When atoms are placed into liquids, their optical spectral lines corresponding to the electronic transitions are greatly broadened compared to those of single, isolated atoms. This linewidth increase can often reach a factor of more than a million, obscuring spectroscopic structures and preventing high-resolution spectroscopy, even when superfluid helium, which is the most transparent, cold and chemically inert liquid, is used as the host material. Here we show that when an exotic helium atom with a constituent antiproton is embedded into superfluid helium, its visible-wavelength spectral line retains a sub-gigahertz linewidth. An abrupt reduction in the linewidth of the antiprotonic laser resonance was observed when the liquid surrounding the atom transitioned into the superfluid phase. This resolved the hyperfine structure arising from the spin-spin interaction between the electron and antiproton with a relative spectral resolution of two parts in 10, even though the antiprotonic helium resided in a dense matrix of normal matter atoms. The electron shell of the antiprotonic atom retains a small radius of approximately 40 picometres during the laser excitation. This implies that other helium atoms containing antinuclei, as well as negatively charged mesons and hyperons that include strange quarks formed in superfluid helium, may be studied by laser spectroscopy with a high spectral resolution, enabling the determination of the particle masses. The sharp spectral lines may enable the detection of cosmic-ray antiprotons or searches for antideuterons that come to rest in liquid helium targets.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04440-7 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Phys
December 2024
Departament FQA, Facultat de Física, Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Spain.
We study superfluid helium droplets multiply charged with Na+ or Ca+ ions. When stable, the charges are found to reside in equilibrium close to the droplet surface, thus representing a physical realization of Thomson's model. We find the minimum radius of the helium droplet that can host a given number of ions using a model whose physical ingredients are the solvation energy of the cations, calculated within the helium density functional theory approach, and their mutual Coulomb repulsion energy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
November 2024
Université Paris-Saclay, Univ Evry, CY Cergy Paris Université, CNRS, LAMBE, Evry-Courcouronnes 91025, France.
The collision of cesium atoms on the surface of helium nanodroplets (HNDs) containing 1000 atoms is described by the ZPAD-mPL approach, a zero-point averaged dynamics (ZPAD) method based on a He-He pseudopotential adjusted to better reproduce the total energy of He1000. Four types of collisional patterns were identified depending on the initial projectile speed v0 and impact parameter b. At the lowest speeds (v0 ≲ 250 m s-1), Cs atoms are softly captured by the HND surface, while at the highest ones (v0 ≳ 500-600 m s-1), Cs atoms can travel through the droplet and move away.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRep Prog Phys
November 2024
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, C, Denmark.
Nature
November 2024
Institut für Quantenoptik und Quanteninformation, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Innsbruck, Austria.
Supersolids are states of matter that spontaneously break two continuous symmetries: translational invariance owing to the appearance of a crystal structure and phase invariance owing to phase locking of single-particle wavefunctions, responsible for superfluid phenomena. Although originally predicted to be present in solid helium, ultracold quantum gases provided a first platform to observe supersolids, with particular success coming from dipolar atoms. Phase locking in dipolar supersolids has been investigated through, for example, measurements of the phase coherence and gapless Goldstone modes, but quantized vortices, a hydrodynamic fingerprint of superfluidity, have not yet been observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
November 2024
Department of Physical Chemistry II, Ruhr University Bochum, 44801, Bochum, Germany.
Hydrogen bonding is a central concept in chemistry and biochemistry, and so it continues to attract intense study. Here, we examine hydrogen bonding in the HS dimer, in comparison with the well-studied water dimer, in unprecedented detail. We record a mass-selected IR spectrum of the HS dimer in superfluid helium nanodroplets.
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