Bulletin of the American Physical Society
66th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 7–11, 2024; Atlanta, Georgia
Session NP12: Poster Session V:
Fundamental Plasma Physics III: waves, self-organization
Fundamental Plasma Physics IV: turbulence, reconnection, non-neutral/antimatter
High Field Tokamaks
Mirrors
9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Hyatt Regency
Room: Grand Hall West
Abstract: NP12.00078 : Magnetic field studies for precision measurements on antihydrogen in ALPHA*
Presenter:
Jaspal Singh
Authors:
Jaspal Singh
William A Bertsche
(University of Manchester)
Collaboration:
Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus (ALPHA)
Currently, magnetometry techniques available to ALPHA experiments without invasive hardware within traps are limited to on-axis locations. Techniques include Electron Cyclotron Resonance (ECR) using microwave pulses to illuminate quickly prepared low-density electron plasmas carefully positioned along the PM trap axis [1, 2], or extrapolations of the magnetron frequency of these plasmas [3]. First, this study presents an increased characterisation on the preparation of the target plasmas to avoid charge extraction instabilities from a reservoir of electrons. Then, we present 3D magnetometry results with additional radial off-axis control of these plasmas under sectored cylindrical PM electrodes, extending over 70% of the trap diameter (29.6 mm). Far off-axis ECR is performed on these displaced plasmas within the superimposed traps. The plasmas can be reproducibly restored to the on-axis and diagnosed, maintaining acceptable plasma characteristics.
This technique allows for probing the magnetic field and tuning the 3D trapping potential, thereby addressing uncertainties in experimental data and models, ultimately improving the precision of antihydrogen measurements.
[1] ED Hunter. Physics of Plasmas, 27(3), 2020.
[2] ED Hunter. Review of Scientific Instruments, 91(10), 2020.
[3] ALPHA. Nature, 621(7980):716–722, 2023.
*UKRIEPSRC
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