| Literature DB >> 27308149 |
B Yerozolimsky1, A Steyerl2, O Kwon2, V Luschikov3, A Strelkov3, P Geltenbort4, N Achiwa5, A Pichlmaier6, P Fierlinger6.
Abstract
A new type of per-fluorinated polymer, "Low Temperature Fomblin," has been tested as a wall coating in an ultracold neutron (UCN) storage experiment using a gravitational storage system. The data show a UCN reflection loss coefficient η as low as ≈ 5 × 10(-6) in the temperature range 105 K to 150 K. We plan to use this oil in a new type of neutron lifetime measurement, where a bellows system ("accordion") enables to vary the trap size in a wide range while the total surface area and distribution of surface area over height remain constant. These unique characteristics, in combination with application of the scaling technique developed by W. Mampe et al. in 1989, ensure exact linearity for the extrapolation from inverse storage lifetimes to the inverse neutron lifetime. Linearity holds for any energy dependence of loss coefficient µ(E). Using the UCN source at the Institut Laue Langevin we expect to achieve a lifetime precision below ±1 s.Entities:
Keywords: neutron lifetime; ultracold neutrons
Year: 2005 PMID: 27308149 PMCID: PMC4852844 DOI: 10.6028/jres.110.052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Res Natl Inst Stand Technol ISSN: 1044-677X
Fig. 1Schematic view of the “accordion” system. It contains a UCN trap whose surface area remains constant while the volume is changeable by a factor 27. The inner surface will be coated with “Low Temperature Fomblin” at temperatures in the range from 100 K to 220 K to provide a low-loss UCN storage system for a neutron lifetime measurement.
Fig. 2Test of linearity of a plot of inverse storage lifetime τst−1, versus relative wall collision rate ν/ν0. For the largest trap volume Vmax, ν0 = 51.9 Hz. The τst−1 -values are mean values for the storage interval from t1 = 300 s to t2 = 2300 s (for the largest volume). The collision rates are mean values for the same time interval. The windows show results of linear fits for subgroups of points (counting from the left): bottom: 1–4; left: 1–5; top: 1–10; right: 7–10. Extrapolated y-axis intersections agree within 0.3 s with the value τn = 886 s used in all calculations. The error ranges reflect residuals and do not include counting statistics.