| Literature DB >> 34720287 |
M Hori1, H Aghai-Khozani1,2, A Sótér3, A Dax4, D Barna5,6.
Abstract
We review recent experiments carried out by the PiHe collaboration of the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) that observed an infrared transition of three-body pionic helium atoms by laser spectroscopy. These measurements may lead to a precise determination of the charged pion mass, and complement experiments of antiprotonic helium atoms carried out at the new ELENA facility of CERN.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34720287 PMCID: PMC8550253 DOI: 10.1007/s00601-021-01630-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Few Body Syst ISSN: 0177-7963 Impact factor: 1.362
Fig. 1Energy level diagram of atoms. The theoretical energy of state is shown relative to the three-body-breakup threshold. The wavy lines indicate Auger-dominated states with picosecond-scale lifetimes, and the solid lines metastable levels with lifetimes of ns. Auger decay rates of the states are indicated in s. The dashed lines show the ionic states that are formed after Auger electron emission. The curved arrows indicate Auger transitions with minimum . Radiative transitions and are shown by straight arrows, with the corresponding decay rates indicated in s. From Ref. [1]
Fig. 2a: Layout of the experiment. The beam traverses a segmented scintillation counter before coming to rest in the helium target, and the resulting metastable atoms are irradiated with ps long laser pulses. The resulting neutrons, protons, and deuterons that emerge from the absorption in the helium nuclei are detected by 140 plastic scintillation counters that surround the target. b: Schematic layout of the laser system. From Ref. [2]
Fig. 3a: Time spectra of nuclear fragments measured with (indicated by filled circles with error bars) and without (blue filled histogram) laser irradiation at time ns. The peak in the former spectrum at ns corresponds to the resonance signal of . b: Profile of the resonance measured by scanning the laser frequency over a 500 GHz wide region and plotting the normalized counts under the peaks. From Ref. [2]