5–11 Jun 2022
McMaster University
America/Toronto timezone
Welcome to the 2022 CAP Congress Program website! / Bienvenue au siteweb du programme du Congrès de l'ACP 2022!

(G*) Precision Antihydrogen Annihilation Reconstructions using the ALPHA-g Detector

8 Jun 2022, 14:30
15m
MDCL 1009 (McMaster University)

MDCL 1009

McMaster University

Oral Competition (Graduate Student) / Compétition orale (Étudiant(e) du 2e ou 3e cycle) Nuclear Physics / Physique nucléaire (DNP-DPN) W2-4 Fundamental Symmetries and new physics at low energy II (DNP) | Symétries fondamentales et nouvelle physique à basse énergie II (DPN)

Speaker

Ms Pooja Woosaree (University of Calgary Dep. of Phys. and Astronomy (CA))

Description

The ALPHA (Antihydrogen Laser PHysics Apparatus) collaboration aims to test fundamental symmetries with matter and antimatter by testing CPT (charge conjugation, parity reversal, time reversal) theory and observing whether antimatter follows Einstein’s Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP), where the acceleration due to gravity that a body experiences is independent of its structure or composition. A measurement of the gravitational mass of antimatter has never been done before, as previous experiments used charged particles, which meant the experiments were dominated by electromagnetic forces. The ALPHA-g apparatus will use electrically neutral antihydrogen atoms produced in a vertical Penning-Malmberg trap and hold the antihydrogen in a magnetic well. Once the antihydrogen is released, the position of the resulting annihilations can be reconstructed with a radial time projection chamber (rTPC) surrounding the trapping volume. Tracing the annihilation position within the rTPC is imperative to measuring the gravitational mass of antihydrogen. Simulations of antihydrogen annihilations, and how to calibrate the detector for z-positions will be discussed. This data will be used to measure the gravitational mass of antihydrogen; an important measurement in testing the fundamental symmetry of matter and antimatter. The ALPHA-g apparatus is currently being commissioned at CERN, and the first gravitational measurements of antihydrogen are underway.

Primary author

Ms Pooja Woosaree (University of Calgary Dep. of Phys. and Astronomy (CA))

Presentation materials