Ultracold anions for high-precision antihydrogen experiments
Abstract
Experiments with antihydrogen (H) for a study of matter--antimatter symmetry and antimatter gravity require ultracold H to reach ultimate precision. A promising path towards anti-atoms much colder than a few kelvin involves the pre-cooling of antiprotons by laser-cooled anions. Due to the weak binding of the valence electron in anions - dominated by polarization and correlation effects - only few candidate systems with suitable transitions exist. We report on a combination of experimental and theoretical studies to fully determine the relevant binding energies, transition rates and branching ratios of the most promising candidate La-. Using combined transverse and collinear laser spectroscopy, we determined the resonant frequency of the laser cooling transition to be = 96.592\,713(91) THz and its transition rate to be A = 4.90(50) × 104 s-1. Using a novel high-precision theoretical treatment of La- we calculated yet unmeasured energy levels, transition rates, branching ratios, and lifetimes to complement experimental information on the laser cooling cycle of La-. The new data establish the suitability of La- for laser cooling and show that the cooling transition is significantly stronger than suggested by a previous theoretical study.
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