High-precision electron affinity of oxygen

Negative ions are important in many areas of science and technology, e.g., in interstellar chemistry, for accelerator-based radionuclide dating, and in anti-matter research. They are unique quantum systems where electron-correlation effects govern their properties. Atomic anions are loosely bound sy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-10, Vol.13 (1), p.5906-5906, Article 5906
Hauptverfasser: Kristiansson, Moa K., Chartkunchand, Kiattichart, Eklund, Gustav, Hole, Odd M., Anderson, Emma K., de Ruette, Nathalie, Kamińska, Magdalena, Punnakayathil, Najeeb, Navarro-Navarrete, José E., Sigurdsson, Stefan, Grumer, Jon, Simonsson, Ansgar, Björkhage, Mikael, Rosén, Stefan, Reinhed, Peter, Blom, Mikael, Källberg, Anders, Alexander, John D., Cederquist, Henrik, Zettergren, Henning, Schmidt, Henning T., Hanstorp, Dag
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Negative ions are important in many areas of science and technology, e.g., in interstellar chemistry, for accelerator-based radionuclide dating, and in anti-matter research. They are unique quantum systems where electron-correlation effects govern their properties. Atomic anions are loosely bound systems, which with very few exceptions lack optically allowed transitions. This limits prospects for high-resolution spectroscopy, and related negative-ion detection methods. Here, we present a method to measure negative ion binding energies with an order of magnitude higher precision than what has been possible before. By laser-manipulation of quantum-state populations, we are able to strongly reduce the background from photodetachment of excited states using a cryogenic electrostatic ion-beam storage ring where keV ion beams can circulate for up to hours. The method is applicable to negative ions in general and here we report an electron affinity of 1.461 112 972(87) eV for 16 O. High-precision measurements are useful to find isotopic shifts and electron correlation. Here the authors measure electron affinity and hyperfine splitting of atomic oxygen with higher precision than previous studies.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-33438-y