70th Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference
Volume 62, Number 10
Monday–Friday, November 6–10, 2017;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session JW3: Antimatter and Other Processes
8:00 AM–9:30 AM,
Wednesday, November 8, 2017
Room: Oakmont Junior Ballroom
Chair: James Colgan, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.GEC.JW3.1
Abstract: JW3.00001 : Fresh Insights and Initiatives in Low Energy Scattering Processes Involving Antiparticles
8:00 AM–8:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Michael Charlton
(Swansea University)
We will review aspects of the scattering of antiparticles, and in particular
processes used in the controlled formation of antihydrogen atoms with low
enough kinetic energies to allow their storage in magnetic minimum neutral
atom traps [1-3], an advance that has led to the first determination of some
of the properties of the anti-atom [4-7]. When antihydrogen is created via
the mixing of dense clouds of cold positrons and antiprotons, radial
transport of the antiprotons occurs due to repeated cycles of antihydrogen
formation and break-up. We will describe how simulations [8] have elucidated
the underlying physics, and explore some the implications for improved
antihydrogen trapping efficiencies.
There is renewed interest in the use of excited state positronium to form
antihydrogen. We will review recent theoretical activity in this field from
which accurate data for sub-eV positronium-antiproton collisions have become
available for the first time [9-12]. We describe how it may be feasible to
use charge exchange in collisions of positronium with ions to create a range
of cold atomic species [13], including some which, to date, have not been
amenable to laser cooling.
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113002
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}134004
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(}2017) 134001
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To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.GEC.JW3.1