135 research outputs found
Contribution of the screened self-energy to the Lamb shift of quasidegenerate states
Expressions for the effective Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) Hamiltonian due to self-energy screening (self-energy correction to the electron-electron interaction) are presented. We use the method of the two-time Green's function, which handles quasidegenerate atomic states. From these expression one can evaluate energy corrections to, e.g., 1s2p 3P1 and 1s2p 1P1 in helium and two-electron ions, to all orders in Z\alph
Toward high-precision values of the self energy of non-S states in hydrogen and hydrogen-like ions
The method and status of a study to provide numerical, high-precision values
of the self-energy level shift in hydrogen and hydrogen-like ions is described.
Graphs of the self energy in hydrogen-like ions with nuclear charge number
between 20 and 110 are given for a large number of states. The self-energy is
the largest contribution of Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) to the energy levels
of these atomic systems. These results greatly expand the number of levels for
which the self energy is known with a controlled and high precision.
Applications include the adjustment of the Rydberg constant and atomic
calculations that take into account QED effects.Comment: Minor changes since previous versio
Production and decay of Sulphur excited species in a ECRIS plasma
The most important processes for the creation of S12+ to S14+ ions excited
states from the ground configurations of S9+ to S14+ ions in an electron
cyclotron resonance ion source, leading to the emission of K X-ray lines, are
studied. Theoretical values for inner-shell excitation and ionization cross
sections, including double KL and triple KLL ionization, transition
probabilities and energies for the deexcitation processes, are calculated in
the framework of the multi-configuration Dirac-Fock method. With reasonable
assumptions about the electron energy distribution, a theoretical K
X-ray spectrum is obtained, which is compared to recent experimental data
Relativistic and Radiative Energy Shifts for Rydberg States
We investigate relativistic and quantum electrodynamic effects for
highly-excited bound states in hydrogenlike systems (Rydberg states). In
particular, hydrogenic one-loop Bethe logarithms are calculated for all
circular states (l = n-1) in the range 20 <= n <= 60 and successfully compared
to an existing asymptotic expansion for large principal quantum number n. We
provide accurate expansions of the Bethe logarithm for large values of n, for
S, P and circular Rydberg states. These three expansions are expected to give
any Bethe logarithms for principal quantum number n > 20 to an accuracy of five
to seven decimal digits, within the specified manifolds of atomic states.
Within the numerical accuracy, the results constitute unified, general formulas
for quantum electrodynamic corrections whose validity is not restricted to a
single atomic state. The results are relevant for accurate predictions of
radiative shifts of Rydberg states and for the description of the recently
investigated laser-dressed Lamb shift, which is observable in a strong
coherent-wave light field.Comment: 8 pages; RevTeX
Highly charged ion X-rays from Electron-Cyclotron Resonance Ion Sources
Radiation from the highly-charged ions contained in the plasma of
Electron-Cyclotron Resonance Ion Sources constitutes a very bright source of
X-rays. Because the ions have a relatively low kinetic energy ( eV)
transitions can be very narrow, containing only small Doppler broadening. We
describe preliminary accurate measurements of two and three-electron ions with
Z=16--18. We show how these measurement can test sensitively many-body
relativistic calculations or can be used as X-ray standards for precise
measurements of X-ray transitions in exotic atoms
Electronic temperatures, densities and plasma X-ray emission of a 14.5 GHz Electron-Cyclotron Resonance Ion Source
We have performed a systematic study of the Bremsstrahlung emission from the
electrons in the plasma of a commercial 14.5 GHz Electron-Cyclotron Resonance
Ion Source. The electronic spectral temperature and the product of ionic and
electronic densities of the plasma are measured by analyzing the Bremsstrahlung
spectra recorded for several rare gases (Ar, Kr, Xe) as a function of the
injected power. Within our uncertainty, we find an average temperature of ? 48
keV above 100W, with a weak dependency on the injected power and gas
composition. Charge state distributions of extracted ion beams have been
determined as well, providing a way to disentangle the ionic density from the
electronic density. Moreover X-ray emission from highly charged argon ions in
the plasma has been observed with a high-resolution mosaic crystal
spectrometer, demonstrating the feasibility for high-precision measurements of
transition energies of highly charged ions, in particular of the magnetic
dipole (M1) transition of He-like of argon ions
Line shape of the muH(3p - 1s) hyperfine transitions
The (3p - 1s) X-ray transition to the muonic hydrogen ground state was
measured with a high resolution crystal spectrometer. A Doppler effect
broadening of the X-ray line was established which could be attributed to
different Coulomb de-excitation steps preceding the measured transition. The
assumption of a statistical population of the hyperfine levels of the muonic
hydrogen ground state was directly confirmed by the experiment and measured
values for the hyperfine splitting can be reported. The results allow a
decisive test of advanced cascade model calculations and establish a method to
extract fundamental strong-interaction parameters from pionic hydrogen
experiments.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Line shape analysis of the K transition in muonic hydrogen
The K transition in muonic hydrogen was measured with a
high-resolution crystal spectrometer. The spectrum is shown to be sensitive to
the ground-state hyperfine splitting, the corresponding triplet-to-singlet
ratio, and the kinetic energy distribution in the state. The hyperfine
splitting and triplet-to-singlet ratio are found to be consistent with the
values expected from theoretical and experimental investigations and,
therefore, were fixed accordingly in order to reduce the uncertainties in the
further reconstruction of the kinetic energy distribution. The presence of
high-energetic components was established and quantified in both a
phenomenological, i.e. cascade-model-free fit, and in a direct deconvolution of
the Doppler broadening based on the Bayesian approach.Comment: 22 pages, 21 figure
- …