Particle Physics Aspects of Antihydrogen Studies with ALPHA at CERN
AIP Conf. Proc. -- August 8, 2008 -- Volume 1037, pp. 208-220
PROCEEDINGS OF THE WORKSHOP ON COLD ANTIMATTER PLASMAS AND APPLICATION TO FUNDAMENTAL PHYSICS;
doi:10.1063/1.2977840
Issue Date: 8 August 2008
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We discuss aspects of antihydrogen studies, that relate to particle physics ideas and techniques, within the context of the ALPHA experiment at CERN's Antiproton Decelerator facility. We review the fundamental physics motivations for antihydrogen studies, and their potential physics reach. We argue that initial spectroscopy measurements, once antihydrogen is trapped, could provide competitive tests of CPT, possibly probing physics at the Planck Scale. We discuss some of the particle detection techniques used in ALPHA. Preliminary results from commissioning studies of a partial system of the ALPHA Si vertex detector are presented, the results of which highlight the power of annihilation vertex detection capability in antihydrogen studies.
©2008 American Institute of Physics
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KEYWORDS and PACS
PUBLICATION DATA
0094-243X (print)
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