17 research outputs found

    The metastable Q 3Δ2^3\Delta_2 state of ThO: A new resource for the ACME electron EDM search

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    The best upper limit for the electron electric dipole moment was recently set by the ACME collaboration. This experiment measures an electron spin-precession in a cold beam of ThO molecules in their metastable H (3Δ1)H~(^3\Delta_1) state. Improvement in the statistical and systematic uncertainties is possible with more efficient use of molecules from the source and better magnetometry in the experiment, respectively. Here, we report measurements of several relevant properties of the long-lived Q (3Δ2)Q~(^3\Delta_2) state of ThO, and show that this state is a very useful resource for both these purposes. The QQ state lifetime is long enough that its decay during the time of flight in the ACME beam experiment is negligible. The large electric dipole moment measured for the QQ state, giving rise to a large linear Stark shift, is ideal for an electrostatic lens that increases the fraction of molecules detected downstream. The measured magnetic moment of the QQ state is also large enough to be used as a sensitive co-magnetometer in ACME. Finally, we show that the QQ state has a large transition dipole moment to the C (1Π1)C~(^1\Pi_1) state, which allows for efficient population transfer between the ground state X (1Σ+)X~(^1\Sigma^+) and the QQ state via X−C−QX-C-Q Stimulated Raman Adiabatic Passage (STIRAP). We demonstrate 90 90\,% STIRAP transfer efficiency. In the course of these measurements, we also determine the magnetic moment of CC state, the X→CX\rightarrow C transition dipole moment, and branching ratios of decays from the CC state.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 5 pages appendice

    Suppression of the optical crosstalk in a multi-channel silicon photomultiplier array

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    We propose and study a method of optical crosstalk suppression for silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) using optical filters. We demonstrate that attaching absorptive visible bandpass filters to the SiPM can substantially reduce the optical crosstalk. Measurements suggest that the absorption of near infrared light is important to achieve this suppression. The proposed technique can be easily applied to suppress the optical crosstalk in SiPMs in cases where filtering near infrared light is compatible with the application

    A scalable method of applying heat and humidity for decontamination of N95 respirators during the COVID-19 crisis

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    A lack of N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators (FFRs) during the COVID-19 crisis has placed healthcare workers at risk. It is important for any N95 reuse strategy to determine the effects that proposed protocols would have on the physical functioning of the mask, as well as the practical aspects of implementation. Here we propose and implement a method of heating N95 respirators with moisture (85°C, 60-85% humidity). We test both mask filtration efficiency and fit to validate this process. Our tests focus on the 3M 1860, 3M 1870, and 3M 8210 Plus N95 models. After five cycles of the heating procedure, all three respirators pass both quantitative fit testing (score of >100) and show no degradation of mask filtration efficiency. We also test the Chen Heng V9501 KN95 and HKYQ N95 finding no degradation of mask filtration efficiency, however even for unheated masks these scored <50 for every fit test. The heating method presented here is scalable from individual masks to over a thousand a day with a single industrial convection oven, making this method practical for local application inside health-care facilities

    High-sensitivity low-noise photodetector using a large-area silicon photomultiplier

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    The application of silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) technology for weak-light detection at a single photon level has expanded thanks to its better photon detection efficiency in comparison to a conventional photomultiplier tube (PMT). SiPMs with large detection area have recently become commercially available, enabling applications where the photon flux is low both temporarily and spatially. On the other hand, several drawbacks exist in the usage of SiPMs such as a higher dark count rate, many readout channels, slow response time, and optical crosstalk; therefore, users need to carefully consider the trade-offs. This work presents a SiPM-embedded compact large-area photon detection module. Various techniques are adopted to overcome the disadvantages of SiPMs so that it can be generally utilized as an upgrade from a PMT. A simple cooling component and recently developed optical crosstalk suppression method are adopted to reduce the noise which is more serious for larger-area SiPMs. A dedicated readout circuit increases the response frequency and reduces the number of readout channels. We favorably compare this design with a conventional PMT and obtain both higher photon detection efficiency and larger-area acceptance
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