called charge conjugation, which, loosely speaking, means that interactions are unaffected when every particle is substituted by its antiparticle. For a while it was believed that the laws of nature would obey the combination of parity reversal and charge conjugation. But by the mid-1960's this was found to be untrue for a small class of reactions involving unusual, fleeting, particles called K-mesons. Since then it has been assumed that the small blemish in the combined charge conjugation/parity reversal mirror can be corrected by the application of time-reversal.However, this 3-way switch differs from the three discrete symmetries, or any 2-way combination of them because the charge/parity/time combination exists as a theorem that can be proved using the basic postulates of quantum field theory. Such theories are the cornerstone of our current understanding of the Universe, but are widely recognised as being incomplete. So testing this unique 3-way switch is going to the heart of our understanding of nature. Our current picture of the beginning of the Universe involves the Big Bang, which is thought to have been an energetic event that created equal amounts of matter and antimatter. Why then did they not all annihilate one another and leave a Universe devoid of matter? Searches for large amounts of remnant antimatter in the Universe, have failed to find any trace. Currently it is thought that our Universe is matter dominant; in other words asymmetric. The other fact to add to this is that the amount of asymmetry we can currently identify via numerous studies of fleeting and rare particles isn't enough to explain the existence of the material Universe.Thus, the evolution of the Universe is not fully understood and this makes testing the symmetries of nature of great importance. The creation of cold antihydrogen in amounts suitable for study, has opened a new door on symmetry; hopefully one which will allow precision laser spectroscopic comparisons with the spectral lines of hydrogen. Spectroscopy of hydrogen has recently reached fantastic precision for one line in particular, the two-photon 1S-2S transition, which has been determined to about 2 parts in a hundred million million. Amazingly, due to uncertainties in the properties of the proton, this level of precision is way beyond that achieved by theory. Comparisons of hydrogen and antihydrogen would be free of this effect. Our proposal will help make these comparisons a reality.

Publications

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Amole C (2014) The ALPHA antihydrogen trapping apparatus in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment

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Amoretti M (2006) Progress with cold antihydrogen in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms

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Andresen G (2007) Antimatter plasmas in a multipole trap for antihydrogen. in Physical review letters

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Andresen G (2008) Production of antihydrogen at reduced magnetic field for anti-atom trapping in Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics

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Andresen GB (2010) Evaporative cooling of antiprotons to cryogenic temperatures. in Physical review letters

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Andresen GB (2008) Compression of antiproton clouds for antihydrogen trapping. in Physical review letters

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Andresen GB (2010) Trapped antihydrogen. in Nature

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Baker C (2008) Weakly bound positron-electron pairs in a strong magnetic field in Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics

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Bertsche W (2006) A magnetic trap for antihydrogen confinement in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment

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Bianconi A (2017) Antiparticle cloud temperatures for antihydrogen experiments in Physical Review A

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Butler E (2011) Towards antihydrogen trapping and spectroscopy at ALPHA in Hyperfine Interactions

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Charlton M (2008) Antihydrogen for precision tests in physics in Contemporary Physics

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Charlton M (2011) Antiparticle sources for antihydrogen production and trapping in Journal of Physics: Conference Series

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Fabrikant I (2017) Low-energy l -mixing collisions of excited positronium with protons and antiprotons in Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics

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Fujiwara M (2007) Towards antihydrogen confinement with the ALPHA antihydrogen trap in Hyperfine Interactions

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Jonsell S (2009) Simulation of the formation of antihydrogen in a nested Penning trap: effect of positron density in Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics

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Jonsell S (2010) Simulations of antihydrogen formation in a nested Penning trap in Journal of Physics: Conference Series

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Jørgensen L (2008) Towards trapped antihydrogen in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms

 
Description During this grant we made great strides forward in trapping antihydrogen. A neutral trap and a new detector was installed and commissioned. A number of particle and non-neutral plasma techniques have been developed, like compression of antiprotons using rotating electric dipole fields and antiproton and positron cooling.

Towards the end of the grant we were able to produce cold enough antihydrogen and trap them.
Exploitation Route These results are a necessary precursor to boating the ultimate goal of testing CPT theories using the 1S-2S transition in antihydrogen and hydrogen.
Sectors Other

URL http://cern.ch/alpha
 
Description Our findings have been used by many scientists to justify theoretical and experimental work in number of areas of basic physics. Organisations such as CERN and our institutions have used our work to promote their respective missions, and in the public understanding of science.
First Year Of Impact 2010
Sector Other
Impact Types Cultural

 
Description ALPHA Collaboration 
Organisation European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)
Department ALPHA Experiment
Country Switzerland 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution As co-founders of the collaboration, we have provided funding and expertise in multiple areas of key importance to this experiment : Super conducting magnets, Lasers, Plasma physics, Trap physics, Antiproton physics, Antitrapping, Positrons, Positron accumulation, Cryogenics.
Collaborator Contribution Partners and expertise (in parenthesis) are come from Brazil (Lasers), Canada (Detectors/DAQ), Denmark (Lasers, Antihydrogen), UK (Detectors, Plasma physics plus the above), US (plasma physics, Simulation). The contributations are estimated based on 10 year running of the experiment with 30 academics contributing cash for running and maintenance and about 20 FTE's per year of running plus 3M of contributions of kit.
Impact This is an enormously successful collaboration having resulted in 4 Nature papers and a large volume of other papers as well as heavy representation in the media. It is physics-multidisciplinary in that the collaboration spans several normally separate areas of physics : cryogenics, plasma physics, atomic physics, particle physics, fundamental physics, laser physics, positron physics, and spectroscopy
Start Year 2006
 
Description CERN 
Organisation European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)
Country Switzerland 
Sector Academic/University 
Start Year 2006
 
Description CERN Open Weekend: 2 talks about Antimatter 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact A large number of question after the talks

I don't know
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
 
Description Times Cheltenham Science Festival: Particle Physics: An Introduction" co-presented with Dr Tom Whyntie 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact A number of questions after the talk were answered

None
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
URL http://www.cheltenhamfestivals.com/science/whats-on/2013/particle-physics-an-introduction/