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Confinement of antihydrogen for 1000 seconds

Authors :
ALPHA Collaboration
Andresen, G. B.
Ashkezari, M. D.
Baquero-Ruiz, M.
Bertsche, W.
Butler, E.
Cesar, C. L.
Deller, A.
Eriksson, S.
Fajans, J.
Friesen, T.
Fujiwara, M. C.
Gill, D. R.
Gutierrez, A.
Hangst, J. S.
Hardy, W. N.
Hayano, R. S.
Hayden, M. E.
Humphries, A. J.
Hydomako, R.
Jonsell, S.
Kemp, S.
Kurchaninov, L.
Madsen, N.
Menary, S.
Nolan, P.
Olchanski, K.
Olin, A.
Pusa, P.
Rasmussen, C. Ø.
Robicheaux, F.
Sarid, E.
Silveira, D. M.
So, C.
Storey, J. W.
Thompson, R. I.
van der Werf, D. P.
Wurtele, J. S.
Yamazaki, Y.
Source :
Nature Phys.7:558-564,2011
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Atoms made of a particle and an antiparticle are unstable, usually surviving less than a microsecond. Antihydrogen, made entirely of antiparticles, is believed to be stable, and it is this longevity that holds the promise of precision studies of matter-antimatter symmetry. We have recently demonstrated trapping of antihydrogen atoms by releasing them after a confinement time of 172 ms. A critical question for future studies is: how long can anti-atoms be trapped? Here we report the observation of anti-atom confinement for 1000 s, extending our earlier results by nearly four orders of magnitude. Our calculations indicate that most of the trapped anti-atoms reach the ground state. Further, we report the first measurement of the energy distribution of trapped antihydrogen which, coupled with detailed comparisons with simulations, provides a key tool for the systematic investigation of trapping dynamics. These advances open up a range of experimental possibilities, including precision studies of CPT symmetry and cooling to temperatures where gravitational effects could become apparent.<br />Comment: 30 pages, 4 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Phys.7:558-564,2011
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1104.4982
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys2025