Geoffrey L. Greene
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Geoffrey L. Greene.
Nature | 2000
P R. Huffman; C. R. Brome; J. S. Butterworth; Kevin J. Coakley; Maynard S. Dewey; S N. Dzhosyuk; Robert Golub; Geoffrey L. Greene; K. Habicht; S. K. Lamoreaux; C. E. H. Mattoni; D. N. McKinsey; Fred E. Wietfeldt; John M. Doyle
Accurate measurement of the lifetime of the neutron (which is unstable to beta decay) is important for understanding the weak nuclear force and the creation of matter during the Big Bang. Previous measurements of the neutron lifetime have mainly been limited by certain systematic errors; however, these could in principle be avoided by performing measurements on neutrons stored in a magnetic trap. Neutral-particle and charged-particle traps are widely used for studying both composite and elementary particles, because they allow long interaction times and isolation of particles from perturbing environments. Here we report the magnetic trapping of neutrons. The trapping region is filled with superfluid 4He, which is used to load neutrons into the trap and as a scintillator to detect their decay. Neutrons in the trap have a lifetime of 750+330-200 seconds, mainly limited by their beta decay rather than trap losses. Our experiment verifies theoretical predictions regarding the loading process and magnetic trapping of neutrons. Further refinement of this method should lead to improved precision in the neutron lifetime measurement.
Physical Review C | 2000
L. J. Lising; Soo Ryong Hwang; Jonathan M. Adams; T. J. Bowles; Michael C. Browne; T. E. Chupp; Kevin Patrick Coulter; Maynard S. Dewey; Stuart J. Freedman; B. K. Fujikawa; Antonio Garcia; Geoffrey L. Greene; Gordon L. Jones; Hans Pieter Mumm; Jeffrey S. Nico; J. M. Richardson; R. G. H. Robertson; T.D. Steiger; W. A. Teasdale; Alan K. Thompson; E. G. Wasserman; F. E. Wietfeldt; Robert C. Welsh; J. F. Wilkerson
We describe an experiment that has set new limits on the time reversal invariance violating D coefficient in neutron beta-decay. The emiT experiment measured the angular correlation J . p_e x p_p using an octagonal symmetry that optimizes electron-proton coincidence rates. The result is D=[-0.6+/-1.2(stat)+/-0.5(syst)]x10^(-3). This improves constraints on the phase of g_A/g_V and limits contributions to T violation due to leptoquarks. This paper presents details of the experiment, data analysis, and the investigation of systematic effects.
Physical Review C | 2001
C. R. Brome; J. S. Butterworth; S N. Dzhosyuk; C. E. H. Mattoni; D. N. McKinsey; John M. Doyle; P R. Huffman; Maynard S. Dewey; F. E. Wietfeldt; R. Golub; K. Habicht; Geoffrey L. Greene; S. K. Lamoreaux; Kevin J. Coakley
Three-dimensional magnetic confinement of neutrons is reported. Neutrons are loaded into an Ioffe-type superconducting magnetic trap through inelastic scattering of cold neutrons with
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
W.M. Snow; Anatoliy V. Bazhenov; C.S Blessinger; J. D. Bowman; T. E. Chupp; Kevin Patrick Coulter; S. J. Freedman; B. K. Fujikawa; Thomas R. Gentile; Geoffrey L. Greene; G. L. Hansen; Gary E. Hogan; S. Ishimoto; Gordon L. Jones; J. N. Knudson; E. Kolomenski; S. K. Lamoreaux; Mark Bancroft Leuschner; A. Masaike; Y. Masuda; Y. Matsuda; G. L. Morgan; Kimio Morimoto; C. L. Morris; H. Nann; S. I. Penttilä; A. Pirozhkov; V.R. Pomeroy; Donald Rich; Anatolii P. Serebrov
{}^{4}mathrm{He}.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1999
T.E McDonald; T.O Brun; T.N Claytor; E.H Farnum; Geoffrey L. Greene; C. L. Morris
Scattered neutrons with sufficiently low energy and in the appropriate spin state are confined by the magnetic field until they decay. The electron resulting from neutron decay produces scintillations in the liquid helium bath that results in a pulse of extreme ultraviolet light. This light is frequency downconverted to the visible and detected. Results are presented in which
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
R. Hill; Juan-Manuel Anaya; T. J. Bowles; Geoffrey L. Greene; Gary E. Hogan; S. K. Lamoreaux; L.J. Marek; R. Mortenson; C. L. Morris; A. Saunders; S. J. Seestrom; W. Teasdale; Seth Hoedl; C.-Y. Liu; D. Smith; A. R. Young; B. W. Filippone; J Hua; T.M. Ito; E. Pasyuk; P. Geltenbort; Antonio Garcia; Brian Fujikawa; S. Baessler; Anatolii P. Serebrov
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Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
W.M. Snow; Zema Chowdhuri; Maynard S. Dewey; Xiang Fei; David M. Gilliam; Geoffrey L. Greene; Jeffrey S. Nico; F. E. Wietfeldt
neutrons are magnetically trapped in each loading cycle, consistent with theoretical predictions. The lifetime of the observed signal,
Journal of Neutron Research | 2005
Ian.S. Anderson; Jeremy Cook; Gain Felcher; Tom Gentile; Geoffrey L. Greene; F. Klose; Tom Koetzle; Eddy Lelièvre-Berna; Andre d. Parizzi; Roger Pynn; Jinkui Zhao
{660}_{ensuremath{-}170}^{+290} mathrm{s},
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
P R. Huffman; C. R. Brome; J. S. Butterworth; Kevin J. Coakley; Maynard S. Dewey; S N. Dzhosyuk; David M. Gilliam; R. Golub; Geoffrey L. Greene; K. Habicht; S. K. Lamoreaux; C. E. H. Mattoni; D. N. McKinsey; Fred E. Wietfeldt; John M. Doyle
is consistent with the neutron beta-decay lifetime.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
Gordon L. Jones; Jonathan M. Adams; Juan-Manuel Anaya; T. J. Bowles; T. E. Chupp; Kevin Patrick Coulter; Maynard S. Dewey; S. J. Freedman; Brian Fujikawa; Antonio Garcia; Geoffrey L. Greene; Soo Ryong Hwang; Laura Jean Lising; Hans Pieter Mumm; Jeffrey S. Nico; R. G. H. Robertson; T.D. Steiger; W. Teasdale; Alan K. Thompson; Eric Gordon Wasserman; F. E. Wietfeldt; J. F. Wilkerson
The weak pion-nucleon coupling constant H{sub {pi}}{sup 1} remains poorly determined, despite many years of effort. The recent measurement of the {sup 133}Cs anapole moment has been interpreted to give a value of H{sub {pi}}{sup 1} almost an order of magnitude larger than the limit established in the {sup 18}F parity doublet experiments. A measurement of the gamma ray directional asymmetry A{sub {gamma}} for the capture of polarized neutrons by hydrogen has been proposed at Los Alamos National Laboratory. This experiment will determine H{sub {pi}}{sup 1} independent of nuclear structure effects. However, since the predicted asymmetry is small, A{sub {gamma}} {approximately} 5 x 10{sup {minus}8}, systematic effects must be reduced to < 5 x 10{sup {minus}9}. The design of the experiment will is presented, with an emphasis on the techniques used for controlling systematic errors.