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Dive into the research topics where F. Robicheaux is active.

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Featured researches published by F. Robicheaux.


Nature Physics | 2011

Confinement of antihydrogen for 1,000 seconds

G. B. Andresen; M. D. Ashkezari; M. Baquero-Ruiz; W. Bertsche; P. D. Bowe; E. Butler; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; A. Deller; S. Eriksson; J. Fajans; T. Friesen; M. C. Fujiwara; D. R. Gill; A. Gutierrez; J. S. Hangst; W. N. Hardy; R. Hayano; M. E. Hayden; A. J. Humphries; R. Hydomako; Svante Jonsell; S. L. Kemp; L. Kurchaninov; N. Madsen; S. Menary; P. J. Nolan; K. Olchanski; A. Olin; P. Pusa

Antihydrogen has been created, trapped and stored for 1,000 s. The improved holding time means that we now have access to the ground state of antimatter—long enough to test whether matter and antimatter obey the same physical laws.


Nature | 2012

Resonant quantum transitions in trapped antihydrogen atoms

C. Amole; M. D. Ashkezari; M. Baquero-Ruiz; W. Bertsche; P. D. Bowe; E. Butler; A. Capra; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; A. Deller; P H Donnan; S. Eriksson; J. Fajans; T. Friesen; M. C. Fujiwara; D. R. Gill; A. Gutierrez; J. S. Hangst; W. N. Hardy; M. E. Hayden; A. J. Humphries; C. A. Isaac; Svante Jonsell; L. Kurchaninov; A. Little; N. Madsen; J. T. K. McKenna; S. Menary; S. C. Napoli; P. J. Nolan

The hydrogen atom is one of the most important and influential model systems in modern physics. Attempts to understand its spectrum are inextricably linked to the early history and development of quantum mechanics. The hydrogen atom’s stature lies in its simplicity and in the accuracy with which its spectrum can be measured and compared to theory. Today its spectrum remains a valuable tool for determining the values of fundamental constants and for challenging the limits of modern physics, including the validity of quantum electrodynamics and—by comparison with measurements on its antimatter counterpart, antihydrogen—the validity of CPT (charge conjugation, parity and time reversal) symmetry. Here we report spectroscopy of a pure antimatter atom, demonstrating resonant quantum transitions in antihydrogen. We have manipulated the internal spin state of antihydrogen atoms so as to induce magnetic resonance transitions between hyperfine levels of the positronic ground state. We used resonant microwave radiation to flip the spin of the positron in antihydrogen atoms that were magnetically trapped in the ALPHA apparatus. The spin flip causes trapped anti-atoms to be ejected from the trap. We look for evidence of resonant interaction by comparing the survival rate of trapped atoms irradiated with microwaves on-resonance to that of atoms subjected to microwaves that are off-resonance. In one variant of the experiment, we detect 23 atoms that survive in 110 trapping attempts with microwaves off-resonance (0.21 per attempt), and only two atoms that survive in 103 attempts with microwaves on-resonance (0.02 per attempt). We also describe the direct detection of the annihilation of antihydrogen atoms ejected by the microwaves.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Spatially resolved observation of dipole-dipole interaction between Rydberg atoms.

C. S. E. van Ditzhuijzen; A.F. Koenderink; J.V. Hernández; F. Robicheaux; L. D. Noordam; H. B. van Linden van den Heuvell

We have observed resonant energy transfer between cold Rydberg atoms in spatially separated cylinders. Resonant dipole-dipole coupling excites the 49s atoms in one cylinder to the 49p state while the 41d atoms in the second cylinder are transferred down to the 42p state. We have measured the production of the 49p state as a function of separation of the cylinders (0-80 microm) and the interaction time (0-25 micros). In addition, we measured the width of the electric field resonances. A full many-body quantum calculation reproduces the main features of the experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2003

Simulated expansion of an ultra-cold, neutral plasma

F. Robicheaux; James D. Hanson

The details of recent calculations of the expansion of ultra-cold, neutral plasmas are given. The calculations are performed at several levels. The simplest level assumes an ansatz for the form of the electron and ion density; the result is a simple, ordinary differential equation which can be easily solved. The medium level of sophistication assumes the electrons are in thermal equilibrium but does not assume a particular form for the ion density; the result is a partial differential equation which is solved numerically. For the highest level of sophistication, a Monte Carlo technique is used to solve for the electron phase space distribution and solve for the ion motion in the resulting mean field. All levels of simulation include three body recombination and electron-Rydberg scattering. This paper contains the results of our simulations and compares them to measurements made on ultra-cold plasmas. Three body recombination is found to be important at very low temperatures since it is a heating mechanism...


Nature | 2017

Observation of the 1S–2S transition in trapped antihydrogen

M. Ahmadi; B. X. R. Alves; C. J. Baker; W. Bertsche; E. Butler; A. Capra; C. Carruth; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; S. Cohen; R. Collister; S. Eriksson; Andrew Evans; N. Evetts; J. Fajans; T. Friesen; M. C. Fujiwara; D. R. Gill; A. Gutierrez; J. S. Hangst; W. N. Hardy; M. E. Hayden; C. A. Isaac; Akizumi Ishida; M. A. Johnson; Steve Jones; S. Jonsell; L. Kurchaninov; N. Madsen; M. Mathers

The spectrum of the hydrogen atom has played a central part in fundamental physics over the past 200 years. Historical examples of its importance include the wavelength measurements of absorption lines in the solar spectrum by Fraunhofer, the identification of transition lines by Balmer, Lyman and others, the empirical description of allowed wavelengths by Rydberg, the quantum model of Bohr, the capability of quantum electrodynamics to precisely predict transition frequencies, and modern measurements of the 1S–2S transition by Hänsch to a precision of a few parts in 1015. Recent technological advances have allowed us to focus on antihydrogen—the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen. The Standard Model predicts that there should have been equal amounts of matter and antimatter in the primordial Universe after the Big Bang, but today’s Universe is observed to consist almost entirely of ordinary matter. This motivates the study of antimatter, to see if there is a small asymmetry in the laws of physics that govern the two types of matter. In particular, the CPT (charge conjugation, parity reversal and time reversal) theorem, a cornerstone of the Standard Model, requires that hydrogen and antihydrogen have the same spectrum. Here we report the observation of the 1S–2S transition in magnetically trapped atoms of antihydrogen. We determine that the frequency of the transition, which is driven by two photons from a laser at 243 nanometres, is consistent with that expected for hydrogen in the same environment. This laser excitation of a quantum state of an atom of antimatter represents the most precise measurement performed on an anti-atom. Our result is consistent with CPT invariance at a relative precision of about 2 × 10−10.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Compression of Antiproton Clouds for Antihydrogen Trapping

G. B. Andresen; W. Bertsche; P. D. Bowe; C. C. Bray; E. Butler; C. L. Cesar; S. Chapman; M. Charlton; Joel Fajans; M. C. Fujiwara; R. Funakoshi; D. R. Gill; J. S. Hangst; W. N. Hardy; R. Hayano; M. E. Hayden; R. Hydomako; M. J. Jenkins; L. V. Jørgensen; L. Kurchaninov; R. Lambo; N. Madsen; P. J. Nolan; K. Olchanski; A. Olin; A. Povilus; P. Pusa; F. Robicheaux; E. Sarid; S. Seif El Nasr

Control of the radial profile of trapped antiproton clouds is critical to trapping antihydrogen. We report the first detailed measurements of the radial manipulation of antiproton clouds, including areal density compressions by factors as large as ten, by manipulating spatially overlapped electron plasmas. We show detailed measurements of the near-axis antiproton radial profile and its relation to that of the electron plasma.


Journal of Physics B | 2007

The time-dependent close-coupling method for atomic and molecular collision processes

M. S. Pindzola; F. Robicheaux; S. D. Loch; J. C. Berengut; Turker Topcu; J. Colgan; M Foster; D. C. Griffin; C P Ballance; D. R. Schultz; Tatsuya Minami; N. R. Badnell; M. C. Witthoeft; D. R. Plante; D. M. Mitnik; J. A. Ludlow; U. Kleiman

We review the development of the time-dependent close-coupling method to study atomic and molecular few body dynamics. Applications include electron and photon collisions with atoms, molecules, and their ions.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Torsional Optomechanics of a Levitated Nonspherical Nanoparticle

Thai M. Hoang; Yue Ma; Jonghoon Ahn; Jaehoon Bang; F. Robicheaux; Zhang-qi Yin; Tongcang Li

An optically levitated nanoparticle in vacuum is a paradigm optomechanical system for sensing and studying macroscopic quantum mechanics. While its center-of-mass motion has been investigated intensively, its torsional vibration has only been studied theoretically in limited cases. Here we report the first experimental observation of the torsional vibration of an optically levitated nonspherical nanoparticle in vacuum. We achieve this by utilizing the coupling between the spin angular momentum of photons and the torsional vibration of a nonspherical nanoparticle whose polarizability is a tensor. The torsional vibration frequency can be 1 order of magnitude higher than its center-of-mass motion frequency, which is promising for ground state cooling. We propose a simple yet novel scheme to achieve ground state cooling of its torsional vibration with a linearly polarized Gaussian cavity mode. A levitated nonspherical nanoparticle in vacuum will also be an ultrasensitive nanoscale torsion balance with a torque detection sensitivity on the order of 10^{-29}  N m/sqrt[Hz] under realistic conditions.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Antimatter interferometry for gravity measurements

Paul Hamilton; Andrey Zhmoginov; F. Robicheaux; J. Fajans; Jonathan S. Wurtele; Holger Müller

We describe a light-pulse atom interferometer that is suitable for any species of atom and even for electrons and protons as well as their antiparticles, in particular, for testing the Einstein equivalence principle with antihydrogen. The design obviates the need for resonant lasers through far-off resonant Bragg beam splitters and makes efficient use of scarce atoms by magnetic confinement and atom recycling. We expect to reach an initial accuracy of better than 1% for the acceleration of the free fall of antihydrogen, which can be improved to the part-per million level.


Nature | 2017

Observation of the hyperfine spectrum of antihydrogen

M. Ahmadi; B. X. R. Alves; C. J. Baker; W. Bertsche; E. Butler; A. Capra; C. Carruth; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; S. Cohen; R. Collister; S. Eriksson; Andrew Evans; N. Evetts; J. Fajans; T. Friesen; M. C. Fujiwara; D. R. Gill; A. Gutierrez; J. S. Hangst; W. N. Hardy; M. E. Hayden; C. A. Isaac; Akizumi Ishida; M. A. Johnson; Steve Jones; S. Jonsell; L. Kurchaninov; N. Madsen; M. Mathers

The observation of hyperfine structure in atomic hydrogen by Rabi and co-workers and the measurement of the zero-field ground-state splitting at the level of seven parts in 1013 are important achievements of mid-twentieth-century physics. The work that led to these achievements also provided the first evidence for the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron, inspired Schwinger’s relativistic theory of quantum electrodynamics and gave rise to the hydrogen maser, which is a critical component of modern navigation, geo-positioning and very-long-baseline interferometry systems. Research at the Antiproton Decelerator at CERN by the ALPHA collaboration extends these enquiries into the antimatter sector. Recently, tools have been developed that enable studies of the hyperfine structure of antihydrogen—the antimatter counterpart of hydrogen. The goal of such studies is to search for any differences that might exist between this archetypal pair of atoms, and thereby to test the fundamental principles on which quantum field theory is constructed. Magnetic trapping of antihydrogen atoms provides a means of studying them by combining electromagnetic interaction with detection techniques that are unique to antimatter. Here we report the results of a microwave spectroscopy experiment in which we probe the response of antihydrogen over a controlled range of frequencies. The data reveal clear and distinct signatures of two allowed transitions, from which we obtain a direct, magnetic-field-independent measurement of the hyperfine splitting. From a set of trials involving 194 detected atoms, we determine a splitting of 1,420.4 ± 0.5 megahertz, consistent with expectations for atomic hydrogen at the level of four parts in 104. This observation of the detailed behaviour of a quantum transition in an atom of antihydrogen exemplifies tests of fundamental symmetries such as charge–parity–time in antimatter, and the techniques developed here will enable more-precise such tests.

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J. Colgan

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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W. Bertsche

University of Manchester

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C. L. Cesar

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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W. N. Hardy

University of British Columbia

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