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Ultracold matter

Ultracold matter

Positronium gas is laser-cooled to one degree above absolute zero

27 Sep 2024
29-09-2024 positron cooling

Researchers at the University of Tokyo have published a paper in the journal Nature that describes a new laser technique that is capable of cooling a gas of positronium atoms to temperatures as low as 1 K. Written by Kosuke Yoshioka and colleagues at the University of Tokyo, the paper follows on from a publication earlier this year from the AEgIS team at CERN, who described how a different laser technique was used to cool positronium to 170 K.

Positronium comprises a single electron bound to its antimatter counterpart, the positron. Although electrons and positrons will ultimately annihilate each other, they can briefly bind together to form an exotic atom. Electrons and positrons are fundamental particles that are nearly point like, so positronium provides a very simple atomic system for experimental study. Indeed, this simplicity means that precision studies of positronium could reveal new physics beyond the Standard Model.

Quantum electrodynamics

One area of interest is the precise measurement of the energy required to excite positronium from its ground state to its first excited state. Such measurements could enable more rigorous experimental tests of quantum electrodynamics (QED). While QED has been confirmed to extraordinary precision, any tiny deviations could reveal new physics.

An important barrier to making precision measurements is the inherent motion of positronium atoms. “This large randomness of motion in positronium is caused by its short lifetime of 142 ns, combined with its small mass − 1000 times lighter than a hydrogen atom,” Yoshioka explains. “This makes precise studies challenging.”

In 1988, two researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US published a theoretical exploration of how the challenge could be overcome by using laser cooling to slow positronium atoms to very low speeds. Laser cooling is routinely used to cool conventional atoms and involves having the atoms absorb photons and then re-emitting the photons in random directions.

Chirped pulse train

Building on this early work, Yoshioka’s team has developed new laser system that is ideal for cooling positronium. Yoshioka explains that in the Tokyo setup, “the laser emits a chirped pulse train, with the frequency increasing at 500 GHz/μs, and lasting 100 ns. Unlike previous demonstrations, our approach is optimized to cool positronium to ultralow velocities.”

In a chirped pulse, the frequency of the laser light increases over the duration of the pulse. It allows the cooling system to respond to the slowing of the atoms by keeping the photon absorption on resonance.

Using this technique, Yoshioka’s team successfully cooled positronium atoms to temperatures around 1 K, all within just 100 ns. “This temperature is significantly lower than previously achieved, and simulations suggested that an even lower temperature in the 10 mK regime could be realized via a coherent mechanism,” Yoshioka says. Although the team’s current approach is still some distance from achieving this “recoil limit” temperature, the success of their initial demonstration has given them confidence that further improvements could bring them closer to this goal.

“This breakthrough could potentially lead to stringent tests of particle physics theories and investigations into matter-antimatter asymmetry,” Yoshioka predicts. “That might allow us to uncover major mysteries in physics, such as the reason why antimatter is almost absent in our universe.”

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