Study of levitating nanoparticles using ultracold neutrons
V. V. Nesvizhevsky, A. Yu. Voronin, A. Lambrecht, S. Reynaud

TL;DR
This paper models how ultracold neutrons interact with levitating nanoparticles on surfaces, explaining observed small energy transfers and suggesting implications for neutron lifetime experiments and surface studies.
Contribution
It introduces a formalism for large particles on surfaces, predicting small-energy-transfer scattering of UCN on levitating nanoparticles, aligning with experimental data.
Findings
UCN energy transfer due to Doppler shift is very small.
Levitating nanoparticles cause small heating effects in UCN traps.
Model explains existing experimental observations accurately.
Abstract
Physical adsorption of atoms, molecules and clusters on surface is known. It is linked to many phenomena in physics, chemistry, and biology. Usually the studies of adsorption are limited to the particle sizes of up to ~10^2-10^3 atoms. Following a general formalism, we apply it to even larger objects and discover qualitatively new phenomena. A large particle is bound to surface in a deep and broad potential well formed by van der Waals/ Casimir-Polder forces. The well depth is significantly larger than the characteristic thermal energy. Nanoparticles in high-excited bound states form two-dimensional gas of objects quasi-freely traveling along surface. A particularly interesting prediction is small-energy-transfer scattering of UCN on solid/ liquid surfaces covered by such levitating nanoparticles/ nano-droplets. The change in UCN energy is due to the Doppler shift induced by UCN…
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