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Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen

Evaporative cooling has proven to be an invaluable technique in atomic physics, allowing for the study of effects such as Bose-Einstein condensation. One main topic of this thesis is the first application of evaporative cooling to cold non-neutral plasmas stored in an ion trap. We (the ALPHA collabo...

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Autor principal: Andresen, Gorm Bruun
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1514119
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author Andresen, Gorm Bruun
author_facet Andresen, Gorm Bruun
author_sort Andresen, Gorm Bruun
collection CERN
description Evaporative cooling has proven to be an invaluable technique in atomic physics, allowing for the study of effects such as Bose-Einstein condensation. One main topic of this thesis is the first application of evaporative cooling to cold non-neutral plasmas stored in an ion trap. We (the ALPHA collaboration) have achieved cooling of a cloud of antiprotons to a temperature as low as 9 K, two orders of magnitude lowerthan ever directly measured previously. The measurements are well-described by appropriate rate equations for the temperature and number of particles. The technique has direct application to the ongoing attempts to produce trapped samples of antihydrogen. In these experiments the maximum trap depths are ex tremely shallow (~0.6 K for ground state atoms), and careful control of the trapped antiprotons and positrons used to form the (anti)atoms is essential to succes. Since 2006 powerful tools to diagnose and manipulate the antiproton and positron plasmas in the ALPHA apparatus have been developed and used in attempts to trap antihydrogen. These efforts are the second main topic of this thesis.
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spelling cern-15141192019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1514119engAndresen, Gorm BruunEvaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogenParticle Physics - ExperimentEvaporative cooling has proven to be an invaluable technique in atomic physics, allowing for the study of effects such as Bose-Einstein condensation. One main topic of this thesis is the first application of evaporative cooling to cold non-neutral plasmas stored in an ion trap. We (the ALPHA collaboration) have achieved cooling of a cloud of antiprotons to a temperature as low as 9 K, two orders of magnitude lowerthan ever directly measured previously. The measurements are well-described by appropriate rate equations for the temperature and number of particles. The technique has direct application to the ongoing attempts to produce trapped samples of antihydrogen. In these experiments the maximum trap depths are ex tremely shallow (~0.6 K for ground state atoms), and careful control of the trapped antiprotons and positrons used to form the (anti)atoms is essential to succes. Since 2006 powerful tools to diagnose and manipulate the antiproton and positron plasmas in the ALPHA apparatus have been developed and used in attempts to trap antihydrogen. These efforts are the second main topic of this thesis.CERN-THESIS-2010-282oai:cds.cern.ch:15141192013-02-08T10:55:08Z
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Andresen, Gorm Bruun
Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
title Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
title_full Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
title_fullStr Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
title_full_unstemmed Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
title_short Evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
title_sort evaporative cooling of antiprotons and efforts to trap antihydrogen
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1514119
work_keys_str_mv AT andresengormbruun evaporativecoolingofantiprotonsandeffortstotrapantihydrogen