945 research outputs found

    Measurement of the Cotton Mouton effect of water vapour

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    In this paper we report on a measurement of the Cotton Mouton effect of water vapour. Measurement performed at room temperature (T=301T=301 K) with a wavelength of 1064 nm gave the value Δnu=(6.67±0.45)1015\Delta n_u = (6.67 \pm 0.45) \cdot 10^{-15} for the unit magnetic birefringence (1 T magnetic field and atmospheric pressure)

    New PVLAS model independent limit for the axion coupling to γγ\gamma\gamma for axion masses above 1meV

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    During 2014 the PVLAS experiment has started data taking with a new apparatus installed at the INFN Section of Ferrara, Italy. The main target of the experiment is the observation of magnetic birefringence of vacuum. According to QED, the ellipticity generated by the magnetic birefringence of vacuum in the experimental apparatus is expected to be ψ(QED)5×1011\psi^{\rm(QED)} \approx 5\times10^{-11}. No ellipticity signal is present so far with a noise floor ψ(noise)2.5×109\psi^{\rm(noise)} \approx 2.5\times10^{-9} after 210 hours of data taking. The resulting ellipticity limit provides the best model independent upper limit on the coupling of axions to γγ\gamma\gamma for axion masses above 10310^{-3}eV

    Experimental observation of optical rotation generated in vacuum by a magnetic field

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    We report the experimental observation of a light polarization rotation in vacuum in the presence of a transverse magnetic field. Assuming that data distribution is Gaussian, the average measured rotation is (3.9+/-0.5)e-12 rad/pass, at 5 T with 44000 passes through a 1m long magnet, with lambda = 1064 nm. The relevance of this result in terms of the existence of a light, neutral, spin-zero particle is discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letters Comment to version 2: minor changes to abstract and final discussion. Added 2 references Comment to version 3: corrected minor typographical errors, eliminated the distinction between scalar and pseudoscalar in the particle interpretation of the resul

    Matter from light-light scattering via Breit-Wheeler events produced by two interacting Compton sources

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    We present the dimensioning of a photon-photon collider based on Compton gamma sources for the observation of Breit-Wheeler pair production and QED \u3b3\u3b3 events. Two symmetric electron beams, generated by photocathodes and accelerated in linacs, produce two gamma ray beams through Compton back scattering with two J-class lasers. Tuning the system energy above the Breit-Wheeler cross section threshold, a flux of electron-positron pairs is generated out of light-light interaction. The process is analyzed by start-to-end simulations. Realistic numbers of the secondary particle yield, referring to existing state-of-the-art set-ups and a discussion of the feasibility of the experiment taking into account the background signal are presented

    Measurements of vacuum magnetic birefringence using permanent dipole magnets: the PVLAS experiment

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    The PVLAS collaboration is presently assembling a new apparatus (at the INFN section of Ferrara, Italy) to detect vacuum magnetic birefringence (VMB). VMB is related to the structure of the QED vacuum and is predicted by the Euler-Heisenberg-Weisskopf effective Lagrangian. It can be detected by measuring the ellipticity acquired by a linearly polarised light beam propagating through a strong magnetic field. Using the very same optical technique it is also possible to search for hypothetical low-mass particles interacting with two photons, such as axion-like (ALP) or millicharged particles (MCP). Here we report results of a scaled-down test setup and describe the new PVLAS apparatus. This latter one is in construction and is based on a high-sensitivity ellipsometer with a high-finesse Fabry-Perot cavity (>4×105>4\times 10^5) and two 0.8 m long 2.5 T rotating permanent dipole magnets. Measurements with the test setup have improved by a factor 2 the previous upper bound on the parameter AeA_e, which determines the strength of the nonlinear terms in the QED Lagrangian: Ae(PVLAS)<3.3×1021A_e^{\rm (PVLAS)} < 3.3 \times 10^{-21} T2^{-2} 95% c.l. Furthermore, new laboratory limits have been put on the inverse coupling constant of ALPs to two photons and confirmation of previous limits on the fractional charge of millicharged particles is given

    Self-Organising Networks for Classification: developing Applications to Science Analysis for Astroparticle Physics

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    Physics analysis in astroparticle experiments requires the capability of recognizing new phenomena; in order to establish what is new, it is important to develop tools for automatic classification, able to compare the final result with data from different detectors. A typical example is the problem of Gamma Ray Burst detection, classification, and possible association to known sources: for this task physicists will need in the next years tools to associate data from optical databases, from satellite experiments (EGRET, GLAST), and from Cherenkov telescopes (MAGIC, HESS, CANGAROO, VERITAS)

    Optical production and detection of dark matter candidates

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    The PVLAS collaboration is at present running, at the Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro of I.N.F.N., Padova, Italy, a very sensitive optical ellipsometer capable of measuring the small rotations or ellipticities which can be acquired by a linearly polarized laser beam propagating in vacuum through a transverse magnetic feld (vacuum magnetic birefringence). The apparatus will also be able to set new limits on mass and coupling constant of light scalar/pseudoscalar particles coupling to two photons by both producing and detecting the hypothetical particles. The axion, introduced to explain parity conservation in strong interactions, is an example of this class of particles, all of which are considered possible dark matter candidates. The PVLAS apparatus consists of a very high finesse (> 140000), 6.4 m long, Fabry-Perot cavity immersed in an intense dipolar magnetic field (~6.5 T). A linearly polarized laser beam is frequency locked to the cavity and analysed, using a heterodyne technique, for rotation and/or ellipticity acquired within the magnetic field.Comment: presented at "Frontier Detectors for Frontier Physics - 8th Pisa Meeting on Advanced Detectors - May 21-27, 2000" to appear in: Nucl.Instr. and Meth.

    First results from the new PVLAS apparatus: a new limit on vacuum magnetic birefringence

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    Several groups are carrying out experiments to observe and measure vacuum magnetic birefringence, predicted by Quantum Electrodynamics (QED). We have started running the new PVLAS apparatus installed in Ferrara, Italy, and have measured a noise floor value for the unitary field magnetic birefringence of vacuum Δnu(vac)=(4±20)×1023\Delta n_u^{\rm (vac)}= (4\pm 20) \times 10^{-23} T2^{-2} (the error represents a 1σ\sigma deviation). This measurement is compatible with zero and hence represents a new limit on vacuum magnetic birefringence deriving from non linear electrodynamics. This result reduces to a factor 50 the gap to be overcome to measure for the first time the value of Δnu(vac,QED)\Delta n_u^{\rm (vac,QED)} predicted by QED: Δnu(vac,QED)=4×1024\Delta n_u^{\rm (vac,QED)}= 4\times 10^{-24} ~T2^{-2}. These birefringence measurements also yield improved model-independent bounds on the coupling constant of axion-like particles to two photons, for masses greater than 1 meV, along with a factor two improvement of the fractional charge limit on millicharged particles (fermions and scalars), including neutrinos
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