Physics World 前天 22:12
Quantum control of individual antiprotons puts the Standard Model to the test
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物理学家在理解反物质方面取得了重大进展,首次成功对单个反质子进行了相干自旋谱分析。这项由欧洲核子研究组织(CERN)的BASE合作项目团队完成的实验,以前所未有的精度测量了反物质的磁性质。这一突破性研究有望帮助我们揭示宇宙中物质远多于反物质的原因,解决物理学中一个核心的未解之谜——重子不对称问题。该技术通过精确控制反物质粒子,为检验自然基本对称性提供了新的途径。

🔬 **突破性实验技术:** BASE合作项目团队首次成功对单个反质子进行了相干自旋谱分析,这是对单个反物质粒子进行如此精细控制的空前壮举。该实验利用微波脉冲操控反质子的自旋状态,并通过精确的频率控制诱导了拉比振荡,从而以极高的精度测量了其共振峰。

🎯 **前所未有的测量精度:** 研究团队将反质子共振峰的宽度缩小到前所未有的程度,比以往所有反质子测量结果都要窄16倍。结合信号噪声比的显著提高,这一进步使得测量精度有望提高十倍以上,为精确测定反质子的磁矩奠定了基础。

🌌 **探究宇宙物质不对称之谜:** 宇宙在理论上应诞生等量的物质和反物质,但我们观测到的宇宙几乎完全由物质构成。这项研究通过精确比较质子和反质子的性质,例如它们的质量和电荷,旨在寻找可能偏离标准模型描述的细微差异,从而为理解宇宙重子不对称问题提供关键线索。

⚖️ **检验物理学基本对称性:** 该实验的精确性对于检验CPT对称性至关重要。CPT对称性是物理学中的一项基本原理,即如果同时反转电荷、宇称和时间,物理定律应保持不变。通过更高精度的检验,研究人员有望发现标准模型中的潜在不足,深化对基本物理规律的理解。

Physicists have taken a major step toward unlocking the mysteries of antimatter by being the first to perform coherent spin spectroscopy on a single antiproton. Done by researchers on CERN’s BASE collaboration, the experiment measures the magnetic properties of antimatter with record-breaking precision. As a result, it could help us understand why there is much more matter than antimatter in the universe,

“The level of control the authors have achieved over an individual antimatter particle is unprecedented,” says Dmitry Budker, a physicist at the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved in the study. “This opens the path to much more precise tests of fundamental symmetries of nature.”

In theory, the universe should have been born with equal amounts of matter and antimatter. Yet all the visible structures we see today – including stars, galaxies, planets and people – are made almost entirely of matter. This cosmic imbalance remains one of the biggest open questions in physics and is known as the baryon asymmetry problem.

“The general motivation for studying antiprotons is to test fundamental symmetries and our understanding of them,” says Stefan Ulmer, a senior member of BASE and head of the Ulmer Fundamental Symmetries Laboratory at RIKEN in Japan. “What we know about antimatter is that it appears as a symmetric solution to quantum mechanical equations – there’s no obvious reason why the universe should not contain equal amounts of matter and antimatter.”

This mystery can be probed by doing very precise comparisons of properties of matter and antimatter particles – in this case, the proton and the antiproton. For example, the Standard Model says that protons and antiprotons should have identical masses but equal and opposite electrical charges. Any deviations from the Standard Model description could shed light on baryon asymmetry.

Leap in precision

Now, the BASE (Baryon Antibaryon Symmetry Experiment) team has focused on coherent spectroscopy, which is a quantum technique that uses microwave pulses to manipulate the spin states of a single antiproton.

“We were doing spectroscopy on the spin of a single trapped antiproton, stored in a cryogenic Penning trap system,” Ulmer explains. “It is significant because this is of highest importance in studying the fundamental properties of the particle.”

By applying microwave radiation at just the right frequency, the team induced Rabi oscillations –periodic flipping of the antiproton’s spin – and observed the resulting resonances. The key result was a resonance peak 16 times narrower than in any previous antiproton measurements, meaning the team could pinpoint the transition frequency with much greater accuracy. Combined with a 1.5-fold improvement in signal-to-noise ratio, the measurement paves the way for at least a tenfold increase in the precision of antiproton magnetic moment measurements.“In principle, we could reduce the linewidth by another factor of ten if additional technology is developed,” says Ulmer.

Budker described the measurement as unprecedented, adding, “This is a key to future precise tests of CPT invariance and other fundamental-physics experiments”.

Deeply held principle

CPT symmetry – the idea that the laws of physics remain unchanged if charge, parity, and time are simultaneously reversed – is one of the most deeply held principles in physics. Testing it to higher and higher precision is essential for identifying any cracks in the Standard Model.

Ulmer says the team observed antiproton spin coherence times of up to 50 s. Coherence here refers to the ability of the antiproton’s quantum spin state to remain stable and unperturbed over time, which is essential for achieving high-precision measurements.

Measuring magnetic moments of nuclear particles is already notoriously difficult, but doing so for antimatter pushes the limits of experimental physics.

“These measurements require the development of experiments that are about three orders of magnitude more sensitive than any other apparatus developed before,” says Ulmer. “You need to build the world’s most sensitive detectors for single particles, the smallest Penning traps, and superimpose ultra-extreme magnetic gradients.”

The BASE team started development in 2005 and had early successes in proton measurements by 2011. Antiproton studies began in earnest in 2017, but achieving coherent spin control – as in the current work – required further innovations including ultra-homogeneous magnetic fields, cryogenic temperatures, and the exquisite control of noise.

Toward a deeper understanding

These improvements could also make other experiments possible. “This will also allow more precise measurements of other nuclear magnetic moments, and paves a path to better measurements in proton–antiproton mass comparisons,” Ulmer notes.

There may even be distant connections to quantum computing. “If coherence times for matter and antimatter are identical – something we aim to test – then the antimatter qubit might have applications in quantum information,” he says. “But honestly, operating an antimatter quantum computer, if you could do the same with matter, would be inefficient.”

More realistically, the team hopes to use their transportable trap system, BASE STEP, to bring antiprotons to a dedicated offline laboratory for even higher-resolution studies.

“The BASE collaboration keeps a steady course on increasing the precision of fundamental symmetry tests,” says Budker. “This is an important step in that direction.”

The research is described in Nature.

The post Quantum control of individual antiprotons puts the Standard Model to the test appeared first on Physics World.

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反物质 反质子 相干自旋谱 宇宙学 粒子物理
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