Ksenia Khabarova
Lebedev Physical Institute
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Featured researches published by Ksenia Khabarova.
Science | 2017
Axel Beyer; Lothar Maisenbacher; Arthur Matveev; Randolf Pohl; Ksenia Khabarova; Alexey Grinin; Tobias Lamour; Dylan C. Yost; T. W. Hänsch; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky; Thomas Udem
How big is the proton? The discrepancy between the size of the proton extracted from the spectroscopy of muonic hydrogen and the value obtained by averaging previous results for “regular” hydrogen has puzzled physicists for the past 7 years. Now, Beyer et al. shed light on this puzzle (see the Perspective by Vassen). The authors obtained the size of the proton using very accurate spectroscopic measurements of regular hydrogen. Unexpectedly, this value was inconsistent with the average value of previous measurements of the same type. Also unexpectedly, it was consistent with the size extracted from the muonic hydrogen experiments. Resolving the puzzle must now include trying to understand how the old results relate to the new, as well as reexamining the sources of systematic errors in all experiments. Science, this issue p. 79; see also p. 39 The proton radius from hydrogen spectroscopy is consistent with the value from muonic hydrogen spectroscopy. At the core of the “proton radius puzzle” is a four–standard deviation discrepancy between the proton root-mean-square charge radii (rp) determined from the regular hydrogen (H) and the muonic hydrogen (µp) atoms. Using a cryogenic beam of H atoms, we measured the 2S-4P transition frequency in H, yielding the values of the Rydberg constant R∞ = 10973731.568076(96) per meterand rp = 0.8335(95) femtometer. Our rp value is 3.3 combined standard deviations smaller than the previous H world data, but in good agreement with the µp value. We motivate an asymmetric fit function, which eliminates line shifts from quantum interference of neighboring atomic resonances.
21st International Conference on Laser Spectroscopy - ICOLS 2013 | 2013
Axel Beyer; Christian G. Parthey; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky; Janis Alnis; Ksenia Khabarova; Randolf Pohl; Elisabeth Peters; Dylan C. Yost; Arthur Matveev; Katharina Predehl; Stefan Droste; Tobias Wilken; Ronald Holzwarth; T. W. Hänsch; M. Abgrall; Daniele Rovera; C. Salomon; Philippe Laurent; Thomas Udem
Precise determinations of transition frequencies of simple atomic systems are required for a number of fundamental applications such as tests of quantum electrodynamics (QED), the determination of fundamental constants and nuclear charge radii. The sharpest transition in atomic hydrogen occurs between the metastable 2S state and the 1S ground state. Its transition frequency has now been measured with almost 15 digits accuracy using an optical frequency comb and a cesium atomic clock as a reference [1]. A recent measurement of the 2S ? 2P3/2 transition frequency in muonic hydrogen is in significant contradiction to the hydrogen data if QED calculations are assumed to be correct [2, 3]. We hope to contribute to this so-called proton size puzzle by providing additional experimental input from hydrogen spectroscopy.
Optics Express | 2016
Axel Beyer; Lothar Maisenbacher; Arthur Matveev; Randolf Pohl; Ksenia Khabarova; Yue Chang; Alexey Grinin; Tobias Lamour; Tao Shi; Dylan C. Yost; Thomas Udem; T. W. Hänsch; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky
We present an active fiber-based retroreflector providing high quality phase-retracing anti-parallel Gaussian laser beams for precision spectroscopy of Doppler sensitive transitions. Our design is well-suited for a number of applications where implementing optical cavities is technically challenging and corner cubes fail to match the demanded requirements, most importantly retracing wavefronts and preservation of the laser polarization. To illustrate the performance of the system, we use it for spectroscopy of the 2S-4P transition in atomic hydrogen and demonstrate an average suppression of the first order Doppler shift to 4 parts in 106 of the full collinear shift. This high degree of cancellation combined with our cryogenic source of hydrogen atoms in the metastable 2S state is sufficient to enable determinations of the Rydberg constant and the proton charge radius with competitive uncertainties. Advantages over the usual Doppler cancellation based on corner cube type retroreflectors are discussed as well as an alternative method using a high finesse cavity.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015
E.S. Kalganova; G. Vishnyakova; A Golovisin; D. Tregubov; D. Sukachev; S Fedorov; Ksenia Khabarova; A. V. Akimov; N. N. Kolachevsky; V. N. Sorokin
We demonstrated deep laser cooling of thulium atoms on a weak closed transition in magneto-optical trap and reloading of an atomic ensemble into an optical lattice. 105 atoms with a temperature 10 μK were trapped.
Annalen der Physik | 2013
Axel Beyer; Janis Alnis; Ksenia Khabarova; Arthur Matveev; Christian G. Parthey; Dylan C. Yost; Randolf Pohl; Thomas Udem; T. W. Hänsch; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky
Physical Review A | 2016
Dylan C. Yost; Arthur Matveev; Alexey Grinin; Elisabeth Peters; Lothar Maisenbacher; Axel Beyer; Randolf Pohl; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky; Ksenia Khabarova; T. W. Hänsch; Thomas Udem
Physica Scripta | 2015
Axel Beyer; Lothar Maisenbacher; Ksenia Khabarova; Arthur Matveev; Randolf Pohl; Thomas Udem; T. W. Hänsch; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky
Physical Review A | 2016
D. Sukachev; S. Fedorov; Inga Tolstikhina; D. Tregubov; E. Kalganova; G. Vishnyakova; A. Golovizin; N. Kolachevsky; Ksenia Khabarova; V. N. Sorokin
Physical Review A | 2017
E. Kalganova; O. Prudnikov; G. Vishnyakova; A. Golovizin; D. Tregubov; D. Sukachev; Ksenia Khabarova; V. N. Sorokin; N. Kolachevsky
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Lothar Maisenbacher; Axel Beyer; Arthur Matveev; Alexey Grinin; Randolf Pohl; Ksenia Khabarova; Nikolai N. Kolachevsky; Theodor W. H "ansch; Thomas Udem