“Our study suggests that hybrid matter–antimatter
helium atoms could be used beyond particle physics, in particular in
condensed-matter physics and perhaps even in astrophysics experiments,”
says ASACUSA co-spokesperson Masaki Hori. “We have arguably made the
first step in using antiprotons to study condensed matter.”
The ASACUSA collaboration is well used to making hybrid matter–antimatter helium atoms to determine
the antiproton’s mass and compare it with that of the proton. These
hybrid atoms contain an antiproton and an electron around the helium
nucleus1and are made by mixing antiprotons produced at CERN’s antimatter factory with a helium gas that has a low atomic density and is kept at low temperature.
Low gasdensities
and temperatures have played a key role in these antimatter studies,
which involve measuring the response of the hybrid atoms to laser light
in order to determine their light spectrum. High gas densities and
temperatures result in spectral lines, caused by transitions of the
antiproton or electron between energy levels, that are too broad, or
even obscured, to allow the mass of the antiproton relative to that of
the electron to be determined.
This is why it came as surprise to the ASACUSA
researchers that, when they used liquid helium, which has a much higher
density than gaseous helium, in their new study, they saw a decrease in
the width of the antiproton spectral lines.
Moreover, when they decreased the temperature of
the liquid helium to values below the temperature at which the liquid
becomes a superfluid, i.e. flows without any resistance, they found an
abrupt further narrowing of the spectral lines.
“This behaviour was unexpected,” says Anna Sótér,
who was the principal PhD student working on the experiment and is now
an assistant professor at ETHZ. “The optical response of the hybrid
helium atom in superfluid helium is starkly different to that of the
same hybrid atom in high-density gaseous helium, as well as that of many
normal atoms in liquids or superfluids.”
The researchers think that the surprising behaviour
observed is linked to the radius of the electronic orbital, i.e. the
distance at which the hybrid helium atom’s electron is located. In
contrast to that of many normal atoms, the radius of the hybrid atom’s
electronic orbital changes very little when laser light is shone on the
atom and thus does not affect the spectral lines even when the atom is
immersed in superfluid helium. However, further studies are needed to
confirm this hypothesis.
The result has several ramifications. Firstly, researchers may create other hybrid helium atoms, such as pionic helium atoms,
in superfluid helium using different antimatter and exotic particles,
to study their response to laser light in detail and measure the
particle masses. Secondly, the substantial narrowing of the lines in
superfluid helium suggests that hybrid helium atoms could be used to
study this form of matter and potentially other condensed-matter phases.
Finally, the narrow spectral lines could in principle be used to search
for cosmic antiprotons or antideuterons (a nucleus made of an
antiproton and an antineutron) of particularly low velocity that hit the
liquid or superfluid helium that is used to cool experiments in space
or in high-altitude balloons. However, numerous technical challenges
must be overcome before the method becomes complementary to existing
techniques for searching for these forms of antimatter.
1 Instead of two electrons around a helium nucleus.

Masaki Hori, ASACUSA co-spokesperson (image: CERN)
Pictures
https://cds.cern.ch/record/2801207/files/202202-025_50.jpg?subformat=icon-1440
https://cds.cern.ch/record/2801207/files/202202-025_15.jpg?subformat=icon-1440
Videos
https://videos.cern.ch/record/2295468
https://videos.cern.ch/record/2295467