Sebastian Menk
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Sebastian Menk.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010
M. Lange; M. Froese; Sebastian Menk; J. Varju; Robin Bastert; Klaus Blaum; J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia; Florian Fellenberger; M. Grieser; R. von Hahn; O. Heber; Kai-Uwe Kühnel; Felix Laux; D. A. Orlov; M. L. Rappaport; R. Repnow; C. D. Schröter; D. Schwalm; Andrey Shornikov; T. Sieber; Y. Toker; J. Ullrich; A. Wolf
We report on the realization and operation of a fast ion beam trap of the linear electrostatic type employing liquid helium cooling to reach extremely low blackbody radiation temperature and residual gas density and, hence, long storage times of more than 5 min which are unprecedented for keV ion beams. Inside a beam pipe that can be cooled to temperatures <15 K, with 1.8 K reached in some locations, an ion beam pulse can be stored at kinetic energies of 2-20 keV between two electrostatic mirrors. Along with an overview of the cryogenic trap design, we present a measurement of the residual gas density inside the trap resulting in only 2 x 10(3) cm(-3), which for a room temperature environment corresponds to a pressure in the 10(-14) mbar range. The device, called the cryogenic trap for fast ion beams, is now being used to investigate molecules and clusters at low temperatures, but has also served as a design prototype for the cryogenic heavy-ion storage ring currently under construction at the Max-Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
R. von Hahn; Arno Becker; Felix A. Berg; Klaus Blaum; Christian Breitenfeldt; H. Fadil; Florian Fellenberger; M. Froese; S. George; Jürgen Göck; M. Grieser; Florian Grussie; Elisabeth Anna Guerin; O. Heber; Philipp Herwig; Jonas Karthein; Claude Krantz; Holger Kreckel; M. Lange; Felix Laux; Svenja Lohmann; Sebastian Menk; Christian Meyer; Priyadarsini Mishra; O Novotný; A. P. O’Connor; D. A. Orlov; M. L. Rappaport; R. Repnow; Sunny Saurabh
An electrostatic cryogenic storage ring, CSR, for beams of anions and cations with up to 300 keV kinetic energy per unit charge has been designed, constructed, and put into operation. With a circumference of 35 m, the ion-beam vacuum chambers and all beam optics are in a cryostat and cooled by a closed-cycle liquid helium system. At temperatures as low as (5.5 ± 1) K inside the ring, storage time constants of several minutes up to almost an hour were observed for atomic and molecular, anion and cation beams at an energy of 60 keV. The ion-beam intensity, energy-dependent closed-orbit shifts (dispersion), and the focusing properties of the machine were studied by a system of capacitive pickups. The Schottky-noise spectrum of the stored ions revealed a broadening of the momentum distribution on a time scale of 1000 s. Photodetachment of stored anions was used in the beam lifetime measurements. The detachment rate by anion collisions with residual-gas molecules was found to be extremely low. A residual-gas density below 140 cm(-3) is derived, equivalent to a room-temperature pressure below 10(-14) mbar. Fast atomic, molecular, and cluster ion beams stored for long periods of time in a cryogenic environment will allow experiments on collision- and radiation-induced fragmentation processes of ions in known internal quantum states with merged and crossed photon and particle beams.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010
Oldrich Novotny; Henrik Buhr; Julia Stützel; Mario B. Mendes; Max H. Berg; Dennis Bing; M. Froese; M. Grieser; O. Heber; Brandon Jordon-Thaden; Claude Krantz; M. Lange; M. Lestinsky; Steffen Novotny; Sebastian Menk; Dmitry A. Orlov; Annemieke Petrignani; M. L. Rappaport; Andrey Shornikov; D. Schwalm; A. Wolf
We report on our recent studies of dissociative recombination (DR) employing two different fragment imaging detection techniques at the TSR storage ring in Heidelberg, Germany. Principles of an upgraded 3D optical system and the new energy-sensitive multistrip detector (EMU) are explained together with possible applications in reaction dynamics studies. With the EMU imaging detector we succeeded to observe the branching ratios after DR of deuterated hydronium ions D(3)O(+) at energies of 0-0.5 and 4-21 eV. The branching ratios are almost constant at low energies while above 6 eV both oxygen-producing channels O + D + D + D and O + D(2) + D strongly increase and dominate by about 85% at 11 eV. To demonstrate further capabilities of our fragment imaging detectors, we also summarize some of our additional recent studies on DR of molecular ions important for astrophysics as well as for fundamental unimolecular dynamics.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2011
Claude Krantz; Felix A. Berg; Klaus Blaum; Florian Fellenberger; M. Froese; M. Grieser; R. von Hahn; M. Lange; Felix Laux; Sebastian Menk; R. Repnow; Andrey Shornikov; A. Wolf
The Cryogenic Storage Ring (CSR), presently under construction at the Max-Planck-Institute for Nuclear Physics, will allow the storage of large ionic molecules under optimum experimental conditions. The electrostatic beam optics and the presence of a low-energy electron cooler will allow highly-precise recombination experiments with molecular ions of 160 atomic mass units per charge state. The all-cryogenic design of the storage ring will provide unprecedented vacuum conditions and assure long storage times even for very heavy ion beams. Suppression of the black body radiation background of the beam pipe in combination with electron cooling will give access to internal ion temperatures of 10K and allow state-selective experiments on infrared-active species, impossible in present-day room-temperature storage rings. We give an overview of the CSR project, point out the scientific opportunities arising from its unique design, and give an outlook on possible first molecular recombination experiments after commissioning of the storage ring.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010
Annemieke Petrignani; Dennis Bing; Oldrich Novotny; Max H. Berg; Henrik Buhr; M. Grieser; Brandon Jordon-Thaden; Claude Krantz; Mario B. Mendes; Sebastian Menk; Steffen Novotny; D. A. Orlov; R. Repnow; J Stützel; Xavier Urbain; A. Wolf
Ultraviolet and visible photodissociation of a vibrationally excited H(3)(+) ion beam, as produced by standard ion sources, was successfully implemented in an ion storage ring with the aim of investigating the decay of the excited molecular levels. A collinear beams configuration was used to measure the photodissociation of H(3)(+) into H(2)(+) + H fragments by transitions into the first excited singlet state with 266 and 532 nm laser beams. A clear signal could be observed up to 5 ms of storage, indicating that enough highly excited rovibrational states survive on the millisecond time scale of the experiment. The decay into H(2)(+) + H shows an effective time constant between about 1 and 1.5 ms. The initial photodissociating states are estimated to lie roughly 1 eV below the dissociation limit of 4.4 eV. The expected low population of these levels gives rise to an effective cross section of several 10(-20) cm(2) for ultraviolet and some 10(-21) cm(2) for visible light. For using multistep resonant dissociation schemes to monitor rotational populations of cold H(3)(+) in low-density environments, these measurements open promising perspectives.
XXVI International Conference on Photonic, Electronic and Atomic Collisions | 2009
Annemieke Petrignani; Xavier Urbain; Max H. Berg; Dennis Bing; Henrik Buhr; M. Grieser; Brandon Jordon-Thaden; Claude Krantz; Mario B. Mendes; Sebastian Menk; Oldrich Novotný; Steffen Novotny; D. A. Orlov; Tobias Sorg; Julia Stützel; A. Wolf
As a step towards in situ probing of the rotational-state distribution of H3+ ions in a stored beam, we have realized their photodissociation in a storage ring by a parallel ultraviolet laser beam. The decay of the photodissociation signal of H3+ for 4.9 eV photons into the channel H+2 + H was identified and showed a time constant of about 2 ms, typical for vibrational levels of H3+ over a wide range of binding energies. The photodissociation products of H3+ at this photon energy were further investigated for a single pass ion beam by kinetic energy release and charge-exchange measurements.
New Journal of Physics | 2012
M. Froese; M. Lange; Sebastian Menk; M. Grieser; O. Heber; Felix Laux; R. Repnow; T. Sieber; Y. Toker; R. von Hahn; A. Wolf; Klaus Blaum
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2011
Robert von Hahn; Felix A. Berg; Klaus Blaum; José R. Crespo López-Urrutia; Florian Fellenberger; M. Froese; M. Grieser; Claude Krantz; Kai-Uwe Kühnel; M. Lange; Sebastian Menk; Felix Laux; D. A. Orlov; R. Repnow; C. D. Schröter; Andrey Shornikov; T. Sieber; Joachim Ullrich; A. Wolf; M. L. Rappaport
New Journal of Physics | 2012
M. Lange; M. Froese; Sebastian Menk; Dennis Bing; Florian Fellenberger; M. Grieser; Felix Laux; D. A. Orlov; R. Repnow; T. Sieber; Y. Toker; Robert von Hahn; A. Wolf; Klaus Blaum
Physical Review A | 2014
Sebastian Menk; S. Das; Klaus Blaum; M. Froese; M. Lange; M. Mukherjee; R. Repnow; D. Schwalm; R. von Hahn; A. Wolf