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ELENA prepares a bright future for antimatter research

26 August 2011

At its recent session in June, the CERN Council approved the construction of the Extra Low ENergy Antiproton ring (ELENA) – an upgrade of the existing Antiproton Decelerator (AD). ELENA will allow the further deceleration of antiprotons, resulting in an increased number of particles trapped downstream in the experiments. This will give an important boost to antimatter research in the years to come.

The recent successes of the AD experiments are just the latest in a long list of important scientific results with low-energy antiprotons at CERN that started in the 1990s with the Low Energy Antiproton Ring. Over the years, the scientific demand for antiprotons at the AD has continued to grow. There are now four experiments running there (ATRAP, ALPHA, ASACUSA and ACE). A fifth, AEGIS, has been approved and will take beam for the first time at the end of the year; further proposals are also under consideration. The AD is approaching the stage where it can no longer provide the number of antiprotons needed. As antihydrogen studies evolve into antihydrogen spectroscopy and gravitational measurements, the shortage will become even more acute.

The solution is a small ring of magnets that will fit inside the current AD hall – in other words, ELENA, the recently approved upgrade. ELENA will be a 30 m-circumference decelerator that will slow down the 5.3 MeV antiprotons from the AD to an energy of only 100 keV. Receiving slower antiprotons will help the experiments to improve their efficiency in creating antimatter atoms.

Currently, around 99.9% of the antiprotons produced by the AD are lost because of the experiments’ use of degrader foils, which are needed to decelerate the particles from the AD ejection energy down to around 5 keV – the energy needed for trapping. ELENA will increase the experiments’ efficiency by a factor of 10–100 as well as offer the possibility to accommodate an extra experimental area.

The new ring will be located such that its assembly and commissioning will have a minimal impact on operation of the AD. Indeed, the commissioning of the ELENA ring will take place in parallel with the current research programme, with short periods dedicated to commissioning during the physics run. The layout of the experimental area at the AD will not be significantly modified, but the much lower beam energies involved require the design and construction of completely new electrostatic transfer lines.

The construction of ELENA should begin in 2013 and the first physics injection should follow about three years later. The initial phase of the work will include the installation and commissioning of the ELENA ring while using the existing AD beam lines. The old ejection lines in all of the experimental areas will then be replaced with new electrostatic beam lines that will deliver antiprotons at the design energy of 100 keV. In its final configuration, ELENA will be able to deliver beams almost simultaneously to four experiments, resulting in a vital gain in total beam time.

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