V. Lagomarsino
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
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Featured researches published by V. Lagomarsino.
Physical Review Letters | 2003
M. Amoretti; P. Genova; D. P. van der Werf; D. Lindelöf; G. Bonomi; R. Funakoshi; C. Amsler; R. Landua; E. Lodi Rizzini; A. Fontana; J. S. Hangst; C. Regenfus; M. C. Fujiwara; A. Bouchta; V. Filippini; G. Manuzio; G. Testera; N. Madsen; P. Montagna; L. V. Jørgensen; A. Rotondi; M. Charlton; V. Lagomarsino; C. L. Cesar; A. Variola; H. Pruys; R. Hayano; M. Macri; P. D. Bowe; C. Carraro
Production of antihydrogen atoms by mixing antiprotons with a cold, confined, positron plasma depends critically on parameters such as the plasma density and temperature. We discuss nondestructive measurements, based on a novel, real-time analysis of excited, low-order plasma modes, that provide comprehensive characterization of the positron plasma in the ATHENA antihydrogen apparatus. The plasma length, radius, density, and total particle number are obtained. Measurement and control of plasma temperature variations, and the application to antihydrogen production experiments are discussed.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2012
M. Doser; C. Amsler; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; J. Bremer; R. S. Brusa; G. Burkhart; L. Cabaret; C. Canali; F. Castelli; K. Chlouba; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; L. Di Noto; A. Donzella; A. Dudarev; T. Eisel; R. Ferragut; G. Ferrari; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi; A. Gligorova; Sergei Gninenko; S. Haider; J P Hansen; Stephen D. Hogan; L. V. Jørgensen
The AEGIS experiment, currently being set up at the Antiproton Decelerator at CERN, has the objective of studying the free fall of antimatter in the Earth?s gravitational field by means of a pulsed cold atomic beam of antihydrogen atoms. Both duration of free fall and vertical displacement of the horizontally emitted atoms will be measured, allowing a first test of the WEP with antimatter.
Physics of Plasmas | 2003
M. Amoretti; G. Bonomi; A. Bouchta; P. D. Bowe; C. Carraro; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; M. Doser; A. Fontana; M. C. Fujiwara; R. Funakoshi; P. Genova; J. S. Hangst; R. Hayano; L. V. Jørgensen; V. Lagomarsino; R. Landua; E. Lodi Rizzini; M. Macri; N. Madsen; G. Manuzio; G. Testera; A. Variola; D. P. van der Werf
The detection of electrostatic nonneutral plasma modes in the ATHENA (ApparaTus for High precision Experiment on Neutral Antimatter) experiment [M. Amoretti, C. Amsler, G. Bonomi et al., Nature (London) 419, 456 (2002)] is described. A complete nondestructive diagnostic of the plasma based on a fit to the line shape of the function describing the power transmitted through the plasma around the frequency of the fundamental mode is developed and the experimental results are presented and discussed.
Nuclear Physics B - Proceedings Supplements | 1997
M. H. Holzscheiter; G. Bendiscioli; A Bertin; G. Bollen; M Bruschi; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; M. Corradini; D. DePedis; M. Doser; J. Eades; R Fedele; Xian Feng; F Galluccio; T. Goldman; J. S. Hangst; R. Hayano; D. Horvath; Richard Hughes; N.S.P. King; K. Kirsebom; H. Knudsen; V. Lagomarsino; R. Landua; G. Laricchia; R.A. Lewis; E. Lodi-Rizzini; M. Macri; G. Manuzio; U Marconi
The study of CPT invariance with the highest achievable precision in all particle sectors is of fundamental importance for physics. Equally important is the question of the gravitational acceleration of antimatter. In recent years, impressive progress has been achieved in capturing antiprotons in specially designed Penning traps, in cooling them to energies of a few milli-electron volts, and in storing them for hours in a small volume of space. Positrons have been accumulated in large numbers in similar traps, and low energy positron or positronium beams have been generated. Finally, steady progress has been made in trapping and cooling neutral atoms. Thus the ingredients to form antihydrogen at rest are at hand. Once antihydrogen atoms have been captured at low energy, spectroscopic methods can be applied to interrogate their atomic structure with extremely high precision and compare it to its normal matter counterpart, the hydrogen atom. Especially the 1S-2S transition, with a lifetime of the excited state of 122 msec and thereby a natural linewidth of 5 parts in 10{sup 16}, offers in principle the possibility to directly compare matter and antimatter properties at a level of 1 part in 10{sup 16}.
NON-NEUTRAL PLASMA PHYSICS VIII: 10th International Workshop on Non-Neutral Plasmas | 2013
D. Krasnický; S. Aghion; C. Amsler; A. Ariga; T. Ariga; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; P. Bräunig; R. S. Brusa; J. Bremer; G. Burghart; L. Cabaret; M. Caccia; C. Canali; R. Caravita; F. Castelli; G. Cerchiari; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; L. Dassa; S. Di Domizio; L. Di Noto; M. Doser; A. Dudarev; A. Ereditato; R. Ferragut; A. Fontana; P. Genova; M. Giammarchi
The AEgIS Experiment is an international collaboration based at CERN whose aim is to perform the first direct measurement of the gravitational acceleration g of antihydrogen in the gravitational field of the Earth. Cold antihydrogen will be produced with a pulsed charge exchange reaction in a cylindrical Penning trap where antiprotons will be cooled to 100mK. The cold antihydrogen will be produced in an excited Rydberg state and subsequently formed into a beam. The deflection of the antihydrogen beam will be measured by using Moire deflectometer gratings. After being approved in late 2008, AEgIS started taking data in a commissioning phase early 2012. This report presents an overview of the AEgIS experiment, describes its current status and shows the first measurements on antiproton catching and cooling in the 5 T Penning catching trap. We will also present details on the techniques needed for the 100mK antihydrogen production, such as pulsed positronium production and its excitation with lasers.
Canadian Journal of Physics | 2011
R. Ferragut; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; I. Boscolo; R. S. Brusa; Vsevolod M. Byakov; L. Cabaret; Alberto Calloni; C. Canali; C. Carraro; F. Castelli; S. Cialdi; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; L. Dassa; N. Djourelov; M. Doser; G. Drobychev; A. Dudarev; A. Dupasquier; G. Ferrari; A. Fischer; Paola Folegati; A. Fontana; L. Formaro; M. Giammarchi; Sergei Gninenko; R. Heyne; S. D. Hogan; L. V. Jørgensen
AEgIS (Antimatter experiment: gravity, interferometry, spectroscopy) is an experiment approved by CERN with the goal of studying antihydrogen physics. In AEgIS, antihydrogen will be produced by charge exchange reactions of cold antiprotons with positronium atoms excited in a Rydberg state (n > 20). In the first phase of the experiment, controlled acceleration by an electric field gradient (Stark effect) and subsequent measurement of free fall in a Moire deflectometer will allow a test of the weak equivalence principle. In a second phase, the antihydrogen will be slowed, confined, and laser-cooled to perform CPT studies and detailed spectroscopy. In the present work, after a general description of the experiment, the present status of advancement will be reviewed, with special attention to the production and excitation of positronium atoms.
arXiv: Atomic Physics | 2008
G. Testera; A. S. Belov; G. Bonomi; I. Boscolo; N. Brambilla; R. S. Brusa; Vsevolod M. Byakov; L. Cabaret; C. Canali; C. Carraro; F. Castelli; S. Cialdi; M. de Combarieu; D. Comparat; G. Consolati; N. Djourelov; M. Doser; G. Drobychev; A. Dupasquier; D. Fabris; R. Ferragut; G. Ferrari; A. Fischer; A. Fontana; P. Forget; L. Formaro; M. Lunardon; A. Gervasini; M. Giammarchi; S. N. Gninenko
The formation of the antihydrogen beam in the AEGIS experiment through the use of inhomogeneous electric fields is discussed and simulation results including the geometry of the apparatus and realistic hypothesis about the antihydrogen initial conditions are shown. The resulting velocity distribution matches the requirements of the gravity experiment. In particular it is shown that the inhomogeneous electric fields provide radial cooling of the beam during the acceleration.
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.
Hyperfine Interactions | 2006
N. Zurlo; M. Amoretti; C. Amsler; G. Bonomi; C. Carraro; C. L. Cesar; M. Charlton; M. Doser; A. Fontana; R. Funakoshi; P. Genova; R. Hayano; L. V. Jørgensen; A. Kellerbauer; V. Lagomarsino; R. Landua; E. Lodi Rizzini; M. Macri; N. Madsen; G. Manuzio; D. Mitchard; Paolo Montagna; L. G. C. Posada; H. Pruys; C. Regenfus; A. Rotondi; G. Testera; D. P. van der Werf; A. Variola; L. Venturelli
We descrbe how protonium, the quasi-stable antiproton-proton bound system, has been synthesized following the interaction of antiprotons with the molecular ion