Sympathetic cooling of positrons to cryogenic temperatures for antihydrogen production.
C J BakerW BertscheA CapraC L CesarM CharltonA Cridland MathadS ErikssonA EvansN EvettsS FabbriJ FajansT FriesenM C FujiwaraP GrandemangeP GranumJ S HangstM E HaydenD HodgkinsonC A IsaacM A JohnsonJ M JonesS A JonesS JonsellL KurchaninovN MadsenD MaxwellJ T K McKennaS MenaryT MomoseP MullanK OlchanskiA OlinJ PeszkaA PowellP PusaC Ø RasmussenF RobicheauxR L SacramentoM SameedE SaridD M SilveiraG StutterC SoT D TharpR I ThompsonD P van der WerfJ S WurtelePublished in: Nature communications (2021)
The positron, the antiparticle of the electron, predicted by Dirac in 1931 and discovered by Anderson in 1933, plays a key role in many scientific and everyday endeavours. Notably, the positron is a constituent of antihydrogen, the only long-lived neutral antimatter bound state that can currently be synthesized at low energy, presenting a prominent system for testing fundamental symmetries with high precision. Here, we report on the use of laser cooled Be+ ions to sympathetically cool a large and dense plasma of positrons to directly measured temperatures below 7 K in a Penning trap for antihydrogen synthesis. This will likely herald a significant increase in the amount of antihydrogen available for experimentation, thus facilitating further improvements in studies of fundamental symmetries.