Author:
Johnson M.A.,Bertsche W.A.,Cortázar O.D,Faircloth D.,Kalvas T.,Lawrie S.,Megia Macías A.M.,Tarvainen O.,Barrios Díaz E.
Abstract
Abstract
The CERN ALPHA experiment makes precision measurements of antihydrogen atoms held in a
superconducting magnetic minimum trap. Recent studies of the antihydrogen spectrum have provided
unique tests of fundamental physics, and to improve on these studies ALPHA is now proposing
upgrades to directly compare hydrogen and antihydrogen within their existing atom trap. One route
towards producing cold, neutral hydrogen atoms is the integration of a hydrogen ion source into
the experiment. Ideally, this should provide both positive (H+, H2
+,
H3
+) and negative (H-) ions to facilitate different schemes for
producing and trapping hydrogen atoms. For compatibility with ALPHA's existing beamlines, the
source must produce modest (∼ 10 μA) beam currents at very low final energies
(<100 eV). PELLIS, previously developed at JYFL, is a filament-driven ion source that
generates 5–10 keV H- beams with small emittances and tens of
microamps of beam current. Here, we present a modified PELLIS design to provide both positive and
negative hydrogen ions for ALPHA. The use of an electromagnet filter field in PELLIS allows for
the optimisation of H- volume production, and also tuning of the positive ion species
fraction. We present simulations of H- (and similarly H+) transport through
the initial extraction optics, which have been configured for a lower beam energy of 5 keV
and designed to match a proposed beamline to interface with ALPHA. We present the results of
detailed vacuum simulations that were used to guide the optics design, allowing the source (at
10-2 mbar) to interface with a transport beamline ∼ 0.5 m downstream
that has strict vacuum requirements of < 10-9 mbar. We present experimental results
from commissioning of the source, and show that it broadly performs as designed for both positive
and negative hydrogen ions.