Literature DB >> 27370434

The cryogenic storage ring CSR.

R von Hahn1, A Becker1, F Berg1, K Blaum1, C Breitenfeldt1, H Fadil1, F Fellenberger1, M Froese1, S George1, J Göck1, M Grieser1, F Grussie1, E A Guerin1, O Heber2, P Herwig1, J Karthein1, C Krantz1, H Kreckel1, M Lange1, F Laux1, S Lohmann1, S Menk1, C Meyer1, P M Mishra1, O Novotný1, A P O'Connor1, D A Orlov1, M L Rappaport2, R Repnow1, S Saurabh1, S Schippers3, C D Schröter1, D Schwalm1, L Schweikhard4, T Sieber1, A Shornikov1, K Spruck1, S Sunil Kumar1, J Ullrich1, X Urbain5, S Vogel1, P Wilhelm1, A Wolf1, D Zajfman2.   

Abstract

An electrostatic cryogenic storage ring, CSR, for beams of anions and cations with up to 300 keV kinetic energy per unit charge has been designed, constructed, and put into operation. With a circumference of 35 m, the ion-beam vacuum chambers and all beam optics are in a cryostat and cooled by a closed-cycle liquid helium system. At temperatures as low as (5.5 ± 1) K inside the ring, storage time constants of several minutes up to almost an hour were observed for atomic and molecular, anion and cation beams at an energy of 60 keV. The ion-beam intensity, energy-dependent closed-orbit shifts (dispersion), and the focusing properties of the machine were studied by a system of capacitive pickups. The Schottky-noise spectrum of the stored ions revealed a broadening of the momentum distribution on a time scale of 1000 s. Photodetachment of stored anions was used in the beam lifetime measurements. The detachment rate by anion collisions with residual-gas molecules was found to be extremely low. A residual-gas density below 140 cm(-3) is derived, equivalent to a room-temperature pressure below 10(-14) mbar. Fast atomic, molecular, and cluster ion beams stored for long periods of time in a cryogenic environment will allow experiments on collision- and radiation-induced fragmentation processes of ions in known internal quantum states with merged and crossed photon and particle beams.

Year:  2016        PMID: 27370434     DOI: 10.1063/1.4953888

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Sci Instrum        ISSN: 0034-6748            Impact factor:   1.523


  1 in total

1.  High-precision electron affinity of oxygen.

Authors:  Moa K Kristiansson; Kiattichart Chartkunchand; Gustav Eklund; Odd M Hole; Emma K Anderson; Nathalie de Ruette; Magdalena Kamińska; Najeeb Punnakayathil; José E Navarro-Navarrete; Stefan Sigurdsson; Jon Grumer; Ansgar Simonsson; Mikael Björkhage; Stefan Rosén; Peter Reinhed; Mikael Blom; Anders Källberg; John D Alexander; Henrik Cederquist; Henning Zettergren; Henning T Schmidt; Dag Hanstorp
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-10-07       Impact factor: 17.694

  1 in total

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