| Literature DB >> 25066810 |
S Aghion1, O Ahlén2, C Amsler3, A Ariga3, T Ariga3, A S Belov4, K Berggren2, G Bonomi5, P Bräunig6, J Bremer2, R S Brusa7, L Cabaret8, C Canali9, R Caravita10, F Castelli10, G Cerchiari11, S Cialdi10, D Comparat8, G Consolati1, H Derking2, S Di Domizio12, L Di Noto7, M Doser2, A Dudarev2, A Ereditato3, R Ferragut1, A Fontana13, P Genova13, M Giammarchi14, A Gligorova15, S N Gninenko4, S Haider2, T Huse16, E Jordan11, L V Jørgensen2, T Kaltenbacher2, J Kawada3, A Kellerbauer11, M Kimura3, A Knecht2, D Krasnický17, V Lagomarsino18, S Lehner19, A Magnani20, C Malbrunot21, S Mariazzi22, V A Matveev23, F Moia1, G Nebbia24, P Nédélec25, M K Oberthaler6, N Pacifico15, V Petràček26, C Pistillo3, F Prelz14, M Prevedelli27, C Regenfus9, C Riccardi20, O Røhne16, A Rotondi20, H Sandaker15, P Scampoli28, J Storey3, M A Subieta Vasquez5, M Špaček26, G Testera12, R Vaccarone12, E Widmann19, S Zavatarelli12, J Zmeskal19.
Abstract
The precise measurement of forces is one way to obtain deep insight into the fundamental interactions present in nature. In the context of neutral antimatter, the gravitational interaction is of high interest, potentially revealing new forces that violate the weak equivalence principle. Here we report on a successful extension of a tool from atom optics--the moiré deflectometer--for a measurement of the acceleration of slow antiprotons. The setup consists of two identical transmission gratings and a spatially resolving emulsion detector for antiproton annihilations. Absolute referencing of the observed antimatter pattern with a photon pattern experiencing no deflection allows the direct inference of forces present. The concept is also straightforwardly applicable to antihydrogen measurements as pursued by the AEgIS collaboration. The combination of these very different techniques from high energy and atomic physics opens a very promising route to the direct detection of the gravitational acceleration of neutral antimatter.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25066810 PMCID: PMC4124857 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Moiré deflectometer for antiprotons.
(a) A divergent antiproton beam impinges on two subsequent gratings that restrict the transmitted particles to well-defined trajectories. This leads to a shadow fringe pattern as indicated in b, which is shifted in the presence of a force (blue trajectories). Finally, the antiprotons are detected with a spatially resolving emulsion detector. To infer the force, the shifted position of the moiré pattern has to be compared with the expected pattern without force. (c) This is achieved using light and near-field interference, the shift of which is negligible. A grating in direct contact with the emulsion is used to reference the antimatter and the light measurements.
Figure 2Antiproton fringe pattern.
(a) The spatial pattern of the antiprotons (highlighted as blue tracks) as detected by the emulsion detector in an exemplary area of 1 mm2. The annihilation of an antiproton leads to a clear signal from which the annihilation vertex can be extracted with a precision of 2 μm by reconstruction analysing the emitted secondary particles. The image enlargement shows an exemplary annihilation star. (b) The fringe pattern after transmission through the moiré deflectometer setup reveals a visibility as high as (71±10) %. Since less than one antiproton is detected per lattice period, the pattern shown is obtained by binning the vertical positions modulo the extracted periodicity of the fringe pattern. The solid black line denotes the expected distribution. (c) The pattern behind a grating placed directly on the emulsion detector (‘contact’) is a simple shadow that is smeared out due to the finite resolution of the detection. The few background events are consistent with independently observed grating defects. This pattern is used as a reference with no force dependence since the transit time is zero. The position of the moiré fringe pattern (indicated as offset a) is measured using light.
Figure 3Comparison between photon and antiproton patterns.
(a) The spatial positions of the detected antiprotons (blue dots) are compared with the subsequently recorded light pattern (measured intensity indicated by the red shading). The Talbot–Lau fringe pattern provides the zero-force reference, presented here for the same exemplary detector area with ten annihilations as in Fig. 2a. (b) The antiproton and light measurements are aligned by overlaying the two patterns obtained with the contact grating. The result of this procedure is visualized on the right, where the annihilation positions of all antiprotons are folded into an area of 80 × 80 μm2. The moiré and Talbot–Lau pattern depicted on the left, without any further alignment, can be compared to determine a shift. (c) The data is projected onto the y axis for quantitative analysis. A relative shift between moiré and Talbot–Lau pattern indicates that a force is present. The observed mean shift of 9.8 μm is consistent with a mean force of 530 aN.
Figure 4Monte Carlo simulation.
A detailed simulation study based on the expected energy distribution of the antiprotons (see Methods) shows the visibility for increasingly large forces. As the observed pattern in the presence of a force is an ensemble of differently shifted patterns corresponding to different transit times τ the visibility consequently decreases. The measured fringe pattern exhibits a visibility of (71±10) % and is consistent with the result of this simulation. The error bar on the measured visibility is determined via resampling; the error bar on the measured force includes the systematic error bound and the one sigma statistical error bound. The observed high visibility excludes that the fringe pattern is shifted by more than one period and sets an upper limit for a force present without the necessity of referencing.
Figure 5Rayleigh test.
The results of the Rayleigh test applied on the antiproton data of the moiré deflectometer and the contact grating show unambiguous maxima from which orientation and periodicity of the patterns are extracted.
Figure 6Simulated energy distribution.
A Monte Carlo simulation based on the Geant4 toolkit provides an estimate of the kinetic energy distribution of the antiprotons reaching the moiré deflectometer. This calculation takes into account the degrading foil system, the magnetic field and the geometry of the AEgIS apparatus.