6,226 research outputs found
High Precision Laser and Microwave Spectroscopy of Antiprotonic Helium
This talk gives an overview of the recent results on the precision
spectroscopy of antiprotonic helium which was performed by the ASACUSA
collaboration at the Antiproton Decelerator of CERN. The laser spectroscopy of
energy levels of the antiproton has reached a relative accuracy of , and by comparing the experimental value for the transition
wavelengths with theoretical calculations, a CPT test on the equality of proton
and antiproton charge and mass of has been obtained. In a
recent experiment, the hyperfine structure of the state of
antiprotonic helium has been measured for the first time with an accuracy of .Comment: Invited talk at the XIVth Rencontres de Blois on Matter-Antimatter
Asymmetry, Blois, June 200
Perspectives for low energy antiproton physics at FAIR
The CRYRING accelerator, previously located at the Manne Siegbahn Laboratory
of Stockholm University, has been chosen by the FLAIR collaboration as the
central accelerator for the planned facility. It has been modified to allow for
high-energy injection and extraction and is capable of providing fast and slow
extracted beams of antiprotons and highly charged ions. It is currently being
installed at the ESR of GSI Darmstadt where it can be used with highly charged
ions. The future possibilities for its use with slow antiprotons will be
discussed.Comment: Proceedings of LEAP2013, 6 pages, 3 figures. Hyperfine Interactions
2014, The final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10751-014-1058-
Prospects of In-Flight Hyperfine Spectroscopy of (Anti)Hydrogen for Tests of CPT Symmetry
The ground-state hyperfine splitting of antihydrogen promises one of the most
sensitive tests of CPT symmetry. The ASACUSA collaboration is pursuing a
measurement of this splitting in a Rabi-type experiment using a polarized beam
from a CUSP magnet at the Antiproton Decelerator of CERN. With the initial
intention of characterizing the Rabi apparatus, a polarized source of cold
hydrogen was built and the transition of hydrogen was measured to a
few ppb precision. A measurement of the transition is being prepared.
The availability of this beam opens the possibility to perform first
measurements of some coefficients within the nonminimal Standard-Model
Extension.Comment: Presented at the Seventh Meeting on CPT and Lorentz Symmetry,
Bloomington, Indiana, June 20-24, 201
Precision spectroscopy of antiprotonic helium
Antiprotonic helium, a neutral exotic three-body system consisting of a
helium nucleus, an electron and an antiproton, is being studied at the
Antiproton Decelerator of CERN by the ASAUCSA collaboration. Using laser
spectroscopy of the energy levels of the antiproton in this system and
comparison to theory, a value of the antiproton-to-electron mass ratio with an
error of 3 ppb could be obtained. This result agrees with the most precise
measurement of the value of the proton and allows us to extract a limit of the
equality of the proton and antiproton charge and mass of 2 ppb. Using microwave
spectroscopy, the hyperfine structure of antiprotonic helium has been measured
to 30 ppm. Experimental improvements are expected to soon provide a new value
for the magnetic moment of the antiproton.Comment: Proceedings of the XLV International Winter Meeting on Nuclear
Physics, Bormio, Valtellina, January 14 - 21, 200
A Facility for Low-energy Antiproton and Ion Research
The future accelerator facility for beams of ions and antiprotons at
Darmstadt will provide antiproton beams of intensities that are two orders of
magnitude higher than currently available. Within the foreseen scheme,
antiprotons can be decelerated to 30 MeV. The low-energy antiproton community
has recently formed a users group to make use of this opportunity to create a
next-generation low-energy antiproton facility called FLAIR, which will be able
to provide cooled antiproton beams well below 100 keV kinetic energy. This talk
gives an overview of the layout and physics program of the proposed facility.Comment: Proceedings of the XLII Interantional Winter Meeting on Nuclear
Physics, Bormio (Italy), Janaury 25 - February 1, 200
Aspects of Sex Differences: Social Intelligence vs. Creative Intelligence
In this article, we argue that there is an essential difference between social intelligence and creative intelligence, and that they have their foundation in human sexuality. For sex differences, we refer to the vast psychological, neurological, and cognitive science research where problem-solving, verbal skills, logical reasoning, and other topics are dealt with. Intelligence tests suggest that, on average, neither sex has more general intelligence than the other. Though people are equals in general intelligence, they are different in special forms of intelligence such as social intelligence and creative intelligence, the former dominant in women, the latter dominant in men. The dominance of creative intelligence in men needs to be explained. The focus of our research is on the strictly anthropological aspects, and consequently our explanation for this fact is based on the male-female polarity in the mating systems. Sexual dimorphism does not only regard bodily differences but implies different forms of sex life. Sex researchers distinguish between two levels of sexual intercourse: procreative sex and recreational sex, and to these we would add âcreative sex.â On all three levels, there is a behavioral difference between men and women, including the subjective experience. These differences are as well attributed to culture as genetically founded in nature. Sexual reproduction is only possible if females cooperate. Their biological inheritance makes females play a decisive role in mate choice. Recreational sex for the purpose of pleasure rather than reproduction results from female extended sexual activity. Creative sex, on the contrary, is a specifically male performance of sexuality. We identify creative sex with eroticism. Eroticism evolved through the transformation of the sexual drive into a mental state of expectation and fantasizing. Hence, sex differences (that nowadays are covered up by cultural egalitarianism) continue to be the evolutionary origin of the difference between social and creative intelligence
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