We have developed a small purely electrostatic ion-beam trap which may be operated in thermal equilibrium at precisely controlled temperatures down to 10 K. Thus, we avoid magnetic field induced mixing of quantum states and may effectively eliminate any influence from absorption of photons from blackbody radiation. We report the first correction-free measurement of the lifetime of the 1s2s2p {4}P{5/2}{0} level of 4He(-) yielding the high-precision result 359.0 +/- 0.7 micros. This result is an essential proof-of-principle for cryogenic electrostatic storage rings and traps for atomic and molecular physics.
At the heavy ion storage ring CRYRING in Stockholm, Sweden, we have investigated the dissociative recombination of DCOOD + 2 at low relative kinetic energies, from ∼1 meV to 1 eV. The thermal rate coefficient has been found to follow the expression k(T) = 8.43 × 10 −7 (T/300) −0.78 cm 3 s −1 for electron temperatures, T, ranging from ∼10 to ∼1000 K. The branching fractions of the reaction have been studied at ∼2 meV relative kinetic energy. It has been found that ∼87% of the reactions involve breaking a bond between heavy atoms. In only 13% of the reactions do the heavy atoms remain in the same product fragment. This puts limits on the gas-phase production of formic acid, observed in both molecular clouds and cometary comae. Using the experimental results in chemical models of the dark cloud, TMC-1, and using the latest release of the UMIST Database for Astrochemistry improves the agreement with observations for the abundance of formic acid. Our results also strengthen the assumption that formic acid is a component of cometary ices.
An investigation into the dissociative recombination process for H(13)CO(+) using merged ion-electron beam methods has been performed at the heavy ion storage ring CRYRING, Stockholm, Sweden. We have measured the branching fractions of the different product channels at ∼ 0 eV collision energy to be the following: CO + H 87 ± 2%, OH + C 9 ± 2%, and O + CH 4 ± 2%. The formation of electronically excited CO in the dominant reaction channel has also been studied, and we report the following tentative branching fractions for the different CO product electronic states: CO(X (1)Σ(+)) + H, 54 ± 10%; CO(a (3)Π) + H, 23 ± 4%; and CO(a' (3)Σ(+)) + H, 23 ± 4%. The absolute cross section between ∼ 2-50 000 meV was measured and showed resonance structures between 3 and 15 eV. The cross section was fitted in the energy range relevant to astrophysics, i.e., between 1 and 300 meV, and was found to follow the expression σ = 1.3 ± 0.3 × 10(-16) E(-1.29 ± 0.05) cm(2) and the corresponding thermal rate constant was determined to be k(T) = 2.0 ± 0.4 × 10(-7)(T/300)(-0.79 ± 0.05) cm(3) s(-1). Radioastronomical observations with the IRAM 30 m telescope of HCO(+) toward the Red Rectangle yielded an upper column density limit of 4 × 10(11) cm(-2) of HCO(+) at the 1σ level in that object, indicating that previous claims that the dissociative recombination of HCO(+) plays an important role in the production of excited CO molecules emitting the observed Cameron bands in that object are not supported.
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