T. Huse
University of Oslo
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Featured researches published by T. Huse.
Nature Communications | 2014
S. Aghion; O. Ahlén; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; T. Ariga; A. S. Belov; K. Berggren; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; C. Canali; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; H. Derking; S. Di Domizio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova
The precise measurement of forces is one way to obtain deep insight into the fundamental interactions present in nature. In the context of neutral antimatter, the gravitational interaction is of high interest, potentially revealing new forces that violate the weak equivalence principle. Here we report on a successful extension of a tool from atom optics—the moiré deflectometer—for a measurement of the acceleration of slow antiprotons. The setup consists of two identical transmission gratings and a spatially resolving emulsion detector for antiproton annihilations. Absolute referencing of the observed antimatter pattern with a photon pattern experiencing no deflection allows the direct inference of forces present. The concept is also straightforwardly applicable to antihydrogen measurements as pursued by the AEgIS collaboration. The combination of these very different techniques from high energy and atomic physics opens a very promising route to the direct detection of the gravitational acceleration of neutral antimatter.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2014
S. Aghion; O. Ahlén; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; G. Burghart; L. Cabaret; M. Caccia; C. Canali; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; J. H. Derking; S. Di Domizio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova; Sergei Gninenko; S. Haider; J. Harasimowicz
The goal of the AEIS experiment at the Antiproton Decelerator (AD) at CERN, is to measure directly the Earths gravitational acceleration on antimatter by measuring the free fall of a pulsed, cold antihydrogen beam. The final position of the falling antihydrogen will be detected by a position sensitive detector. This detector will consist of an active silicon part, where the annihilations take place, followed by an emulsion part. Together, they allow to achieve 1% precision on the measurement of with about 600 reconstructed and time tagged annihilations. We present here the prospects for the development of the AEIS silicon position sentive detector and the results from the first beam tests on a monolithic silicon pixel sensor, along with a comparison to Monte Carlo simulations.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2015
J. Storey; S. Aghion; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; T. Ariga; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; M. Caccia; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; K. Chlouba; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; H. Derking; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; S. Gerber; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova; Sergei Gninenko
The AEgIS experiment is an interdisciplinary collaboration between atomic, plasma and particle physicists, with the scientific goal of performing the first precision measurement of the Earths gravitational acceleration on antimatter. The principle of the experiment is as follows: cold antihydrogen atoms are synthesized in a Penning-Malmberg trap and are Stark accelerated towards a moire deflectometer, the classical counterpart of an atom interferometer, and annihilate on a position sensitive detector. Crucial to the success of the experiment is an antihydrogen detector that will be used to demonstrate the production of antihydrogen and also to measure the temperature of the anti-atoms and the creation of a beam. The operating requirements for the detector are very challenging: it must operate at close to 4 K inside a 1 T solenoid magnetic field and identify the annihilation of the antihydrogen atoms that are produced during the 1 μs period of antihydrogen production. Our solution—called the FACT detector—is based on a novel multi-layer scintillating fiber tracker with SiPM readout and off the shelf FPGA based readout system. This talk will present the design of the FACT detector and detail the operation of the detector in the context of the AEgIS experiment.
International Journal of Modern Physics: Conference Series | 2014
D. Krasnický; S. Aghion; O. Ahlén; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; T. Ariga; A. S. Belov; K. Berggren; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; C. Canali; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; H. Derking; S. Di Domizio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi
experiments main goal is to measure the local gravitational acceleration of antihydrogen and thus perform a direct test of the weak equivalence principle with antimatter. In the first phase of the experiment the aim is to measure with 1% relative precision. This paper presents the antihydrogen production method and a description of some components of the experiment, which are necessary for the gravity measurement. Current status of the experimental apparatus is presented and recent commissioning results with antiprotons are outlined. In conclusion we discuss the short-term goals of the collaboration that will pave the way for the first gravity measurement in the near future.
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2014
A. Gligorova; S. Aghion; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; M. Caccia; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; S. Cial; G. Consolati; J. H. Derking; C. Da Via; S. Di Domizio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi; Sergei Gninenko; S. Haider; H. Holmestad; T. Huse; E. Jordan; T. Kaltenbacher
The principal aim of the AEgIS experiment at CERN is to measure the acceleration of antihydrogen due to Earths gravitational field. This would be a test of the Weak Equivalence Principle, which states that all bodies fall with the same acceleration independently of their mass and composition. The effect of Earths gravitational field on antimatter will be determined by measuring the deflection of the path of the antihydrogen from a straight line. The position of the antihydrogen will be found by detecting its annihilation on the surface of a silicon detector. The gravitational measurement in AEgIS will be performed with a gravity module, which includes the silicon detector, an emulsion detector and a scintillating fibre time-of-flight detector. As the experiment attempts to determine the gravitational acceleration with a precision of 1%, a position resolution better than 10 μm is required. Here we present the results of a study of antiproton annihilations in a 3D silicon pixel sensor and compare the results with a previous study using a monolithic active pixel sensor. This work is part of a larger study on different silicon sensor technologies needed for the development of a silicon position detector for the AEgIS experiment. The 3D detector together with its readout electronics have been originally designed for the ATLAS detector at the LHC. The direct annihilation of low energy antiprotons ( ~ 100 keV) takes place in the first few μm of the silicon sensor and we show that the charged products of the annihilation can be detected with the same sensor. The present study also aims to understand the signature of an antiproton annihilation event in segmented silicon detectors and compares it with a GEANT4 simulation model. These results will be used to determine the geometrical and process parameters to be adopted by the silicon annihilation detector to be installed in AEgIS.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2017
S. Aghion; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; T. Ariga; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; M. Caccia; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; A. Demetrio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Ereditato; C. Evans; R. Ferragut; J. Fesel; A. Fontana; S. Gerber; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova; F. Guatieri; S. Haider; A. Hinterberger; H. Holmestad; T. Huse
The characteristics of low energy antiproton annihilations on nuclei (e.g. hadronization and product multiplicities) are not well known, and Monte Carlo simulation packages that use different models provide different descriptions of the annihilation events. In this study, we measured the particle multiplicities resulting from antiproton annihilations on nuclei. The results were compared with predictions obtained using different models in the simulation tools GEANT4 and FLUKA. For this study, we exposed thin targets (Cu, Ag and Au) to a very low energy antiproton beam from CERNs Antiproton Decelerator, exploiting the secondary beamline available in the AEgIS experimental zone. The antiproton annihilation products were detected using emulsion films developed at the Laboratory of High Energy Physics in Bern, where they were analysed at the automatic microscope facility. The fragment multiplicity measured in this study is in good agreement with results obtained with FLUKA simulations for both minimally and heavily ionizing particles.
Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Low Energy Antiproton Physics (LEAP2016) | 2017
P. Yzombard; I. M. Strojek; C. Evans; O. Røhne; C. Pistillo; A. Ereditato; R. S. Brusa; R. Ferragut; Z. Mazzotta; R. Santoro; S. Gerber; H. Sandaker; G. Testera; M. Giammarchi; S. Vamosi; E. Widmann; R. Caravita; J. Zmeskal; F. Prelz; N. Pacifico; G. Bonomi; G. Consolati; N. Zurlo; I.C. Tietje; Lagomarsino; G. Nebbia; T. Ariga; L. Ravelli; B. Rienaecker; F. Castelli
P. Yzombard1, C. Amsler2, T. Ariga2, G. Bonomi3,4, P. Bräunig5, R. S. Brusa6,7, L. Cabaret1, M. Caccia8, R. Caravita9,10,14, F. Castelli8,11, G. Cerchiari12, D. Comparat1, G. Consolati8,13, A. Demetrio5, L. Di Noto9,10, M. Doser14, A. Ereditato2, C. Evans8,13, R. Ferragut8,13, J. Fesel14, A. Fontana4, S. Gerber14, M. Giammarchi8, A. Gligorova15, F. Guatieri6,7, S. Haider14, H. Holmestad16, T. Huse16, A. Kellerbauer12, D. Krasnický9,10, V. Lagomarsino9,10, P. Lansonneur17, P. Lebrun17, C. Malbrunot14,18, S. Mariazzi18, V. Matveev19,20, Z. Mazzotta8,11, G. Nebbia21, P. Nedelec17, M. Oberthaler5, N. Pacifico15, D. Pagano3,4, L. Penasa6,7, V. Petracek22, C. Pistillo2, F. Prelz8, M. Prevedelli23, L. Ravelli6,7, B. Rienaecker14, O.M. Røhne16, A. Rotondi4,24, M. Sacerdoti8,11, H. Sandaker16, R. Santoro8,25, P. Scampoli2,26, L. Smestad14,27, F. Sorrentino9,10, I. M. Strojek22, G. Testera10, I. C. Tietje14, S. Vamosi18, E. Widmann18, J. Zmeskal18, N. Zurlo4,28
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2017
R. S. Brusa; I M Strojek; C. Evans; O. M. Røhne; C. Pistillo; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; Z. Mazzotta; R. Santoro; S. Gerber; H. Sandaker; G. Testera; M. Giammarchi; S. Vamosi; E. Widmann; R. Caravita; J. Zmeskal; F. Prelz; N. Pacifico; G. Bonomi; G. Consolati; N. Zurlo; I.C. Tietje; Lagomarsino; G. Nebbia; T. Ariga; L. Ravelli; B. Rienaecker; F. Castelli; S. Mariazzi
The AEgIS (Antimatter Experiment: Gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy) experiment is designed with the objective to test the weak equivalence principle with antimatter by studying the free fall of antihydrogen in the Earths gravitational field. A pulsed cold beam of antihydrogen will be produced by charge exchange between cold Ps excited in Rydberg state and cold antiprotons. Finally the free fall will be measured by a classical moire deflectometer. The apparatus being assembled at the Antiproton Decelerator at CERN will be described, then the advancements of the experiment will be reported: positrons and antiprotons trapping measurements, Ps two-step excitation and a test-measurement of antiprotons deflection with a small scale moire deflectometer.
4TH SYMPOSIUM ON PROSPECTS IN THE PHYSICS OF DISCRETE SYMMETRIES (DISCRETE2014) | 2015
M. Kimura; S. Aghion; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; T. Ariga; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; M. Caccia; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; K. Chlouba; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; A. Demetrio; H. Derking; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; S. Gerber; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova
The goal of the AEgIS experiment is to measure the gravitational acceleration of antihydrogen – the simplest atom consisting entirely of antimatter – with the ultimate precision of 1%. We plan to verify the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP), one of the fundamental laws of nature, with an antimatter beam. The experiment consists of a positron accumulator, an antiproton trap and a Stark accelerator in a solenoidal magnetic field to form and accelerate a pulsed beam of antihydrogen atoms towards a free-fall detector. The antihydrogen beam passes through a moir e deflectometer to measure the vertical displacement due to the gravitational force. A position and time sensitive hybrid detector registers the annihilation points of the antihydrogen atoms and their time-of-flight. The detection principle has been successfully tested with antiprotons and a miniature moir e deflectometer coupled to a nuclear emulsion detector.
International Journal of Modern Physics: Conference Series | 2014
T. Ariga; S. Aghion; O. Ahlén; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; A. S. Belov; Karl Berggren; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; L. Cabaret; C. Canali; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; H. Derking; S. Di Domizio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova
The motivation of the AEgIS experiment is to test the universality of free fall with antimatter. The goal is to reach a relative uncertainty of 1% for the measurement of the earths gravitational acceleration