The TAMUTRAP facility: A Penning trap facility at Texas A&M University for weak interaction studies

The Texas A&M University Penning Trap (TAMUTRAP) facility aims to test the standard model of the electroweak interaction by measuring the β-ν correlation parameter, aβν, for β-delayed proton emitters in the atomic mass range 20 < A < 40. Precision measurements of this correlation parameter...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:International journal of mass spectrometry 2021-05, Vol.468
Hauptverfasser: Shidling, P. D., Mehlman, M., Kolhinen, V. S., Chubarian, G., Cooper, L., Duran, G., Gilg, E., Iacob, V. E., Marble, K. S., McAfee, R., McClain, D., McDonough, M., Nasser, M., Gonzalez-Ortiz, C., Ozmetin, A., Schroeder, B., Soulard, M., Tabacaru, G., Melconian, D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The Texas A&M University Penning Trap (TAMUTRAP) facility aims to test the standard model of the electroweak interaction by measuring the β-ν correlation parameter, aβν, for β-delayed proton emitters in the atomic mass range 20 < A < 40. Precision measurements of this correlation parameter and, inextricably, the Fierz interference parameter, are a sensitive probe of physics beyond the standard model. Here, using off-line ion sources, the TAMUTRAP facility has been commissioned by demonstrating the ability to manipulate the trapped-ion motions as well as to perform precision mass measurements. Our novel cylindrical Penning trap – the world's largest – differs from typical designs in two key aspects: the electrode structure has an 180-mm inner diameter and an overall length of 334.89 mm leading to a uniquely small length/radius ratio l/r = 3.72; and we do not use the long end cap approximation, instead our short endcap electrodes are closed and capable of being placed at an arbitrary potential. This geometry is optimized for observing β-delayed proton decays, but is also well suited for other in-trap and post-trap precision decay experiments. In addition to presenting an overview of the TAMUTRAP facility, we demonstrate that our unique Penning trap is able to measure masses with a precision similar to typical trap designs.
ISSN:1387-3806
1873-2798