33 research outputs found

    Suppression of electrical breakdown phenomena in liquid TriMethyl Bismuth based ionization detectors

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    Organometallic liquids provide good properties for ionization detectors. TriMethyl Bismuth (TMBi) has been proposed as a detector medium with charge and Cherenkov photon readout for Positron Emission Tomography. In this work, we present studies for the handling of TMBi at different electric fields and under different environmental conditions to find applicable configurations for the suppression of electrical breakdowns in TMBi at room temperature. A simple glass cell with two electrodes filled with TMBi was constructed and tested under different operation conditions. Working at the vapour pressure of TMBi at room temperature of about 40 mbar and electric fields of up to 20 kV/cm in presence of a small oxygen contamination we found the formation of a discharge channel in the liquid and a steady increase in the current. Further reduction of pressure by pumping caused the TMBi to boil and a spontaneous combustion. Eliminating the oxygen contamination led the TMBi under the same condition to only decompose. When operating the setup under an argon atmosphere of 1 bar we did not observe breakdowns of the electrical potential up to field strengths of 20 kV/cm. Still, in presence of a small oxygen contamination fluctuating currents in the nA range were observed, but no decomposition or combustion. We conclude from our experiments that TMBi at room temperature in a pure argon atmosphere of 1 bar remains stable against electrical breakdown at least up to electric field strengths of 20 kV/cm, presumably because the formation of gaseous TMBi was prevented.Comment: 14 page, 8 figure

    Background reduction at the KATRIN experiment by the shifted analysing plane configuration

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    The KATRIN experiment aims at measuring the electron neutrino mass with a sensitivity of 0.2 eV/c2^2 after 5 years of data taking. Recently a new upper limit for the neutrino mass of 0.8 eV/c2^2 (90% CL) was obtained. To reach the design sensitivity, a reduction of the background rate by one order of magnitude is required. The shifted analysing plane (SAP) configuration exploits a specific shaping of the electric and magnetic fields in the KATRIN main spectrometer to reduce the spectrometer background by a factor of two. We discuss the general idea of the SAP configuration and describe the main features of this novel measurement mode

    Observation of the hyperfine transition in lithium-like Bismuth 209Bi80+^{209}\text{Bi}^{80+}: Towards a test of QED in strong magnetic fields

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    We performed a laser spectroscopic determination of the 2s2s hyperfine splitting (HFS) of Li-like 209Bi80+^{209}\text{Bi}^{80+} and repeated the measurement of the 1s1s HFS of H-like 209Bi82+^{209}\text{Bi}^{82+}. Both ion species were subsequently stored in the Experimental Storage Ring at the GSI Helmholtzzentrum f\"ur Schwerionenforschung Darmstadt and cooled with an electron cooler at a velocity of ≈0.71 c\approx 0.71\,c. Pulsed laser excitation of the M1M1 hyperfine-transition was performed in anticollinear and collinear geometry for Bi82+\text{Bi}^{82+} and Bi80+\text{Bi}^{80+}, respectively, and observed by fluorescence detection. We obtain ΔE(1s)=5086.3(11) meV\Delta E^{(1s)}= 5086.3(11)\,\textrm{meV} for Bi82+\text{Bi}^{82+}, different from the literature value, and ΔE(2s)=797.50(18) meV\Delta E^{(2s)}= 797.50(18)\,\textrm{meV} for Bi80+\text{Bi}^{80+}. These values provide experimental evidence that a specific difference between the two splitting energies can be used to test QED calculations in the strongest static magnetic fields available in the laboratory independent of nuclear structure effects. The experimental result is in excellent agreement with the theoretical prediction and confirms the sum of the Dirac term and the relativistic interelectronic-interaction correction at a level of 0.5% confirming the importance of accounting for the Breit interaction.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Collinear Laser Spectroscopy of Helium-like ÂčÂčBÂłâș

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    Collinear laser spectroscopy in the 1s2sÂłS₁→1s2pÂłP₀,₂ transitions of helium-like ÂčÂčBÂłâș was performed using the HITRAP beamline at the GSI Helmholtz Centre. The ions were produced in an electron beam ion source, extracted, and accelerated to a beam energy of 4 keV/q. Results agree with previous measurements within uncertainty. Thus, it was demonstrated that the metastable state in He-like ions is sufficiently populated to carry out collinear laser spectroscopy. The measurement is a pilot experiment for a series of measurements that will be performed at a dedicated collinear laser spectroscopy setup at TU Darmstadt with light helium-like ions

    XUV Fluorescence Detection of Laser-Cooled Stored Relativistic Ions

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    An improved moveable in vacuo XUV fluorescence detection system was employed for the laser cooling of bunched relativistic ( ÎČ = 0.47) carbon ions at the Experimental Storage Ring (ESR) of GSI Helmholtzzentrum Darmstadt, Germany. Strongly Doppler boosted XUV fluorescence (∌90 nm) was emitted from the ions in a forward light cone after laser excitation of the 2s–2p transition (∌155 nm) by a new tunable pulsed UV laser system (257 nm). It was shown that the detected fluorescence strongly depends on the position of the detector around the bunched ion beam and on the delay (∌ns) between the ion bunches and the laser pulses. In addition, the fluorescence information could be directly combined with the revolution frequencies of the ions (and their longitudinal momentum spread), which were recorded using the Schottky resonator at the ESR. These fluorescence detection features are required for future laser cooling experiments at highly relativistic energies (up to Îł ∌ 13) and high intensities (up to 10 11 particles) of ion beams in the new heavy ion synchrotron SIS100 at FAIR
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