A 16 Parts per Trillion Comparison of the Antiproton-to-Proton q/m Ratios
M. J. Borchert, J. A. Devlin, S. E. Erlewein, M. Fleck, J. A., Harrington, T. Higuchi, B. Latacz, F. Voelksen, E. Wursten, F. Abbass, M., Bohman, A. Mooser, D. Popper, M. Wiesinger, C. Will, K. Blaum, Y. Matsuda, C., Ospelkaus, W. Quint, J. Walz, Y. Yamazaki, C. Smorra, S. Ulmer

TL;DR
This study achieves unprecedented precision in comparing proton and antiproton charge-to-mass ratios, providing stringent tests of CPT symmetry and constraints on potential new physics beyond the Standard Model.
Contribution
It reports a new measurement of proton/antiproton charge-to-mass ratio with 16 parts per trillion uncertainty, improving previous precision by a factor of 4.3 and testing fundamental symmetries.
Findings
Charge-to-mass ratio comparison consistent with CPT invariance.
Improved constraints on Standard Model Extension coefficients.
First differential test of WEP for antimatter using antiprotons.
Abstract
The Standard Model (SM) of particle physics is both incredibly successful and glaringly incomplete. Among the questions left open is the striking imbalance of matter and antimatter in the observable universe which inspires experiments to compare the fundamental properties of matter/antimatter conjugates with high precision. Our experiments deal with direct investigations of the fundamental properties of protons and antiprotons, performing spectroscopy in advanced cryogenic Penning-trap systems. For instance, we compared the proton/antiproton magnetic moments with 1.5 ppb fractional precision, which improved upon previous best measurements by a factor of >3000. Here we report on a new comparison of the proton/antiproton charge-to-mass ratios with a fractional uncertainty of 16ppt. Our result is based on the combination of four independent long term studies, recorded in a total time span…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Molecular Physics · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
