The lab takes shape…

The lab is starting to come together now. This photo shows the source chamber (far left), positron trap (nr. centre of photo), and in the background plenty of space for an optical table and lasers (coming soon). Hopefully the next photo on this blog will look quite different…

Ps Spectroscopy lab, November 2013. Starting to come together...
Ps Spectroscopy lab, November 2013. Starting to come together…

Welcome to the new blog of the UCL Positronium Spectroscopy Group!

Based in the Physics Department at UCL, we are building a new experiment to create a pulsed source of positronium atoms. These are exotic atoms, made half of matter (an electron) and half of anti-matter (a positron).

Once we have made these atoms we will drive them to highly excited Rydberg states with pulsed lasers, and then manipulate them with electric fields, eventually making a slow beam for a precise gravity measurement, addressing the question of how anti-matter interacts with gravity.

We are just starting out on this project, and along the way there will be many experiments to perform, and many questions to answer: how can we make an intense source of positrons? How can we cool the positrons? What is the most efficient way of making positronium, and then exciting them to Rydberg states? How does anti-matter interact with gravity?

Over the coming months and years we will answer these questions, and many more! So come back to our blog and see how we’re getting on…