| Literature DB >> 32922165 |
G Janka1, B Ohayon1, Z Burkley1, L Gerchow1, N Kuroda2, X Ni3, R Nishi2, Z Salman3, A Suter3, M Tuzi1, C Vigo1, T Prokscha3, P Crivelli1.
Abstract
Precision spectroscopy of the Muonium Lamb shift and fine structure requires a robust source of 2S Muonium. To date, the beam-foil technique is the only demonstrated method for creating such a beam in vacuum. Previous experiments using this technique were statistics limited, and new measurements would benefit tremendously from the efficient 2S production at a low energy muon ( < 20 keV) facility. Such a source of abundant low energy μ + has only become available in recent years, e.g. at the Low-Energy Muon beamline at the Paul Scherrer Institute. Using this source, we report on the successful creation of an intense, directed beam of metastable Muonium. We find that even though the theoretical Muonium fraction is maximal in the low energy range of 2-5 keV, scattering by the foil and transport characteristics of the beamline favor slightly higher μ + energies of 7-10 keV. We estimate that an event detection rate of a few events per second for a future Lamb shift measurement is feasible, enabling an increase in precision by two orders of magnitude over previous determinations.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32922165 PMCID: PMC7462919 DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-8400-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J C Part Fields ISSN: 1434-6044 Impact factor: 4.590
Fig. 1The experimental setup installed at the end of the LEM beamline (see text), lengths at the bottom are not to scale. To the right there is an example of the time distribution of particles reaching the Stop-MCP in coincidence with the Tag-MCP. The paths of M and are not parallel for visualization reasons
Fig. 2Histograms obtained from the dataset of 10 keV after background subtraction. The solid line data is with rejection field on and corresponds to pure M signal. The dotted data is with rejection electrode off and corresponds to M and signal. The filled bins were used to extract M fractions, whereas the hollow bins were ignored due to large statistical uncertainty and additional background
Fig. 3TOF distributions of M for 10 keV incident on the foil, with (dark blue) and without (light orange) extension stage. The errors on the rate are from statistics. A Landau distribution was used for fitting the spectra
Fig. 4Energy distributions of M reaching the Stop-MCP, measured at three different . Areas are normalized to 1
Summary of values extracted from different incident energies . MPE is the Most Probable Energy for M that traversed the foil and reached the Stop-MCP
| MPE | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (keV) | (keV) | (%) | (%) | (kHz) | (Hz) |
| 5.0 | – | 1.45 | |||
| 7.5 | 2.07 | ||||
| 10.0 | 2.84 |
For at 5 keV, % was assumed (see text)
Fig. 5M fraction measured as a function of residual energy after the foil
Fig. 6Time-of-flight distributions of the counts in the Ly--MCPs, obtained from the triple coincidence dataset of 10 keV . The dotted data is with quenching electrodes turned on, the solid data is with quenching off. The coloured area is the time window of interest, where the Ly- signal is to be expected
Fig. 7Results of Monte-Carlo simulation for the quenching and geometrical efficiency as a function of energy. The inset portrays a simulated valid event where M(2S) enters the detection region, is quenched by the static field created by the two circular electrodes, and emits a photon which reached one of the detectors