320 research outputs found
A time-resolution study with a plastic scintillator read out by a Geiger-mode Avalanche Photodiode
In this work we attempt to establish the best time resolution attainable with
a scintillation counter consisting of a plastic scintillator read out by a
Geiger-mode Avalanche Photodiode. The measured time resolution is inversely
proportional to the square root of the energy deposited in the scintillator,
and scales to 18ps (sigma) at 1MeV. This result competes with the best ones
reported for photomultiplier tubes.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Long-range interactions between an atom in its ground S state and an open-shell linear molecule
Theory of long-range interactions between an atom in its ground S state and a
linear molecule in a degenerate state with a non-zero projection of the
electronic orbital angular momentum is presented. It is shown how the
long-range coefficients can be related to the first and second-order molecular
properties. The expressions for the long-range coefficients are written in
terms of all components of the static and dynamic multipole polarizability
tensor, including the nonadiagonal terms connecting states with the opposite
projection of the electronic orbital angular momentum. It is also shown that
for the interactions of molecules in excited states that are connected to the
ground state by multipolar transition moments additional terms in the
long-range induction energy appear. All these theoretical developments are
illustrated with the numerical results for systems of interest for the
sympathetic cooling experiments: interactions of the ground state Rb(S)
atom with CO(), OH(), NH(), and CH() and of the
ground state Li(S) atom with CH().Comment: 30 pages, 3 figure
Control of Ultracold Photodissociation with Magnetic Fields
Photodissociation of a molecule produces a spatial distribution of
photofragments determined by the molecular structure and the characteristics of
the dissociating light. Performing this basic chemical reaction at ultracold
temperatures allows its quantum mechanical features to dominate. In this
regime, weak applied fields can be used to control the reaction. Here, we
photodissociate ultracold diatomic strontium in magnetic fields below 10 G and
observe striking changes in photofragment angular distributions. The
observations are in excellent qualitative agreement with a multichannel quantum
chemistry model that includes nonadiabatic effects and predicts strong mixing
of partial waves in the photofragment energy continuum. The experiment is
enabled by precise quantum-state control of the molecules.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of the Crossover from the Ultracold to the Quasiclassical Regime of Photodissociation
At ultralow energies, atoms and molecules undergo collisions and reactions
that are best described in terms of quantum mechanical wave functions. In
contrast, at higher energies these processes can be understood
quasiclassically. Here, we investigate the crossover from the quantum
mechanical to the quasiclassical regime both experimentally and theoretically
for photodissociation of ultracold diatomic strontium molecules. This basic
reaction is carried out with a full control of quantum states for the molecules
and their photofragments. The photofragment angular distributions are imaged,
and calculated using a quantum mechanical model as well as the WKB and a
semiclassical approximation that are explicitly compared across a range of
photofragment energies. The reaction process is shown to converge to its
high-energy (axial recoil) limit when the energy exceeds the height of any
reaction barriers. This phenomenon is quantitatively investigated for
two-channel photodissociation using intuitive parameters for the channel
amplitude and phase. While the axial recoil limit is generally found to be well
described by a commonly used quasiclassical model, we find that when the
photofragments are identical particles, their bosonic or fermionic quantum
statistics can cause this model to fail, requiring a quantum mechanical
treatment even at high energies.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Precise study of asymptotic physics with subradiant ultracold molecules
Weakly bound molecules have physical properties without atomic analogues,
even as the bond length approaches dissociation. In particular, the internal
symmetries of homonuclear diatomic molecules result in formation of two-body
superradiant and subradiant excited states. While superradiance has been
demonstrated in a variety of systems, subradiance is more elusive due to the
inherently weak interaction with the environment. Here we characterize the
properties of deeply subradiant molecular states with intrinsic quality factors
exceeding via precise optical spectroscopy with the longest
molecule-light coherent interaction times to date. We find that two competing
effects limit the lifetimes of the subradiant molecules, with different
asymptotic behaviors. The first is radiative decay via weak magnetic-dipole and
electric-quadrupole interactions. We prove that its rate increases
quadratically with the bond length, confirming quantum mechanical predictions.
The second is nonradiative decay through weak gyroscopic predissociation, with
a rate proportional to the vibrational mode spacing and sensitive to
short-range physics. This work bridges the gap between atomic and molecular
metrology based on lattice-clock techniques, yielding new understanding of
long-range interatomic interactions and placing ultracold molecules at the
forefront of precision measurements.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Crossover from the Ultracold to the Quasiclassical Regime in State-Selected Photodissociation
Processes that break molecular bonds are typically observed with molecules
occupying a mixture of quantum states and successfully described with
quasiclassical models, while a few studies have explored the distinctly quantum
mechanical low-energy regime. Here we use photodissociation of diatomic
strontium molecules to demonstrate the crossover from the ultracold, quantum
regime where the photofragment angular distributions strongly depend on the
kinetic energy, to the energy-independent quasiclassical regime. Using
time-of-flight velocity map imaging for photodissociation channels with
millikelvin reaction barriers, we explore photofragment energies in the 0.1-300
mK range experimentally and up to 3 K theoretically, and discuss the energy
scale at which the crossover occurs. Furthermore, we find that the effects of
quantum statistics can unexpectedly persist to high photodissociation energies.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
A gamma- and X-ray detector for cryogenic, high magnetic field applications
As part of an experiment to measure the spectrum of photons emitted in
beta-decay of the free neutron, we developed and operated a detector consisting
of 12 bismuth germanate (BGO) crystals coupled to avalanche photodiodes (APDs).
The detector was operated near liquid nitrogen temperature in the bore of a
superconducting magnet and registered photons with energies from 5 keV to 1000
keV. To enlarge the detection range, we also directly detected soft X-rays with
energies between 0.2 keV and 20 keV with three large area APDs. The
construction and operation of the detector is presented, as well as information
on operation of APDs at cryogenic temperatures
Time resolution of the plastic scintillator strips with matrix photomultiplier readout for J-PET tomograph
Recent tests of a single module of the Jagiellonian Positron Emission
Tomography system (J-PET) consisting of 30 cm long plastic scintillator strips
have proven its applicability for the detection of annihilation quanta (0.511
MeV) with a coincidence resolving time (CRT) of 0.266 ns. The achieved
resolution is almost by a factor of two better with respect to the current
TOF-PET detectors and it can still be improved since, as it is shown in this
article, the intrinsic limit of time resolution for the determination of time
of the interaction of 0.511 MeV gamma quanta in plastic scintillators is much
lower. As the major point of the article, a method allowing to record
timestamps of several photons, at two ends of the scintillator strip, by means
of matrix of silicon photomultipliers (SiPM) is introduced. As a result of
simulations, conducted with the number of SiPM varying from 4 to 42, it is
shown that the improvement of timing resolution saturates with the growing
number of photomultipliers, and that the 2 x 5 configuration at two ends
allowing to read twenty timestamps, constitutes an optimal solution. The
conducted simulations accounted for the emission time distribution, photon
transport and absorption inside the scintillator, as well as quantum efficiency
and transit time spread of photosensors, and were checked based on the
experimental results. Application of the 2 x 5 matrix of SiPM allows for
achieving the coincidence resolving time in positron emission tomography of
0.170 ns for 15 cm axial field-of-view (AFOV) and 0.365 ns
for 100 cm AFOV. The results open perspectives for construction of a
cost-effective TOF-PET scanner with significantly better TOF resolution and
larger AFOV with respect to the current TOF-PET modalities.Comment: To be published in Phys. Med. Biol. (26 pages, 17 figures
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