| Literature DB >> 28508892 |
Johannes Ullmann1,2,3, Zoran Andelkovic4, Carsten Brandau4,5, Andreas Dax6, Wolfgang Geithner4, Christopher Geppert1,7, Christian Gorges1, Michael Hammen7,8, Volker Hannen9, Simon Kaufmann1, Kristian König1, Yuri A Litvinov4, Matthias Lochmann1, Bernhard Maaß1, Johann Meisner10, Tobias Murböck11, Rodolfo Sánchez4, Matthias Schmidt10, Stefan Schmidt1, Markus Steck4, Thomas Stöhlker2,3,4, Richard C Thompson12, Christian Trageser5, Jonas Vollbrecht9, Christian Weinheimer9, Wilfried Nörtershäuser1.
Abstract
Electrons bound in highly charged heavy ions such as hydrogen-like bismuth 209Bi82+ experience electromagnetic fields that are a million times stronger than in light atoms. Measuring the wavelength of light emitted and absorbed by these ions is therefore a sensitive testing ground for quantum electrodynamical (QED) effects and especially the electron-nucleus interaction under such extreme conditions. However, insufficient knowledge of the nuclear structure has prevented a rigorous test of strong-field QED. Here we present a measurement of the so-called specific difference between the hyperfine splittings in hydrogen-like and lithium-like bismuth 209Bi82+,80+ with a precision that is improved by more than an order of magnitude. Even though this quantity is believed to be largely insensitive to nuclear structure and therefore the most decisive test of QED in the strong magnetic field regime, we find a 7-σ discrepancy compared with the theoretical prediction.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28508892 PMCID: PMC5440849 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Calculated contributions to the specific difference.
| Dirac | −31.809 |
| Interelectronic Interaction 1/ | −29.995 |
| Interelectronic Interaction 1/ | 0.258 |
| Interelectronic Interaction 1/ | −0.003(3) |
| Single-electron QED | 0.036 |
| Screened QED | 0.193(2) |
| Bohr–Weisskopf | 0.003 |
| Nuclear magnetic moment | 0.003 |
| Nuclear polarization | 0.002 |
| Δ′ | −61.320(4)(5) |
| Δ′ | −61.012(5)(21) |
Theoretical results and uncertainties of Δ′E=ΔE(2−ξΔE(1 and its individual contributions taken from ref. 25. All values are in meV. The first and second uncertainties in the total value of Δ′E arise from uncalculated higher-order terms and the uncertainty of the complete cancellation of all nuclear effects, respectively. Uncertainties of Δ′Eexperiment are the statistical and systematic uncertainty contributions as listed in Table 2 and discussed in the Methods section.
Figure 1Overview of the experimental setup at GSI.
The bismuth ions revolve in the ESR and the velocity spread of the ions is reduced by electron cooling. The final velocity is determined by the accelerating potential of the electron beam, which is measured with a high-precision voltage divider. Two ion bunches are formed by applying the second harmonic of the revolution frequency to a radio frequency (RF) cavity. Fluorescence and background photons are reflected by specialized mirror systems (inset) and detected with photo multiplier tubes (PMT) for ultraviolet and infrared light. A newly designed parabolic copper mirror system30 allowed the detection of the resonance in the Li-like charge state13. The data acquisition system (DAQ) comprises fast time-to-digital converters to resolve the temporal phase of each detected photon.
Figure 2Resonances of H-like and Li-like bismuth.
Typical resonance spectra in a coasting (unbunched) H-like Bi82+ ion beam (a) and a bunched Li-like Bi80+ ion beam (b). In each figure, the topmost part shows the fluorescence counts in colour code as a function of the laser wavelength (x axis) and the temporal phase of the photon detection (y axis) with respect to the revolution frequency (≈2 MHz). The span of the ordinate equals one revolution period in the storage ring. Underneath are shown the normalized fluorescence spectrum and the residual of the weighted Gaussian fit (solid line) at the bottom. All graphs share the same abscissa. The error bars represent the statistical uncertainty. For more details, see text.
Estimation of experimental uncertainties.
| Gaussian fit | 2.9 | 5.0 | ||||
| Wavelength measurement | +3.1 | 0.4 | 1.2 | −0.5 | 0.3 | 1.1 |
| Bunching amplitude | 7.4 | 7.3 | ||||
| Ion current | 11.7 | 11.7 | ||||
| Space charge | −73.9 | 6.8 | −85.6 | 6.8 | ||
| High-voltage measurement | 1.4 | 7.0 | 1.1 | 7.0 | ||
| Overlap angle | +4.9 | −0.8 | ||||
| Total uncertainty (p.p.m.) | 3.3 | 17.7 | 5.2 | 17.0 | ||
| Final value | 243.8221 (8)(43) nm | 1554.377 (8)(28) nm | ||||
| Final value Δ | 5085.03 (2)(9) meV | 797.645 (4)(14) meV | ||||
Corrections for systematic shifts of the rest frame transition wavelength λ0 and contributions to its statistical and systematic uncertainty caused by various experimental parameters as discussed in the Methods section. All values are provided in p.p.m. of λ0 and represent 1-σ confidence regions. Final values for λ0 and the hyperfine splitting energy are given with statistical and systematic 1-σ uncertainties in parentheses.
Figure 3Size of hyperfine splittings and the specific difference.
(a) Evolution of the HFS energies in H-like bismuth, obtained experimentally (blue solid squares)613 and from theoretical predictions (red open diamonds)19202123. (b) The transition in Li-like bismuth was measured by ref. 13 following various predictions19222335 (inset:202425). The specific difference Δ′E is shown in c as predicted from theory1225 and obtained in experiments13. The error bars are taken from the respective publication, systematic and statistical experimental uncertainties were added linearly.