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Dive into the research topics where Steven Clayton is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven Clayton.


Science | 2018

Measurement of the neutron lifetime using a magneto-gravitational trap and in situ detection

Robert Pattie; Nathan Callahan; C. Cude-Woods; E. R. Adamek; L. J. Broussard; Steven Clayton; S. Currie; E. B. Dees; X. Ding; E. M. Engel; D. E. Fellers; W. Fox; P. Geltenbort; K. P. Hickerson; Mark A. Hoffbauer; A. T. Holley; A. Komives; Ching Liu; S. W. T. MacDonald; M. Makela; C. L. Morris; J. D. Ortiz; J. C. Ramsey; D. J. Salvat; A. Saunders; S. J. Seestrom; E. I. Sharapov; Sky Sjue; Zhaowen Tang; J. Vanderwerp

How long does a neutron live? Unlike the proton, whose lifetime is longer than the age of the universe, a free neutron decays with a lifetime of about 15 minutes. Measuring the exact lifetime of neutrons is surprisingly tricky; putting them in a container and monitoring their decay can lead to errors because some neutrons will be lost owing to interactions with the container walls. To overcome this problem, Pattie et al. measured the lifetime in a trap where ultracold polarized neutrons were levitated by magnetic fields, precluding interactions with the trap walls (see the Perspective by Mumm). This more precise determination of the neutron lifetime will aid our understanding of how the first nuclei formed after the Big Bang. Science, this issue p. 627; see also p. 605 Ultracold polarized neutrons are levitated in a trap to measure their lifetime with reduced systematic uncertainty. The precise value of the mean neutron lifetime, τn, plays an important role in nuclear and particle physics and cosmology. It is used to predict the ratio of protons to helium atoms in the primordial universe and to search for physics beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. We eliminated loss mechanisms present in previous trap experiments by levitating polarized ultracold neutrons above the surface of an asymmetric storage trap using a repulsive magnetic field gradient so that the stored neutrons do not interact with material trap walls. As a result of this approach and the use of an in situ neutron detector, the lifetime reported here [877.7 ± 0.7 (stat) +0.4/–0.2 (sys) seconds] does not require corrections larger than the quoted uncertainties.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2015

A multilayer surface detector for ultracold neutrons

Zhehui Wang; Mark A. Hoffbauer; C. L. Morris; Nathan Callahan; E. R. Adamek; Jeffrey Bacon; M. Blatnik; Aaron Brandt; L. J. Broussard; Steven Clayton; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; E. B. Dees; X. Ding; J. Gao; F. Gray; K. P. Hickerson; A. T. Holley; Takeyasu M. Ito; Ching Liu; M. Makela; J. C. Ramsey; Robert Pattie; Daniel Salvat; A. Saunders; D. W. Schmidt; R. K. Schulze; S. J. Seestrom; E. I. Sharapov; A. Sprow

Abstract A multilayer surface detector for ultracold neutrons (UCNs) is described. The top 10 B layer is exposed to vacuum and directly captures UCNs. The ZnS:Ag layer beneath the 10 B layer is a few microns thick, which is sufficient to detect the charged particles from the 10 B(n,α) 7 Li neutron-capture reaction, while thin enough that ample light due to α and 7 Li escapes for detection by photomultiplier tubes. A 100-nm thick 10 B layer gives high UCN detection efficiency, as determined by the mean UCN kinetic energy, detector materials, and other parameters. Low background, including negligible sensitivity to ambient neutrons, has also been verified through pulse-shape analysis and comparison with other existing 3 He and 10 B detectors. This type of detector has been configured in different ways for UCN flux monitoring, development of UCN guides and neutron lifetime research.


Physical Review C | 2018

New result for the neutron

M. A. P. Brown; E. B. Dees; E. R. Adamek; B. Allgeier; M. Blatnik; T. J. Bowles; L. J. Broussard; R. Carr; Steven Clayton; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; X. Ding; B. W. Filippone; A. García; P. Geltenbort; S. Hasan; K. P. Hickerson; J. Hoagland; R. Hong; G. E. Hogan; A. T. Holley; Takeyasu M. Ito; A. Knecht; Ching Liu; J. Liu; M. Makela; J. W. Martin; D. Melconian; M. P. Mendenhall; S. D. Moore

Background: The neutron β-decay asymmetry parameter A_0 defines the angular correlation between the spin of the neutron and the momentum of the emitted electron. Values for A_0 permit an extraction of the ratio of the weak axial-vector to vector coupling constants, λ≡gA/gV, which under assumption of the conserved vector current hypothesis (gV=1) determines gA. Precise values for gA are important as a benchmark for lattice QCD calculations and as a test of the standard model. Purpose: The UCNA experiment, carried out at the Ultracold Neutron (UCN) source at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, was the first measurement of any neutron β-decay angular correlation performed with UCN. This article reports the most precise result for A_0 obtained to date from the UCNA experiment, as a result of higher statistics and reduced key systematic uncertainties, including from the neutron polarization and the characterization of the electron detector response. Methods: UCN produced via the downscattering of moderated spallation neutrons in a solid deuterium crystal were polarized via transport through a 7 T polarizing magnet and a spin flipper, which permitted selection of either spin state. The UCN were then contained within a 3-m long cylindrical decay volume, situated along the central axis of a superconducting 1 T solenoidal spectrometer. With the neutron spins then oriented parallel or anti-parallel to the solenoidal field, an asymmetry in the numbers of emitted decay electrons detected in two electron detector packages located on both ends of the spectrometer permitted an extraction of A_0. Results: The UCNA experiment reports a new 0.67% precision result for A_0 of A_0=−0.12054(44)_(stat)(68)_(syst), which yields λ=gA/gV=−1.2783(22). Combination with the previous UCNA result and accounting for correlated systematic uncertainties produces A0=−0.12015(34)stat(63)syst and λ=gA/gV=−1.2772(20). Conclusions: This new result for A0 and gA/gV from the UCNA experiment has provided confirmation of the shift in values for gA/gV that has emerged in the published results from more recent experiments, which are in striking disagreement with the results from older experiments. Individual systematic corrections to the asymmetries in older experiments (published prior to 2002) were >10%, whereas those in the more recent ones (published after 2002) have been of the scale of <2%. The impact of these older results on the global average will be minimized should future measurements of A0 reach the 0.1% level of precision with central values near the most recent results.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2017

\beta

C. L. Morris; E. R. Adamek; L. J. Broussard; N. B. Callahan; Steven Clayton; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; X. Ding; W. Fox; K. P. Hickerson; Mark A. Hoffbauer; A. T. Holley; A. Komives; C.-Y. Liu; M. Makela; R. W. Pattie; J. C. Ramsey; D. J. Salvat; A. Saunders; S. J. Seestrom; E. I. Sharapov; Sky Sjue; Zhaowen Tang; J. Vanderwerp; B. Vogelaar; P. L. Walstrom; Zhongwu Wang; W. Wei; J. W. Wexler; T. L. Womack

In this paper, we describe a new method for measuring surviving neutrons in neutron lifetime measurements using bottled ultracold neutrons (UCN), which provides better characterization of systematic uncertainties and enables higher precision than previous measurement techniques. An active detector that can be lowered into the trap has been used to measure the neutron distribution as a function of height and measure the influence of marginally trapped UCN on the neutron lifetime measurement. In addition, measurements have demonstrated phase-space evolution and its effect on the lifetime measurement.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2013

-asymmetry parameter

Young-Jin Kim; Steven Clayton

A discovery of a permanent electric dipole moment (EDM) of the neutron would provide one of the most important low energy tests of the discrete symmetries beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. A new search of neutron EDM, to be conducted at the spallation neutron source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is designed to improve the present experimental limit of ~10-26 e·cm by two orders of magnitude. The experiment is based on the magnetic-resonance technique in which polarized neutrons precess at the Larmor frequency when placed in a static magnetic field; a nonzero EDM would be evident as a difference in precession frequency when a strong external electric field is applied parallel versus antiparallel to the magnetic field. In addition to its role as neutron spin-analyser via the spin-dependent n+3He nuclear capture reaction, polarized helium-3 (which has negligible EDM) will serve as co-magnetometer to correct for drifts in the magnetic field. In one of the two methods that will be built into the apparatus, the helium-3 precession signal is read out by SQUID-based gradiometers. We present a design study of a SQUID system suitable for the neutron EDM apparatus, and discuss using very long leads between the pickup loop and the SQUID.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2017

A_0

L. J. Broussard; B. A. Zeck; E. R. Adamek; S. Baeßler; N. Birge; M. Blatnik; J. D. Bowman; Aaron Brandt; M. A. P. Brown; J. Burkhart; Nathan Callahan; Steven Clayton; C. Crawford; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; E. B. Dees; X. Ding; N. Fomin; E. Frlez; J. Fry; F. Gray; S. Hasan; K. P. Hickerson; J. Hoagland; A. T. Holley; Takeyasu M. Ito; Andreas Klein; Hengne Li; Ching Liu; M. Makela

We describe a detection system designed for precise measurements of angular correlations in neutron β decay. The system is based on thick, large area, highly segmented silicon detectors developed in collaboration with Micron Semiconductor, Ltd. The prototype system meets specifications for β electron detection with energy thresholds below 10 keV, energy resolution of ∼3 keV FWHM, and rise time of ∼50 ns with 19 of the 127 detector pixels instrumented. Using ultracold neutrons at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, we have demonstrated the coincident detection of β particles and recoil protons from neutron β decay. The fully instrumented detection system will be implemented in the UCNB and Nab experiments to determine the neutron β decay parameters B, a, and b.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2017

from UCNA

Robert Pattie; E. R. Adamek; Thomas Brenner; Aaron Brandt; L. J. Broussard; Nathan Callahan; Steven Clayton; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; P. Geltenbort; Takeyasu M. Ito; Thorsten Lauer; Chen-Yu Liu; Jaroslaw Majewski; M. Makela; Yasohira Masuda; C. L. Morris; J. C. Ramsey; Daniel Salvat; A. Saunders; Juri Schroffenegger; Zhaowen Tang; W. Wei; Zhehui Wang; Erik B. Watkins; A. R. Young; B. A. Zeck

Abstract We report on the evaluation of commercial electroless nickel phosphorus (NiP) coatings for ultracold neutron (UCN) transport and storage. The material potential of 50 μ m thick NiP coatings on stainless steel and aluminum substrates was measured to be V F = 213 ( 5 . 2 ) neV using the time-of-flight spectrometer ASTERIX at the Lujan Center. The loss per bounce probability was measured in pinhole bottling experiments carried out at ultracold neutron sources at Los Alamos Neutron Science Center and the Institut Laue-Langevin. For these tests a new guide coupling design was used to minimize gaps between the guide sections. The observed UCN loss in the bottle was interpreted in terms of an energy independent effective loss per bounce, which is the appropriate model when gaps in the system and upscattering are the dominate loss mechanisms, yielding a loss per bounce of 1 . 3 ( 1 ) × 1 0 − 4 . We also present a detailed discussion of the pinhole bottling methodology and an energy dependent analysis of the experimental results.


arXiv: Nuclear Experiment | 2018

A new method for measuring the neutron lifetime using an in situ neutron detector

X. Sun; E. R. Adamek; B. Allgeier; M. Blatnik; T. J. Bowles; L. J. Broussard; M. A. P. Brown; R. Carr; Steven Clayton; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; E. B. Dees; X. Ding; B. W. Filippone; A. García; P. Geltenbort; S. Hasan; K. P. Hickerson; J. Hoagland; R. Hong; G. E. Hogan; A. T. Holley; Takeyasu M. Ito; A. Knecht; Ching Liu; J. Liu; M. Makela; R. Mammei; J. W. Martin; D. Melconian

It has been proposed recently that a previously unobserved neutron decay branch to a dark matter particle (χ) could account for the discrepancy in the neutron lifetime observed in experiments that use two different measurement techniques. One of the possible final states discussed includes a single χ along with an e^+e^− pair. We use data from the UCNA (Ultracold Neutron Asymmetry) experiment to set limits on this decay channel. Coincident electron-like events are detected with ∼4π acceptance using a pair of detectors that observe a volume of stored Ultracold Neutrons (UCNs). The summed kinetic energy (E_(e^+e^−)) from such events is used to set limits, as a function of the χ mass, on the branching fraction for this decay channel. For χ masses consistent with resolving the neutron lifetime discrepancy, we exclude this as the dominant dark matter decay channel at ≫ 5σlevel for 100 keV 90% confidence level.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Development of a SQUID-Based

Takeyasu M. Ito; J. C. Ramsey; Weijun Yao; D. Beck; V. Cianciolo; Steven Clayton; C. Crawford; S. Currie; B. W. Filippone; William Griffith; M. Makela; Richardo Schmid; G. M. Seidel; Zhaowen Tang; Daniel Wagner; W. Wei; Steven Williamson

testing electrode materials for the SNS nEDM experiment T. M. Ito, a) J. C. Ramsey, W. Yao, D. H. Beck, V. Cianciolo, S. M. Clayton, C. Crawford, S. A. Currie, B. W. Filippone, W. C. Griffith, M. Makela, R. Schmid, G. M. Seidel, Z. Tang, D. Wagner, W. Wei, and S. E. Williamson Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545, USA Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA Loomis Laboratory of Physics, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506, USA W. K. Kellogg Radiation Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, 91125, USA Department of Physics, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912, USAWe have constructed an apparatus to study DC electrical breakdown in liquid helium at temperatures as low as 0.4 K and at pressures between the saturated vapor pressure and ∼600 Torr. The apparatus can house a set of electrodes that are 12 cm in diameter with a gap of 1-2 cm between them, and a potential up to ±50 kV can be applied to each electrode. Initial results demonstrated that it is possible to apply fields exceeding 100 kV/cm in a 1 cm gap between two electropolished stainless steel electrodes 12 cm in diameter for a wide range of pressures at 0.4 K. We also measured the current between two electrodes. Our initial results, I < 1 pA at 45 kV, correspond to a lower bound on the effective volume resistivity of liquid helium of ρV > 5 × 10(18) Ω cm. This lower bound is 5 times larger than the bound previously measured. We report the design, construction, and operational experience of the apparatus, as well as initial results.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2016

{}^{3}\hbox{He}

W. Wei; L. J. Broussard; Mark A. Hoffbauer; M. Makela; C. L. Morris; Zhaowen Tang; E. R. Adamek; Nathen Brannan Callahan; Steven Clayton; C. Cude-Woods; S. Currie; E. B. Dees; Xinjian Ding; P. Geltenbort; K. P. Hickerson; A. T. Holley; Takeyasu M. Ito; K. K. H. Leung; Chen-Yu Liu; Deborah Jean Morley; Jose D. Ortiz; Robert Pattie; J. C. Ramsey; A. Saunders; S. J. Seestrom; E. I. Sharapov; Sky Sjue; Jonathan William Wexler; T. L. Womack; A. R. Young

Position-sensitive detection of ultracold neutrons (UCNs) is demonstrated using an imaging charge-coupled device (CCD) camera. A spatial resolution less than 15μm has been achieved, which is equivalent to a UCN energy resolution below 2 pico-electron-volts through the relation δE=m_0gδx. Here, the symbols δE, δx, m_0 and g are the energy resolution, the spatial resolution, the neutron rest mass and the gravitational acceleration, respectively. A multilayer surface convertor described previously is used to capture UCNs and then emits visible light for CCD imaging. Particle identification and noise rejection are discussed through the use of light intensity profile analysis. This method allows different types of UCN spectroscopy and other applications.

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J. C. Ramsey

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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M. Makela

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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S. Currie

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Takeyasu M. Ito

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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A. Saunders

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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E. R. Adamek

Indiana University Bloomington

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C. L. Morris

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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C. Cude-Woods

North Carolina State University

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K. P. Hickerson

California Institute of Technology

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L. J. Broussard

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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