A. Lapierre
Michigan State University
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Featured researches published by A. Lapierre.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
M. Smith; M. Brodeur; Thomas Brunner; S. Ettenauer; A. Lapierre; R. Ringle; V. L. Ryjkov; F. Ames; P. Bricault; Gordon W. F. Drake; P. P. J. Delheij; D. Lunney; F. Sarazin; J. Dilling
M. Smith, M. Brodeur, T. Brunner, S. Ettenauer, A Lapierre, R. Ringle, V. L. Ryjkov, F. Ames, P. Bricault, G. W. F. Drake, P. Delheij, D Lunney, and J. Dilling TRIUMF, 4004 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia, 6224 Agricultural Road, Vancouver BC, Canada Technische Universität München, E12, James Franck Strasse, Garching, Germany Department of Physics, University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada and CSNSM/CNRS/IN2P3, Universite de Paris-Sud, F-91405, Orsay, France (Dated: July 21, 2008)
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012
M.C. Simon; J.C. Bale; U. Chowdhury; B. Eberhardt; S. Ettenauer; A.T. Gallant; F. Jang; A. Lennarz; M. Luichtl; T. Ma; D. Robertson; Vanessa V. Simon; C. Andreoiu; M. Brodeur; T. Brunner; A. Chaudhuri; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; P. Delheij; D. Frekers; A. Grossheim; G. Gwinner; A.A. Kwiatkowski; A. Lapierre; E. Mané; M. R. Pearson; R. Ringle; B.E. Schultz; J. Dilling
TRIUMFs Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear science (TITAN) constitutes the only high precision mass measurement setup coupled to a rare isotope facility capable of increasing the charge state of short-lived nuclides prior to the actual mass determination in a Penning trap. Recent developments around TITANs charge breeder, the electron beam ion trap, form the basis for several successful experiments on radioactive isotopes with half-lives as low as 65 ms and in charge states as high as 22+.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
S. Ettenauer; M.C. Simon; A.T. Gallant; T. Brunner; U. Chowdhury; Vanessa V. Simon; M. Brodeur; A. Chaudhuri; E. Mané; C. Andreoiu; G. Audi; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; P. Delheij; G. Gwinner; A. Lapierre; D. Lunney; M. R. Pearson; R. Ringle; Joachim Ullrich; J. Dilling
Penning trap mass measurements of short-lived nuclides have been performed for the first time with highly charged ions, using the TITAN facility at TRIUMF. Compared to singly charged ions, this provides an improvement in experimental precision that scales with the charge state q. Neutron-deficient Rb isotopes have been charge bred in an electron beam ion trap to q=8-12+ prior to injection into the Penning trap. In combination with the Ramsey excitation scheme, this unique setup creating low energy, highly charged ions at a radioactive beam facility opens the door to unrivaled precision with gains of 1-2 orders of magnitude. The method is particularly suited for short-lived nuclides such as the superallowed β emitter 74Rb (T(1/2)=65 ms). The determination of its atomic mass and an improved Q(EC) value are presented.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
A. Cingöz; A. Lapierre; A.-T. Nguyen; N. Leefer; Dmitry Budker; S. K. Lamoreaux; J. R. Torgerson
Over 8 months, we monitored transition frequencies between nearly degenerate, opposite-parity levels in two isotopes of atomic dysprosium (Dy). These frequencies are sensitive to variation of the fine-structure constant (alpha) due to relativistic corrections of opposite sign for the opposite-parity levels. In this unique system, in contrast to atomic-clock comparisons, the difference of the electronic energies of the opposite-parity levels can be monitored directly utilizing a rf electric-dipole transition between them. Our measurements show that the frequency variation of the 3.1-MHz transition in (163)Dy and the 235-MHz transition in (162)Dy are 9.0+/-6.7 Hz/yr and -0.6+/-6.5 Hz/yr, respectively. These results provide a rate of fractional variation of alpha of (-2.7+/-2.6) x 10(-15) yr(-1) (1 sigma) without assumptions on constancy of other fundamental constants, indicating absence of significant variation at the present level of sensitivity.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
M. Brodeur; T. Brunner; C. Champagne; S. Ettenauer; M. Smith; A. Lapierre; R. Ringle; V. L. Ryjkov; Sonia Bacca; P. P. J. Delheij; Gordon W. F. Drake; D. Lunney; A. Schwenk; J. Dilling
The first direct mass measurement of {6}He has been performed with the TITAN Penning trap mass spectrometer at the ISAC facility. In addition, the mass of {8}He was determined with improved precision over our previous measurement. The obtained masses are m({6}He)=6.018 885 883(57) u and m({8}He)=8.033 934 44(11) u. The {6}He value shows a deviation from the literature of 4σ. With these new mass values and the previously measured atomic isotope shifts we obtain charge radii of 2.060(8) and 1.959(16) fm for {6}He and {8}He, respectively. We present a detailed comparison to nuclear theory for {6}He, including new hyperspherical harmonics results. A correlation plot of the point-proton radius with the two-neutron separation energy demonstrates clearly the importance of three-nucleon forces.
Physical Review A | 2005
I. I. Tupitsyn; A. V. Volotka; D. A. Glazov; V. M. Shabaev; G. Plunien; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; A. Lapierre; Joachim Ullrich
The magnetic-dipole transition probabilities between the fine-structure levels (1s{sup 2}2s{sup 2}2p) {sup 2}P{sub 1/2}-{sup 2}P{sub 3/2} for B-like ions and (1s{sup 2}2s2p) {sup 3}P{sub 1}-{sup 3}P{sub 2} for Be-like ions are calculated. The configuration-interaction method in the Dirac-Fock-Sturm basis is employed for the evaluation of the interelectronic-interaction correction with negative-continuum spectrum being taken into account. The 1/Z interelectronic-interaction contribution is derived within a rigorous QED approach employing the two-time Green function method. The one-electron QED correction is evaluated within framework of the anomalous magnetic-moment approximation. A comparison with the theoretical results of other authors and with available experimental data is presented.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2012
T. Brunner; M. Smith; M. Brodeur; S. Ettenauer; A.T. Gallant; Vanessa V. Simon; A. Chaudhuri; A. Lapierre; E. Mané; R. Ringle; M.C. Simon; J.A. Vaz; P.P.J. Delheij; M. Good; M. R. Pearson; J. Dilling
We present a description of the Radio Frequency Quadrupole (RFQ) ion trap built as part of the TITAN facility. It consists of a gas-filled, segmented, linear Paul trap and is the first stage of the TITAN setup with the purpose of cooling and bunching radioactive ion beams delivered from ISAC-TRIUMF. This is the first such device to be driven digitally, i.e., using a high voltage (Vpp=400V), wide bandwidth (0.2<f<1.2MHz) square-wave as compared to the typical sinusoidal wave form. Results from the commissioning of the device as well as systematic studies with stable and radioactive ions are presented including efficiency measurements with stable 133Cs and radioactive 124,126Cs. A novel and unique mode of operation of this device is also demonstrated where the cooled ion bunches are extracted in reverse mode, i.e., in the same direction as previously injected.
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2012
M. Brodeur; V. L. Ryjkov; T. Brunner; S. Ettenauer; A.T. Gallant; Vanessa V. Simon; M. Smith; A. Lapierre; R. Ringle; P. P. J. Delheij; M. Good; D. Lunney; J. Dilling
Abstract TITAN (TRIUMFs Ion Traps for Atomic and Nuclear science) is an online facility designed to carry out high-precision mass measurements on singly and highly charged radioactive ions. The TITAN Penning trap has been built and optimized in order to perform such measurements with an accuracy in the sub ppb-range. A detailed characterization of the TITAN Penning trap is presented and a new compensation method is derived and demonstrated, verifying the performance in the range of sub-ppb.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
M. Brodeur; T. Brunner; S. Ettenauer; A. Lapierre; R. Ringle; B. A. Brown; D. Lunney; J. Dilling
Recent high-precision mass measurements of 9Li and 9Be, performed with the TITAN Penning trap at the TRIUMF ISAC facility, are analyzed in light of state-of-the-art shell model calculations. We find an explanation for the anomalous isobaric mass multiplet equation behavior for the two A=9 quartets. The presence of a cubic d=6.3(17) keV term for the J(π)=3/2(-) quartet and the vanishing cubic term for the excited J(π)=1/2(-) multiplet depend upon the presence of a nearby T=1/2 state in 9B and 9Be that induces isospin mixing. This is contrary to previous hypotheses involving purely Coulomb and charge-dependent effects. T=1/2 states have been observed near the calculated energy, above the T=3/2 state. However, an experimental confirmation of their J(π) is needed.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2009
G. Y. Liang; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; T. Baumann; Sascha W. Epp; A. Gonchar; A. Lapierre; P. H. Mokler; M. C. Simon; H. Tawara; V. Mäckel; K. Yao; G. Zhao; Y. Zou; J. Ullrich
Spectra in the extreme ultraviolet range from 107 to 353 A emitted from Fe ions in various ionization stages have been observed at the Heidelberg electron beam ion trap (EBIT) with a flat-field grating spectrometer. A series of transition lines and their intensities have been analyzed and compared with collisional-radiative simulations. The present collisional-radiative model reproduces well the relative line intensities and facilitates line identification of ions produced in the EBIT. The polarization effect on the line intensities resulting from nonthermal unidirectional electron impact was explored and found to be significant (up to 24%) for a few transition lines. Based upon the observed line intensities, relative charge state distributions (CSD) of ions were determined, which peaked at Fe23+ tailing toward lower charge states. Another simulation on ion charge distributions including the ionization and electron capture processes generated CSDs which are in general agreement with the measurements. By observing intensity ratios of specific lines from levels collisionally populated directly from the ground state and those starting from the metastable levels of Fe XXI, Fe X and other ionic states, the effective electron densities were extracted and found to depend on the ionic charge. Furthermore, it was found that the overlap of the ion cloud with the electron beam estimated from the effective electron densities strongly depends on the charge state of the ion considered, i.e. under the same EBIT conditions, higher charge ions show less expansion in the radial direction.