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Seminarium Fizyki Wielkich Energii

sala B2.38, ul. Pasteura 5
2021-11-05 (10:15) Calendar icon
mgr Kamil Dulski (UJ)

Test of discrete symmetries with spin observables at J-PET

The phenomenon of positron-electron annihilation is a subject-of-interest in many fields from medical imaging to fundamental studies. Two photon annihilation of positron-electron pair is already well established mode allowing for determination of annihilation position distribution, by means of Positron Emission Tomography (PET). However, a particularly interesting research object is the unique relationship that can bind a positron and an electron, that is called positronium. Positronium as the lightest purely leptonic bound state can serve as a sensitive probe of effects such as violation of discrete symmetries [1,2]. A particularly interesting case is testing the CPT invariance, a violation of which can be searched for as non-disappearing angular correlations between the photons from positronium annihilation and its spin. So far, attempts to experimentally investigate this effect have been limited mostly by the knowledge of the latter [2,3]. An improvement in the estimation of the spin direction was recently proposed by the Jagiellonian PET (J-PET) collaboration, introducing the J-PET detector as a new device which allows for the estimation of the positron spin axis along with the polarization of photons from positronium annihilation on an event-by-event basis [1,5,6]. So far, it is the only detector capable of such operation. The results of the most precise measurement of an angular correlation operator sensitive to violation of the combine symmetry under charge conjugation (C), parity (P) and time reversal (T) on the study of ortho-positronium (o-Ps) annihilations will be presented. The presented results do not indicate any violation at the level of the per mille [1], improving the previous measurements [2,3].The new method of image reconstruction based on trilateration will be additionally presented [7]. It allows to determine the position of the o-Ps annihilation, which resulted in emission of three photons. Knowing the o-Ps annihilation position translated directly into the precision of estimating the o-Ps spin direction. The first reconstructed image of positron annihilation based on 3-photon o-Ps decays will be shown as a result from trilateration reconstruction [1]. Finally the world’s first positronium image of heart tissue from a patient will be presented [8]. The positronium image is a completely new imaging technique which is based on the determination of the mean positronium lifetime in each voxel. Resulting image allowed to distinguish the type of the tissue based on the mean positronium lifetime, which is not possible to distinguish by a conventional PET.

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