After the first production of cold antihydrogen by the ATHENA and ATRAP experiments ten years ago, new second-generation experiments are aimed at measuring the fundamental properties of this anti-atom. The goal of AEGIS (Antimatter Experiment: Gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy) is to test the weak equivalence principle by studying the gravitational interaction between matter and antimatter with a pulsed, cold antihydrogen beam. The experiment is currently being assembled at CERN’s Antiproton Decelerator. In AEGIS, antihydrogen will be produced by charge exchange of cold antiprotons with positronium excited to a high Rydberg state (n > 20). An antihydrogen beam will be produced by controlled acceleration in an electric-field gradient (Stark acceleration). The deflection of the horizontal beam due to its free fall in the gravitational field of the earth will be measured with a moiré deflectometer. Initially, the gravitational acceleration will be determined to a precision of 1%, requiring the detection of about 10^5 antihydrogen atoms. In this paper, after a general description, the present status of the experiment will be reviewed.

A. Kellerbauer, Y. Allkofer, C. Amsler, A. S. Belov, G. Bonomi, P. Braeunig, et al. (2012). The AEGIS experiment at CERN. Measuring the free fall of antihydrogen [10.1007/s10751-012-0583-x].

The AEGIS experiment at CERN. Measuring the free fall of antihydrogen

PREVEDELLI, MARCO;
2012

Abstract

After the first production of cold antihydrogen by the ATHENA and ATRAP experiments ten years ago, new second-generation experiments are aimed at measuring the fundamental properties of this anti-atom. The goal of AEGIS (Antimatter Experiment: Gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy) is to test the weak equivalence principle by studying the gravitational interaction between matter and antimatter with a pulsed, cold antihydrogen beam. The experiment is currently being assembled at CERN’s Antiproton Decelerator. In AEGIS, antihydrogen will be produced by charge exchange of cold antiprotons with positronium excited to a high Rydberg state (n > 20). An antihydrogen beam will be produced by controlled acceleration in an electric-field gradient (Stark acceleration). The deflection of the horizontal beam due to its free fall in the gravitational field of the earth will be measured with a moiré deflectometer. Initially, the gravitational acceleration will be determined to a precision of 1%, requiring the detection of about 10^5 antihydrogen atoms. In this paper, after a general description, the present status of the experiment will be reviewed.
2012
Proceedings of the International Conference on Exotic Atoms and Related Topics (EXA 2011), PART I/III
43
49
A. Kellerbauer, Y. Allkofer, C. Amsler, A. S. Belov, G. Bonomi, P. Braeunig, et al. (2012). The AEGIS experiment at CERN. Measuring the free fall of antihydrogen [10.1007/s10751-012-0583-x].
A. Kellerbauer; Y. Allkofer; C. Amsler; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Braeunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; G. Burghart; L. Cabaret; C. Canali; F. Castelli; ...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/116815
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