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Doppler and sympathetic cooling for the investigation of short-lived radioactive ions

At radioactive ion beam (RIB) facilities, ions of short-lived radionuclides are cooled and bunched in buffergas-filled Paul traps to improve the ion-beam quality for subsequent experiments. To deliver even colder ions, beneficial to RIB experiments’ sensitivity or accuracy, we employ Doppler and sym...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sels, S, Maier, F M, Au, M, Fischer, P, Kanitz, C, Lagaki, V, Lechner, S, Leistenschneider, E, Leimbach, D, Lykiardopoulou, E M, Kwiatkowski, A A, Manovitz, T, Vila Gracia, Y N, Neyens, G, Plattner, P, Rothe, S, Schweikhard, L, Vilen, M, Wolf, R N, Malbrunot-Ettenauer, S
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.033229
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2836502
Descripción
Sumario:At radioactive ion beam (RIB) facilities, ions of short-lived radionuclides are cooled and bunched in buffergas-filled Paul traps to improve the ion-beam quality for subsequent experiments. To deliver even colder ions, beneficial to RIB experiments’ sensitivity or accuracy, we employ Doppler and sympathetic cooling in a Paul trap cooler-buncher. The improved emittance of Mg$^+$, K$^+$, and O$^+_2$ ion beams is demonstrated by a reduced time-of-flight spread of the extracted ion bunches with respect to room-temperature buffer-gas cooling. Cooling externally-produced hot ions with energies of at least 7 eV down to a few Kelvin is achieved in a timescale of $O$(100 ms) by combining a low-pressure helium background gas with laser cooling. This is sufficiently short to cool short-lived radioactive ions. As an example of this technique’s use for RIB research, the mass-resolving power in a multireflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer is shown to increase by up to a factor of 4.6 with respect to buffer-gas cooling. Simulations show good agreement with the experimental results and guide further improvements and applications. These results open a path to a significant emittance improvement and, thus, unprecedented ion-beam qualities at RIB facilities, achievable with standard equipment readily available. The same method provides opportunities for future high-precision experiments with radioactive cold trapped ions.