4.8 Article

Two-photon laser spectroscopy of antiprotonic helium and the antiproton-to-electron mass ratio

Journal

NATURE
Volume 475, Issue 7357, Pages 484-488

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10260

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Science Foundation (EURYI)
  2. Monbukagakusho [20002003]
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
  4. Hungarian Research Foundation [K72172]
  5. Austrian Federal Ministry of Science and Research
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20002003] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Physical laws are believed to be invariant under the combined transformations of charge, parity and time reversal (CPT symmetry(1)). This implies that an antimatter particle has exactly the same mass and absolute value of charge as its particle counterpart. Metastable antiprotonic helium ((p) over bar He+) is a three-body atom(2) consisting of a normal helium nucleus, an electron in its ground state and an antiproton ((p) over bar) occupying a Rydberg state with high principal and angular momentum quantum numbers, respectively n and l, such that n approximate to l + 1 approximate to 38. These atoms are amenable to precision laser spectroscopy, the results of which can in principle be used to determine the antiproton-to-electron mass ratio and to constrain the equality between the antiproton and proton charges and masses. Here we report two-photon spectroscopy of antiprotonic helium, in which (p) over bar He-3(+) and (p) over bar He-4(+) isotopes are irradiated by two-counter-propagating laser beams. This excites nonlinear, two-photon transitions of the antiproton of the type (n, l) -> (n - 2, l - 2) at deep-ultraviolet wavelengths (lambda = 139.8, 193.0 and 197.0 nm), which partly cancel the Doppler broadening of the laser resonance caused by the thermal motion of the atoms. The resulting narrow spectral lines allowed us to measure three transition frequencies with fractional precisions of 2.3-5 parts in 10(9). By comparing the results with three-body quantum electrodynamics calculations, we derived an antiproton-to-electron mass ratio of 1,836.1526736(23), where the parenthetical error represents one standard deviation. This agrees with the proton-to-electron value known to a similar precision.

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