Observation of the 1S-2P Lyman-alpha transition in antihydrogen

William Bertsche, M Ahmadi, B X R Alves, C. J. Baker, A Capra, C Carruth, C L Cesar, M Charlton, S Cohen, R Collister, S Eriksson, A Evans, N Evetts, J. Fajans, T Friesen, M C Fujiwara

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    In 1906, Theodore Lyman discovered his eponymous series of transitions in the extreme-ultraviolet region of the atomic hydrogen spectrum1,2. The patterns in the hydrogen spectrum helped to establish the emerging theory of quantum mechanics, which we now know governs the world at the atomic scale. Since then, studies involving the Lyman-αline—the 1S–2P transition at a wavelength of 121.6 nanometres—have played an important part in physics and astronomy, as one of the most fundamental atomic transitions in the Universe. For example, this transition has long been used by astronomers studying the intergalactic medium and testing cosmological models via the so-called ‘Lyman-αforest’3 of absorption lines at different redshifts. Here we report the observation of the Lyman-αtransition in the antihydrogen atom, the antimatter counterpart of hydrogen. Using narrow-line-width, nanosecond-pulsed laser radiation, the 1S–2P transition was excited in magnetically trapped antihydrogen. The transition frequency at a field of 1.033 tesla was determined to be 2,466,051.7 ±0.12 gigahertz (1σuncertainty) and agrees with the prediction for hydrogen to a precision of 5 ×10−8. Comparisons of the properties of antihydrogen with those of its well-studied matter equivalent allow precision tests of fundamental symmetries between matter and antimatter. Alongside the ground-state hyperfine4,5 and 1S–2S transitions6,7 recently observed in antihydrogen, the Lyman-αtransition will permit laser cooling of antihydrogen8,9, thus providing a cold and dense sample of anti-atoms for precision spectroscopy and gravity measurements10. In addition to the observation of this fundamental transition, this work represents both a decisive technological step towards laser cooling of antihydrogen, and the extension of antimatter spectroscopy to quantum states possessing orbital angular momentum.
    Da
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number7722
    Pages (from-to)211-215
    Number of pages5
    JournalNature -London-
    Volume561
    Issue number7722
    Early online date22 Aug 2018
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 13 Sept 2018

    Keywords

    • antihydrogen
    • cpt
    • atomic physics
    • symmetry

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