Antihydrogen-Gravity Experiment: An Analytical Model For Parallel Plate Geometry

POSTER

Abstract

An analytical model is developed for an experiment that may be used to determine whether antihydrogen falls up or down in Earth's gravitational field. The model is the third iteration of an ongoing development to reduce the experimental run time necessary for an experiment at the CERN Antiproton Decelerator facility. The experiment relies on methods developed by existing research collaborations: production, confinement, and detection of antihydrogen. The configuration consists of two parallel plates that have an axis of symmetry directed away from the center of the Earth. They are separated by a small vertical distance and include a series of circular apertures. An antihydrogen annihilation located a short distance beyond each barrier, within a ``shadow'' region, are asymmetric on the top or bottom annulus. The analytical model is used to determine the probability that an antiatom annihilates within one of the shadow regions, which would indicate the direction of the acceleration of antihydrogen due to gravity.

Authors

  • J.R Rocha

    University of North Texas

  • Samantha Lacombe

    Tarleton State University, Lee College, Highland Park High School, University of Pittsburgh, Wards and Seargent Welch, Davidson College, University of Texas at Arlington, University of Texas At Arlington, Instituto de Fisica, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Texas A\&M University, none, University of Central Arkansas, Department of Physics, Lamar University, Stuyvesant HS, UTEP, University of North Texas, University of Houston Clear Lake, The University of Texas at Dallas, Abilene Christian University, Albert Einstein Institute, Syracuse University, Albert Einstein Institute, Baylor University Department of Physics, NASA Ames Research Center, University of Central Arkansas, University of North Dakota, University of Kentucky, United States Naval Academy, University of Dallas, Advisor, Mentor, Texas A\&M University - Commerce, The university of Texas at El Paso, University of Texas Arlington