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Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy

%AD-2 %title\\ \\The Antihydrogen TRAP Collaboration (ATRAP) seeks to do precise laser spectroscopy of antihydrogen. Comparisons of antihydrogen and hydrogen atoms should provide the most stringent test of CPT invariance involving baryons and leptons. ATRAP is an expansion of the TRAP collaboration...

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Autores principales: Zielinski, M, Sefzick, T, Storry, C H, Grzonka, D J
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2002
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/5602
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author Zielinski, M
Sefzick, T
Storry, C H
Grzonka, D J
author_facet Zielinski, M
Sefzick, T
Storry, C H
Grzonka, D J
author_sort Zielinski, M
collection CERN
description %AD-2 %title\\ \\The Antihydrogen TRAP Collaboration (ATRAP) seeks to do precise laser spectroscopy of antihydrogen. Comparisons of antihydrogen and hydrogen atoms should provide the most stringent test of CPT invariance involving baryons and leptons. ATRAP is an expansion of the TRAP collaboration that developed the techniques to take CERN antiprotons from an energy of 6 MeV (momentum 100 MeV/c) all the way down to thermal equilibrium at 4 K for storage. This storage energy is lower than realized previously by more than ten orders of magnitude. The TRAP techniques include slowing, capturing, electron cooling and stacking of antiprotons. ATRAP and other collaborations will use antiprotons from the Antiproton Decelerator (AD). This new facility makes sense for such experiments because we showed that antiprotons can be accumulated in a trap at much lower expense than was required in the earlier CERN AC-AA-LEAR complex. In the closest approach yet to the production of cold antihydrogen, collaboration members were able to confine cold antiprotons and positrons together for the first time, and to observe their interaction. ATRAP now includes members who have pioneered crucial techniques required for the study of cold antihydrogen such as the laser spectroscopy of hydrogen, the spectroscopy of trapped hydrogen, atom trapping and laser cooling. Very recently we have demonstrated the first continuous source of Lyman alpha radiation (developed to facilitate antihydrogen spectroscopy) and have demonstrated that the stripping of high Rydberg states of positronium is an efficient way to produce the cold positrons needed for antihydrogen production.\\ \\
id cern-5602
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2002
record_format invenio
spelling cern-56022023-10-01T21:13:44Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/5602engZielinski, MSefzick, TStorry, C HGrzonka, D JCold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy%AD-2 %title\\ \\The Antihydrogen TRAP Collaboration (ATRAP) seeks to do precise laser spectroscopy of antihydrogen. Comparisons of antihydrogen and hydrogen atoms should provide the most stringent test of CPT invariance involving baryons and leptons. ATRAP is an expansion of the TRAP collaboration that developed the techniques to take CERN antiprotons from an energy of 6 MeV (momentum 100 MeV/c) all the way down to thermal equilibrium at 4 K for storage. This storage energy is lower than realized previously by more than ten orders of magnitude. The TRAP techniques include slowing, capturing, electron cooling and stacking of antiprotons. ATRAP and other collaborations will use antiprotons from the Antiproton Decelerator (AD). This new facility makes sense for such experiments because we showed that antiprotons can be accumulated in a trap at much lower expense than was required in the earlier CERN AC-AA-LEAR complex. In the closest approach yet to the production of cold antihydrogen, collaboration members were able to confine cold antiprotons and positrons together for the first time, and to observe their interaction. ATRAP now includes members who have pioneered crucial techniques required for the study of cold antihydrogen such as the laser spectroscopy of hydrogen, the spectroscopy of trapped hydrogen, atom trapping and laser cooling. Very recently we have demonstrated the first continuous source of Lyman alpha radiation (developed to facilitate antihydrogen spectroscopy) and have demonstrated that the stripping of high Rydberg states of positronium is an efficient way to produce the cold positrons needed for antihydrogen production.\\ \\oai:cds.cern.ch:56022002
spellingShingle Zielinski, M
Sefzick, T
Storry, C H
Grzonka, D J
Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy
title Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy
title_full Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy
title_fullStr Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy
title_short Cold Antihydrogen for Precise Laser Spectroscopy
title_sort cold antihydrogen for precise laser spectroscopy
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/5602
work_keys_str_mv AT zielinskim coldantihydrogenforpreciselaserspectroscopy
AT sefzickt coldantihydrogenforpreciselaserspectroscopy
AT storrych coldantihydrogenforpreciselaserspectroscopy
AT grzonkadj coldantihydrogenforpreciselaserspectroscopy