From Paul Scherrer Institute [Paul Scherrer Institut](CH): “Size of helium nucleus measured more precisely than ever before”

From Paul Scherrer Institute [Paul Scherrer Institut](CH)

27 January 2021

Text: Barbara Vonarburg

Dr. Aldo Antognini
Labor für Teilchenphysik
Paul Scherrer Institute, Forschungsstrasse 111, 5232 Villigen PSI (CH)
&
Institute for Particle Physics and Astrophysics
ETH Zürich, Otto-Stern-Weg 5, 8093 Zürich (CH)
+41 56 310 46 14
aldo.antognini@psi.ch

Dr. Franz Kottmann
Labor für Teilchenphysik
Paul Scherrer Institute, Forschungsstrasse 111, 5232 Villigen PSI (CH)
Institute for Particle Physics and Astrophysics
ETH Zürich, Otto-Stern-Weg 5, 8093 Zürich (CH)
+41 79273 16 39
franz.kottmann@psi.ch

Dr. Julian J. Krauth
LaserLaB, Faculty of Sciences
Quantum Metrology and Laser Applications
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
De Boelelaan 1081, 1081HV Amsterdam (NL)
+31 20 5987438
j.krauth@vu.nl

Prof. Dr. Randolf Pohl
Institut für Physik
Johannes Gutenberg Universität, 55128 Mainz (DE)
+49 171 41 70 752, e-mail:
pohl@uni-mainz.de

In experiments at the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI, an international research collaboration has measured the radius of the atomic nucleus of helium five times more precisely than ever before. With the aid of the new value, fundamental physical theories can be tested and natural constants can be determined even more precisely. For their measurements, the researchers needed muons – these particles are similar to electrons but are around 200 times heavier. PSI is the only research site in the world where enough so-called low-energy muons are produced for such experiments. The researchers are publishing their results today in the journal Nature.

1
Both Franz Kottmann (left) and Karsten Schuhmann did essential preparatory work for the crucial experiment. Credit: Paul Scherrer Institute/Markus Fischer)

After hydrogen, helium is the second most abundant element in the universe. Around one-fourth of the atomic nuclei that formed in the first few minutes after the Big Bang were helium nuclei. These consist of four building blocks: two protons and two neutrons. For fundamental physics, it is crucial to know the properties of the helium nucleus, among other things to understand the processes in other atomic nuclei that are heavier than helium. “The helium nucleus is a very fundamental nucleus, which could be described as magical,” says Aldo Antognini, a physicist at PSI and ETH Zürich (CH). His colleague and co-author Randolf Pohl from Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (DE) adds: “Our previous knowledge about the helium nucleus comes from experiments with electrons. At PSI, however, we have for the first time developed a new type of measurement method that allows much better accuracy.”

With this, the international research collaboration succeeded in determining the size of the helium nucleus around five times more precisely than was possible in previous measurements. The group is publishing its results today in the renowned scientific journal Nature [above]. According to their findings, the so-called mean charge radius of the helium nucleus is 1.67824 femtometers (there are 1 quadrillion femtometers in 1 meter).

“The idea behind our experiments is simple,” explains Antognini. Normally two negatively charged electrons orbit the positively charged helium nucleus. “We don’t work with normal atoms, but with exotic atoms in which both electrons have been replaced by a single muon,” says the physicist. The muon is considered to be the electron’s heavier brother; it resembles it, but it’s around 200 times heavier. A muon is much more strongly bound to the atomic nucleus than an electron and encircles it in much narrower orbits. Compared to electrons, a muon is much more likely to stay in the nucleus itself. “So with muonic helium, we can draw conclusions about the structure of the atomic nucleus and measure its properties,” Antognini explains.

Slow muons, complicated laser system

The muons are produced at PSI using a particle accelerator. The specialty of the facility: generating muons with low energy. These particles are slow and can be stopped in the apparatus for experiments. This is the only way researchers can form the exotic atoms in which a muon throws an electron out of its orbit and replaces it. Fast muons, in contrast, would fly right through the apparatus. The PSI system delivers more low-energy muons than all other comparable systems worldwide. “That is why the experiment with muonic helium can only be carried out here,” says Franz Kottmann, who for 40 years has been pressing ahead with the necessary preliminary studies and technical developments for this experiment.

The muons hit a small chamber filled with helium gas. If the conditions are right, muonic helium is created, where the muon is in an energy state in which it often stays in the atomic nucleus. “Now the second important component for the experiment comes into play: the laser system,” Pohl explains. The complicated system shoots a laser pulse at the helium gas. If the laser light has the right frequency, it excites the muon and advances it to a higher energy state, in which its path is practically always outside the nucleus. When it falls from this to the ground state, it emits X-rays. Detectors register these X-ray signals.

In the experiment, the laser frequency is varied until a large number of X-ray signals arrive. Physicists then speak of the so-called resonance frequency. With its help, then, the difference between the two energetic states of the muon in the atom can be determined. According to theory, the measured energy difference depends on how large the atomic nucleus is. Hence, using the theoretical equation, the radius can be determined from the measured resonance. This data analysis was carried out in Randolf Pohl’s group in Mainz (DE).

Proton radius mystery is fading away

The researchers at PSI had already measured the radius of the proton in the same way in 2010. At that time, their value did not match that obtained by other measurement methods. There was talk of a proton radius puzzle, and some speculated that a new physics might lie behind it in the form of a previously unknown interaction between the muon and the proton. This time there is no contradiction between the new, more precise value and the measurements with other methods. “This makes the explanation of the results with physics beyond the standard model more improbable,” says Kottmann. In addition, in recent years the value of the proton radius determined by means of other methods has been approaching the precise number from PSI. “The proton radius puzzle still exists, but it is slowly fading away,” says Kottmann.

“Our measurement can be used in different ways,” says Julian Krauth, first author of the study: “The radius of the helium nucleus is an important touchstone for nuclear physics.” Atomic nuclei are held together by the so-called strong interaction, one of the four fundamental forces in physics. With the theory of strong interaction, known as quantum chromodynamics, physicists would like to be able to predict the radius of the helium nucleus and other light atomic nuclei with a few protons and neutrons. The extremely precisely measured value for the radius of the helium nucleus puts these predictions to the test. This also makes it possible to test new theoretical models of the nuclear structure and to understand atomic nuclei even better.

The measurements on muonic helium can also be compared with experiments using normal helium atoms and ions. In experiments on these, too, energy transitions can be triggered and measured with laser systems – here, though, with electrons instead of muons. Measurements on electronic helium are under way right now. By comparing the results of the two measurements, one can draw conclusions about fundamental natural constants such as the Rydberg constant, which plays an important role in quantum mechanics.

See the full article here.

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The Paul Scherrer Institute [Paul Scherrer Institut](CH) is the largest research institute for natural and engineering sciences within Switzerland. We perform world-class research in three main subject areas: Matter and Material; Energy and the Environment; and Human Health. By conducting fundamental and applied research, we work on long-term solutions for major challenges facing society, industry and science.

The Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) is a multi-disciplinary research institute for natural and engineering sciences in Switzerland. It is located in the Canton of Aargau in the municipalities Villigen and Würenlingen on either side of the River Aare, and covers an area over 35 hectares in size. Like ETH Zurich and EPFL, PSI belongs to the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain of the Swiss Confederation. The PSI employs around 2100 people. It conducts basic and applied research in the fields of matter and materials, human health, and energy and the environment. About 37% of PSI’s research activities focus on material sciences, 24% on life sciences, 19% on general energy, 11% on nuclear energy and safety, and 9% on particle physics.

PSI develops, builds and operates large and complex research facilities and makes them available to the national and international scientific communities. In 2017, for example, more than 2500 researchers from 60 different countries came to PSI to take advantage of the concentration of large-scale research facilities in the same location, which is unique worldwide. About 1900 experiments are conducted each year at the approximately 40 measuring stations in these facilities.

In recent years, the institute has been one of the largest recipients of money from the Swiss lottery fund.