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Nature Communications logoLink to Nature Communications
. 2021 Sep 27;12:5658. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-25905-9

Testing CPT symmetry in ortho-positronium decays with positronium annihilation tomography

P Moskal 1,2,, A Gajos 1,2,, M Mohammed 1, J Chhokar 1,2, N Chug 1,2, C Curceanu 3, E Czerwiński 1,2, M Dadgar 1,2, K Dulski 1,2, M Gorgol 4, J Goworek 5, B C Hiesmayr 6, B Jasińska 4, K Kacprzak 1, Ł Kapłon 1,2, H Karimi 1,2, D Kisielewska 1, K Klimaszewski 7, G Korcyl 1,2, P Kowalski 7, N Krawczyk 1,2, W Krzemień 8, T Kozik 1, E Kubicz 1,2, S Niedźwiecki 1,2, S Parzych 1,2, M Pawlik-Niedźwiecka 1,2, L Raczyński 7, J Raj 1,2, S Sharma 1,2, S Choudhary 1,2, R Y Shopa 7, A Sienkiewicz 5, M Silarski 1,2, M Skurzok 1,3, E Ł Stępień 1,2, F Tayefi 1,2, W Wiślicki 7
PMCID: PMC8476595  PMID: 34580294

Abstract

Charged lepton system symmetry under combined charge, parity, and time-reversal transformation (CPT) remains scarcely tested. Despite stringent quantum-electrodynamic limits, discrepancies in predictions for the electron–positron bound state (positronium atom) motivate further investigation, including fundamental symmetry tests. While CPT noninvariance effects could be manifested in non-vanishing angular correlations between final-state photons and spin of annihilating positronium, measurements were previously limited by knowledge of the latter. Here, we demonstrate tomographic reconstruction techniques applied to three-photon annihilations of ortho-positronium atoms to estimate their spin polarisation without magnetic field or polarised positronium source. We use a plastic-scintillator-based positron-emission-tomography scanner to record ortho-positronium (o-Ps) annihilations with single-event estimation of o-Ps spin and determine the complete spectrum of an angular correlation operator sensitive to CPT-violating effects. We find no violation at the precision level of 10−4, with an over threefold improvement on the previous measurement.

Subject terms: Experimental nuclear physics, Experimental particle physics, Imaging techniques


CPT violation could manifest itself in annihilating positronium events, but searching for this effect would require to know the spin of the annihilating system. Here, the authors do this using a positron-emission tomography scanner, finding no violation with a statistical precision of 10−4.

Introduction

The symmetry under the combined operations of charge conjugation (C), spatial inversion (P), and reversal in time (T), referred to as CPT invariance, is the last of the fundamental discrete symmetries, a violation of which has never been observed. While numerous experimental tests have been carried out using baryonic matter systems (such as, neutral mesons that provide stringent limits14), and significant efforts have recently been made towards comparing the properties of hydrogen and anti-hydrogen atoms510, certain CPT symmetry tests are also conceivable with purely leptonic systems.

Studies of neutrino oscillations in long-baseline experiments are prominent candidates in this sector. Discrepancies in mass and mixing parameters between neutrinos and antineutrinos would indicate CPT violation11,12, and while it has been argued that the sensitivity of such experiments could surpass even that of the neutral kaon system11, recent results agree with CPT conservation13.

Systems consisting of charged leptons, in contrast, are governed by quantum electrodynamics (QED), supported by experimental evidence of unparalleled precision. The most recent measurements of the electron anomalous magnetic moment14, and its QED predictions based on the recent precise measurement of the fine structure constant15 agree to 1 part in 1012, indicating that no new CPT-violating interactions coupling to the electron could be observed to this level of precision16.

Nonetheless, the recently discovered deviations from QED predictions in the fine structure of the positronium atom, that is, the bound state of an electron and positron17, suggest that diverse experimental studies of charged lepton systems should not be hastily abandoned. In fact, as the lightest matter–antimatter bound states, positronium atoms are considered in the context of CPT tests through searches for Lorentz noninvariance. Such tests, based on atomic spectroscopy of positronium have been recently proposed in the theoretical framework of Standard-Model Extension18,19.

A complementary, model-independent approach to searching for new CPT-violating interactions in the positronium system is constituted by searching for CPT-prohibited angular correlations in the annihilation of ortho-positronium atoms into three photons (o-Ps → 3γ). This approach, first reported in 198820, has seen relatively little activity in recent years, with the best result to date achieving a sensitivity of 3 × 10−321.

In this work, we present an experimental approach to search for a CPT-violating angular correlation in the three-photon annihilation of ortho-positronium atoms. We employ a positron-emission-tomography (PET) imaging device and demonstrate that three-photon annihilations of positronium can be reconstructed in a large volume, which allows for estimating its spin polarisation without the use of an external magnetic field. Using this technique, we measure the expectation value of a CPT-prohibited angular correlation S ⋅ (k1 × k2), improving the sensitivity of the previous result21 by over a factor of three. Notably, the o-Ps → 3γ reconstruction technique presented here additionally opens the possibility of imaging of excited long-lived positronium states in studies of their gravitational fall as a matter–antimatter system22.

Results

CPT-prohibited angular correlations in ortho-positronium annihilations

The decaying ortho-positronium state is described by its unit spin along a given axis S, whereas the final state of this annihilation is characterised by the momenta of the three photons ki, i = 1, 2, 3, where we assume an ordering of ∣k1∣ > ∣k2∣ > ∣k3∣. Certain angular correlation operators constructed using these observables are sensitive to the effects of violation of T, CP, or combined CPT symmetry if the corresponding operators are odd under the given symmetry transformation23,24. Notably, these symmetry-violating correlations are not limited to positronium, and a similar approach has been employed to search for T noninvariance in the decays of Z0 bosons into hadronic jets25.

Here, we focus on a study of the following operator:

OCPT=S(k1×k2)/k1×k2=cosθ, 1

expressing the angular correlation θ between the ortho-positronium spin and the orientation of the decay plane spanned by the three annihilation photons. This correlation operator constitutes a robust CPT-violation-sensitive observable defined through the fundamental geometry of an annihilation event, independent of particular kinematical configurations. The definition of the annihilation plane orientation through the two most energetic photons is merely a convenient convention and thus does not impose a bias on the space of kinematical configurations of three-photon annihilations, a problem affecting other conceivable angular correlations for o-Ps → 3γ events. Consequently, the choice of this observable for the CPT test minimises spurious asymmetries originating from the detector geometry that could mimic a violation26. Moreover, due to the neutrality of the final state of the o-Ps → 3γ process, radiative corrections that could cause fake CPT asymmetry, thus posing a natural limit on the sensitivity of such a test, are only expected at a precision level of 10−9 20,23, thus leaving significant exploratory potential.

Previous measurements

Measurement of angular correlations in o-Ps → 3γ decays requires knowledge of the positronium spin as well as the recording of the momenta of the annihilation photons. Previous studies of CP- and CPT-violating operators achieved the former by either utilising a polarised positron beam20 or polarising an o-Ps sample in an external magnetic field. The latter approach has been commonly used in studies of the CP-violation-sensitive correlation (S ⋅ k1)(S ⋅ k1 × k2), which has a sensitivity to symmetry violation that demands specific tensor polarisation of ortho-positronium27,28. Notably, these experiments simultaneously recorded photons in only a single annihilation plane so that the magnetic-field-generation setup did not overlap with the detection devices. In turn, the measurements were limited to a scalar asymmetry between two opposite configurations integrated over possible angles. Moreover, the need to reconfigure the detection setup to detect opposite decay geometries accounted for a significant source of systematic uncertainty in these measurements27,28.

The most recent search for CPT violation using the cosθ correlation, therefore, used the intrinsic polarisation of positrons from β+ decay combined with limiting the direction of their emission, which allowed for the use of a high-angular-acceptance photon detector capable of recording multiple scattering planes simultaneously. Thus, the first search for asymmetry in the distribution of the cosθ operator could be performed21. The statistical polarisation of o-Ps was obtained by allowing positrons from a 22Ne or 68Ge source to thermalise and form positronium only in a hemisphere of aerogel with the source at its centre, elucidating the positron emission direction with Δϑ = 90. The effective polarisation of the positrons was therefore given by υc12(1+cos(Δϑ)), where υc is the intrinsic polarisation of positrons from β+ decay along the direction of emission, and the remainder is a geometrical factor limiting the directional e+ polarisation, in this case to a cone with a 2Δϑ opening angle29. Owing to the hemisphere used as the positronium production medium and the dimensions of the e+ trigger detector used, this geometrical factor amounted to 0.686. Moreover, despite the spherical symmetry of the detector, the chosen axis of the hemisphere required the source setup to be rotated in subsequent phases of the measurement to reduce systematic effects21.

Positronium spin estimation and reconstruction of o-Ps → 3γ events in J-PET

Our study was performed using the Jagiellonian Positron Emission Tomograph (J-PET) detector, which was conceived as the first PET imaging device based on plastic scintillators30,31. In addition to exploring the path towards a cost-effective total-body PET scanner3133 and imaging with properties of e+e bound states produced during scans of living organisms3436 as well as positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy37, J-PET constitutes a robust photon detector well suited to the study of angular correlations in o-Ps → 3γ annihilations38,39.

Figure 1 presents the methodology used in this work for studying o-Ps → 3γ events with positronium spin control without the use of an external magnetic field. Annihilation photons are detected through their Compton interaction in strips of plastic scintillators with an interaction time resolution at the level of 250 ps and an angular resolution of ~1 (Fig. 1a).

Fig. 1. Methodology of the measurement of CPT-violation-sensitive angular correlation in three-photon annihilations of ortho-positronium.

Fig. 1

a Photograph of the J-PET tomograph with the cylindrical positronium production chamber. Plastic scintillators (black strips) record photons produced in o-Ps → 3γ events (red arrows) and a prompt photon from β+ emitter de-excitation (green arrow). b Photograph of the interior of the positronium production chamber and a schematic view of the transverse cross section of the J-PET tomograph. Plastic scintillators (with rectangular cross sections (blue)) form three coaxial rings. Annihilating o-Ps atoms are produced by positrons from a 22Na β+ source in the centre of a cylindrical vacuum chamber (grey), the walls of which are coated with porous silica, where positrons thermalise and form positronia. c Reconstructed spatial locations of the identified o-Ps → 3γ events obtained using three-photon annihilations, allowing us to reproduce a tomographic image of the vacuum chamber. The maximum density distribution is in a ring with a radius of 12 cm, equal to the radius of the positronium production chamber. d For every selected event, the o-Ps spin axis is reconstructed, allowing calculation of the cosine of the angle between the spin (S) and annihilation plane orientation (n = k1 × k2), the distribution of which is sensitive to CPT-violating asymmetries. The histogram presents the determined cosθ distribution for 1.9 × 106 identified o-Ps → 3γ events.

Data acquisition operates in a triggerless mode40,41 to minimise the initial sample bias for discrete symmetry tests and searches for rare positronium decays42. A detailed description of the J-PET detector can be found in the "Methods” section.

To estimate the ortho-positronium spin by utilising the imaging capabilities of the J-PET tomograph, we devised an extension of the spin control method used in ref. 21 based on allowing positrons from a point-like β+ source to form o-Ps in a large volume following the symmetry of our photon detector. We used a 22Na source placed in the centre of a cylindrical vacuum chamber, the walls of which were coated with a layer of porous medium, enhancing positronium formation (Fig. 1b).

The positron source is prepared as a micro-droplet of liquid 22NaCl, evaporated and closed in a thin 7 μm Kapton foil with density of ~1.5 g cm−3 resulting in areal density of ~1 mg cm−2. Therefore, the scattering and depolarisation of positrons in the source material is negligible with respect to the 8% polarisation loss estimated for the 3 mm thick target material with the density of 0.32 g cm−3 resulting in areal density of ~100 mg cm−2.

The porous material layer, consisting of mesoporous silica and gypsum (similar to that used in thin-layer chromatography), allowed for preparation of a highly porous self-supporting structure of extensive size. The usage of gypsum enhances binding of the silica gel and its expansion during setting allows for better packing of the material on a concave surface, such as the inner wall of the cylindrical chamber. The porous medium was prepared by multi-stage deposition through the evaporation of a silica–gypsum suspension in an alcohol solution distributed on the inner surface of the cylinder.

The thickness of the obtained silica coating was ~3 mm, well above the maximum implantation depth expected for unmoderated positrons from 22Na43. The vacuum chamber walls consisted of 4 mm thick polycarbonate, allowing transmission of photons from positronium annihilation at the level of 90%44. A pressure of 10−3 Pa was maintained inside the chamber to reduce the scattering of positrons travelling from the source to the positronium production medium on the chamber walls45.

It is important to note that smearing of annihilation positions with respect to the porous material location caused by positronia escaping from the open pores is significantly smaller in comparison to the present resolution of the reconstructed annihilation points which amounts to about 8 cm.

To maintain the symmetry of the setup, we did not limit the e+ emission direction to any solid angle besides the limits of the chamber. Instead, the positron flight direction was estimated separately for every recorded three-photon event using the position of the 3γ annihilation vertex reconstructed with a trilateration-based technique42,46.

Initial identification of o-Ps → 3γ event candidates in the J-PET data was based on photon energy deposition measured through time-over-thresholds (TOTs) of pairs of photomultiplier signals recorded at two ends of a scintillator strip for every registered photon interaction47,48. As Compton interaction in the J-PET plastic scintillators yielded a continuous energy deposition spectrum, candidates for the identification of photons from an o-Ps → 3γ annihilation were recognised using a TOT window located below the Compton edge of 511 keV photons, as indicated in Fig. 2. The fast response of the plastic scintillators allowed a fine coincidence time window of 2.5 ns to be employed for the identification of 3γ event candidates.

Fig. 2. Measurement of deposited γ energy with time-over-thresholds (TOT).

Fig. 2

a Photomultiplier electric signals in J-PET sampled at four predefined voltage thresholds (ν1, …, ν4), yielding four timestamps for the leading (tiL) and trailing (tiT) edges of the signal. The total TOT of a signal is calculated as i=14(tiTtiL). b Distribution of total TOTs from both photomultiplier signals in J-PET detection modules, used as a measure of photon energy deposited in Compton scattering. The hatched red region is used to identify o-Ps annihilation photon candidates, whereas candidates for prompt photons from 22Ne* de-excitation are found in the green dotted region.

The high-angular resolution of the detector at the level of 1, coupled with exclusive registration of o-Ps → 3γ decays, compensates for the lack of direct measurement of the photon energy. Their momenta are completely reconstructed using the recorded points of Compton interactions in the detector. Subsequently, the directions of k1, k2, and k3 span between the γ recording points and the annihilation point reconstructed using the latter combined with the corresponding interaction times. Consequently, the knowledge of the relative angles between the photon momenta can be used to unambiguously determine their energies49.

Further selection of o-Ps → 3γ events is based on the reconstructed photon energies and relative angles between their momentum vectors. Moreover, the background originating from secondary Compton-scattered photons recorded in the detector is discriminated by testing a hypothesis of a photon travelling directly between all pairs of detected γ interactions (see “Methods” for details).

The identified sample of three-photon annihilations of ortho-positronium atoms constitutes the first measurement of such events taking place in a medium of extensive size and featuring annihilation point reconstruction, which allows for determination of a three-photon tomographic image of the annihilation chamber using the spatial density of o-Ps → 3γ events (Fig. 1c). In addition to the studies discussed in this work, this newly explored tomographic capability opens prospects for non-standard medical imaging modalities with spatially resolved determination of positronium properties32,3436.

Search for CPT-violating angular correlations in o-Ps → 3γ

In August 2018, we collected a total of 7.3 × 106 event candidates in a continuous 26-day measurement using the described setup with a 10 MBq 22Na positron source. Figure 1c presents the distribution of reconstructed o-Ps → 3γ annihilation points in the transverse plane of the detector where the location of the porous silica allowing for positronium formation on the walls of the vacuum chamber is visible as the region with the highest density of reconstructed points. Notably, this distribution constitutes the first image of an extensive-size object obtained using o-Ps → 3γ annihilations.

To ensure proper reconstruction of the ortho-positronium spin, the recorded photon interaction times were varied within their uncertainties so as to minimise the discrepancy between ρ=X2+Y2 of the reconstructed annihilation point and the radius of the annihilation chamber (R = 12 cm). Only events in which the total required variation, measured with a χ2-like variable (with two degrees of freedom), did not exceed χ2 = 0.5 were retained for evaluation of the OCPT operator. This selection rejected poorly reconstructed events in which the geometrical uncertainty of the estimated spin axis could deteriorate the resulting statistical polarisation of the o-Ps sample, as well as spurious 3γ annihilation points resulting from reconstruction applied to background events (a comprehensive discussion of background sources is enclosed in “Methods”).

For ~2 million selected events, the estimated spin axis direction and photon momentum vectors were used to evaluate the OCPT correlation (equation (1)), resulting in the distribution presented in Fig. 1d. Extraction of the degree of potential symmetry violation from the angular correlation requires determination of the expectation value of the corresponding operator, corrected by the analysing power of the setup. The latter is dominated by the effective ortho-positronium polarisation resulting from the evaluation of the spin axis orientation for each event. The effective polarisation is determined by (i) average longitudinal polarisation of positrons from 22Na (Pe+=β¯0.67), (ii) the amount of polarisation statistically transferred to the formed positronium (2/3), (iii) polarisation loss during positron thermalisation amounting to ~8%21,50, and (iv) the geometrical uncertainty of the estimated direction of positron emission, which was reduced to ~9% in the presented setup46. The total effective polarisation was estimated to be P ≈ 37.4%.

It should be noted that while previous experiments20,21,27,28 concentrated on measuring the asymmetry of a given angular correlation, defined as A(∣OCPT∣) = (N(+∣OCPT∣) − N(− ∣OCPT∣))/(N(+∣OCPT∣) + N(− ∣OCPT∣)) (where N denotes the number of observed events for a given correlation value), it is only a special case of the expectation value of the corresponding operator in the case where a single value of ±∣OCPT∣ is measurable simultaneously.

Therefore, we use the expectation value <OCPT > over the entire region of its definition as a measure of the observed asymmetry and obtain a value of

<OCPT>=0.00025±0.00036, 2

thus observing no significant asymmetry. The error is dominated by the statistical uncertainty of 0.00033.

For comparison with the measurements conducted to date, a parameter quantifying the level of observed CPT violation CCPT ∈ [0, 1] can be used, as in ref. 21, for which CCPT = 1 corresponds to a maximal asymmetry violating CPT. Correcting the above result for the analysing power (P), we obtain

CCPT=<OCPT>/P=0.00067±0.00095. 3

Discussion

We have demonstrated the application of tomographic reconstruction of three-photon positronium annihilations to determine the spin polarisation of ortho-positronium atoms, enabling precise studies of discrete symmetries in positronium decays without requiring a magnetic field. Through the exploratory measurement presented in this work, we have demonstrated that the J-PET detector based on plastic-scintillator strips can exclusively register three-photon annihilations of ortho-positronium atoms occurring in an extensive-size medium with reconstruction of the spatial location of the annihilation and o-Ps spin-axis estimation on a single-event basis. With this 26-day measurement, the sensitivity to the CPT-violating angular correlation between ortho-positronium spin and orientation of the annihilation plane reached a statistical precision of 10−4, over a factor of three better than the previous result21.

Further sensitivity improvements to the presented CPT symmetry test are possible owing to an additional densely packed layer of plastic scintillators with a fully digital readout, which is currently being added to the J-PET detection setup. Providing up to quadruple enhancement in registration probability for a single annihilation photon, it can increase the overall detection efficiency of o-Ps → 3γ events by a factor of 64. This will be further augmented by a new design of the annihilation chamber with spherical geometry, increasing the o-Ps formation probability by a factor of ~1.5 with a given β+ source activity and minimising potential spurious asymmetries from the geometry of the experimental setup26. These improvements will allow the J-PET setup to collect the largest dataset of exclusively recorded ortho-positronium three-photon annihilations. Even with a moderate extension in measurement time compared to the experiment presented in this work, the statistics of the collected sample of o-Ps → 3γ will allow for CPT symmetry testing at a precision level of 10−5. Moreover, the control over systematic effects in the presented measurement and coverage of a broad span of kinematic configurations of recorded events. This eliminates false asymmetries from the detector geometry, and opens the way to exploring angular correlation operators for which usage was not feasible in previous experiments, such as the S ⋅ k1 correlation, which is odd under both CP and CPT transformations26.

Methods

J-PET detector

The (J-PET) detector comprises three sparse concentric layers of 50 cm long plastic-scintillator strips arranged axially in a cylindrical geometry (see Fig. 1a). Each scintillator strip constitutes a detection module with two vacuum tube photomultipliers attached at its ends, which collect light produced as a result of Compton scattering of a γ quantum in the strip.

The longitudinal positions and time of γ interactions in the scintillator strips are reconstructed using times of light propagation from the point of γ Compton scattering to the ends of the strip, providing interaction time resolution at a level of ~250 ps owing to the fast signals of the plastic scintillators.

Synchronisation of time signals from both sides of each scintillator, as well as between detection modules and layers, is obtained from self-calibration of the recorded data using a statistical technique exploiting time differences between 2γ annihilations and uncorrelated prompt photon emissions from the 22Na source51.

Properties of the ortho-positronium production setup

Density of porous material used in the experiment is estimated from densities of pure silica gel (commonly accepted value dsilica = 2.2 g cm−3) and gypsum, dgypsum = 2.3 g cm−3. Density of mixture of both these components, taking into account their concentration, is slightly higher than that of pure silica gel and equal to ca. 2.22 g cm−3. However, the so-called bulk density of coating composed of material particles, which we determined experimentally, is smaller and equal to 0.32 g cm−3. This difference in the substrate density and the bulk density is related to the overall porosity of material and free interparticle spaces.

Textural characterisation of material used in experiment was performed in a standard method on the basis of adsorption-desorption data of nitrogen at −196 °C. Adsorption-desorption isotherms of nitrogen were measured using volumetric pore analyser ASAP 2040, Micromeritics Co. Specific surface area SBET was derived from adsorption data in the range of relative pressure p/p0 = 0–0.25 using Brunauer–Emmett–Teller equation52. The calculations were conducted under the assumption that one molecule of nitrogen occupies 0.162 nm2. Total pore volume Vp was estimated from a single point adsorption at p/p0 = 0.993. Pore width DBJH and pore size distribution PSD were calculated using Barett–Joyner–Halenda procedure53 applied to the desorption data. Numerical values of parameters characterising investigated material are as follows: SBET = 252 m2 g−1, Vp = 0.58 cm3 g−1 and average pore width DBJH = 6.6 nm. Relatively high specific surface area and total pore volume testifies that sample possess well developed system of pores and pore interior is accessible for nitrogen as an adsorptive. Hence, one can assume that pores are open to vacuum.

Identification of o-Ps → 3γ annihilation event candidates

For every recorded interaction of a γ quantum in the plastic scintillators, the two photomultiplier electric signals are sampled by the J-PET front-end electronics in the voltage domain at four predefined amplitude thresholds applied to their leading and trailing edges54, as depicted in Fig. 2a. This technique provides a measure of the total size of the two signals through their TOTs, which is used to estimate the total energy deposited in the Compton scattering of the incident photon48. Figure 2b presents the spectrum of TOT values for all recorded photon interactions, in which the three visible structures correspond to an overlap of ortho-positronium annihilation and secondary Compton-scattered photons (hatched red), Compton spectrum edge for 511 keV photons from e+e annihilations, and Compton edge for 1275 keV photons from de-excitation of the β+ source (dotted green), respectively, for increasing TOT values. Candidates for ortho-positronium annihilation photons are selected by TOT values in a window of (15;55) ns to exclude noise and minimise the contribution of direct 2γ annihilations that are abundant close to the middle Compton edge.

Candidate events for o-Ps three-photon annihilations are identified as clusters of three-photon interactions recorded in a coincidence time window of 2.5 ns. At this stage, the background is mostly comprised of secondary Compton scatterings recorded in the detector, as well as 2γ annihilations originating close to the β+ source recorded alongside a low-energy deposition of a de-excitation photon from the source itself. The event topologies of the signal and major background components are presented schematically in Fig. 3. The next section describes the treatment of particular background sources.

Fig. 3. Schematic presentation of signal (o-Ps → 3γ) and background events in the transverse view of the J-PET detector.

Fig. 3

The grey rectangles represent photon detection modules of plastic scintillators (only one layer is shown for readability). The modules in which photons were recorded are marked white. The annihilations take place in the wall of the vacuum chamber (grey band). In a signal event a, all three photons from an ortho-positronium annihilation are recorded and the angles between their momenta, labelled according to ascending magnitude (θ1 < θ2 < θ3), obey θ1 + θ2 > 180. The background is dominated by direct e+e → 2γ annihilations, where the third recorded photon comes from secondary Compton scattering in the detector b, resulting in the identification of a spurious primary photon marked with a dashed arrow. Three-photon events may also be caused by two subsequent secondary scatterings in the case where one of the direct annihilation photons is not detected c, and by two-photon annihilations originating in the β+ source setup (grey circle) accompanied by a prompt 22Ne* de-excitation photon depositing low energy in Compton scattering d.

Rejection of secondary Compton scatterings

The use of plastic scintillators in J-PET entails the possibility of recording secondary Compton scatterings mimicking the registration of primary photons (Fig. 3b, c). Back-to-back e+e → 2γ annihilations recorded with secondary scattering constitute a significant source of background for the identification of 3γ events. However, the time resolution of plastic scintillators also allows such events to be distinguished by testing a hypothesis of a photon propagating between every two recorded interactions, quantified by

δij=dijcΔtij=rirjctitj, 4

where dij is the distance between the ith and jth photon interactions recorded in an event candidate with recording times of ti and tj, respectively, and c denotes the velocity of light.

With such definition, δij assumes values close to zero for photon interaction pairs corresponding to a secondary Compton scattering. Consequently, its contamination among three-photon events is identified using δmin=min{δij} for i ≠ j = 1, 2, 3 calculated for every event. The contribution of events with secondary scattering, clearly visible in Fig. 4, is rejected as events with δij < 15 cm are discarded.

Fig. 4. Rejection of secondary Compton scatterings.

Fig. 4

Distribution of the minimal discrepancy between the travelled path and time of flight among all hypothetical secondary scattered photons considered in a single 3γ event candidate. Events with δmin<15 cm (marked with the red line) are discarded as containing secondary Compton scatterings in the detector modules.

The effect of the removal of secondary Compton scatterings is visible in the relative distribution of the sum and difference of the two smallest angles between the reconstructed momenta of the three photons, which is a convenient figure for evaluation of the o-Ps → 3γ sample purity55. As follows from a comparison of schemes a and b–d in Fig. 3, the genuine 3γ annihilations are characterised by large sums of the two smallest angles θ1 + θ2 with a relatively small difference between them. Conversely, secondary scattering events are located closer to θ1 + θ2 ≈ 180 with a large θ2 − θ1 value. Figure 5 presents the relative distribution of these figures before and after application of the criterion on δmin, demonstrating the purification of the event sample from secondary scattering events.

Fig. 5. Effect of secondary Compton scatterings’ rejection.

Fig. 5

Relative distribution of the sum and difference of the two smallest angles between photon momenta (see Fig. 3) in the identified 3γ events before (a) and after (b) rejection of the secondary scattered photons. The θ1 + θ2 > 180 limit results from momentum conservation in o-Ps → 3γ annihilations. o-Ps annihilation events are expected in the right corner of the populated region55, whereas the topmost region is specifically for secondary scattered photon events.

Rejection of two-photon annihilations coincident with a de-excitation photon

As indicated in Fig. 1b, the positron source used in this experiment emits prompt photons of 1275 keV owing to de-excitation of the β+ decay product. While such photons provide a useful start signal for evaluation of the positronium lifetime, their Compton interactions deposit energy from a continuous spectrum, which may mimic low-energy annihilation photons. As a result, the identified o-Ps → 3γ event candidates are contaminated by two-photon direct e+e annihilations accompanied by a de-excitation γ quantum if it deposits low energy in a J-PET detection module (Fig. 3d). This background is recognised by the difference in azimuthal coordinates of the detection modules (labelled θXY) between two of the three interaction points being close to 180. Moreover, if hypothetical lines of response are considered for every pair of recorded γ interactions and tomographic reconstruction of a 2γ annihilation point is performed, such events are characterised by one of the pairs yielding a hypothetical annihilation point at a small distance dLOR from the β+ source.

Figure 6 presents the minimal values of dLOR in each three-photon event as a function of the sum of the two smallest azimuthal locations of recorded γ interactions, where a structure corresponding to background events from direct e+e annihilations accompanied by a prompt photon originating in the source setup are clustered around 180 and small values of dLOR.

Fig. 6. Separation of ortho-positronium annihilations from direct two-photon events.

Fig. 6

Distribution of distance between the β+ source location and the closest hypothetical 2γ annihilation point on a line of response between two recorded photon interactions vs. the sum of the two smallest angles between azimuthal coordinates of the recorded γ interaction points. Events located in the signal-specific upper right region of the distribution (marked with dashed black line) are retained for the analysis in order to discriminate background events from 2γ annihilations (see Fig. 3b–d).

A small contribution of direct 2γ annihilations accompanied by a scattered photon which survive the previous selection steps is also revealed in this distribution at about θ1XY+θ2XY160. Since genuine o-Ps → 3γ events are mostly characterised by θ1XY+θ2XY>180 and large dLOR, events located in the region marked with dashed black line in Fig. 6 are selected for the final analysis.

Evaluation of systematic uncertainties

False asymmetries can originate from the geometry of the positronium production setup or the detector, as well as from the contributions of background processes such as cosmic radiation recorded during measurement. Geometrical effects were evaluated by determining the following CPT-even and CP-odd angular correlation operator:

OCP=(Sk1)(Sk1×k2). 5

While it is potentially sensitive to CP-violation effects23,28, these could only be observed in the case of a tensor-polarised ortho-positronium sample available when an external magnetic field (B) was used. As no B fields were present in the J-PET measurements, all asymmetries manifested in the distribution of OCP must have originated from the detector geometry. The mean value of this operator was found to be (1.3 ± 1. 4stat) × 10−4, showing no significant detector asymmetries at the level of 10−4.

The impact of cosmic rays recorded during the experiment was estimated in a dedicated measurement without the β+ source and positronium annihilation setup, where only cosmic radiation was recorded. It was estimated that cosmic ray events passing the event selection criteria may constitute at most 3.9 × 10−5 of the final event sample, which was considered as part of the systematic uncertainty.

The influences of subsequent event selection criteria applied in the analysis were tested by variation of each of the cut values within a few multiples of their corresponding experimental resolution. The only analysis cut found to have a statistically significant impact on the measured value of 〈OCPT〉 was the upper bound on the TOT of candidates for annihilation photon interactions (see Fig. 2b). Consequently, an effect of 1.26 × 10−4 on 〈OCPT〉, corresponding to a variation of this bound by 1 ns, was included in the systematic uncertainty.

Supplementary information

Supplementary Information (110.7KB, pdf)

Acknowledgements

The J-PET collaboration acknowledges the support provided by the Polish National Center for Research and Development through grant INNOTECH-K1/IN1/64/159174/NCBR/12; the Foundation for Polish Science through the MPD and TEAM POIR.04.04.00-00-4204/17 Programmes; the National Science Centre of Poland through grant nos. 2016/21/B/ST2/01222, 2017/25/N/NZ1/00861, and 2019/35/B/ST2/03562; the Ministry for Science and Higher Education through grant nos. 6673/IA/SP/2016 and 7150/E- 338/SPUB/2017/1; the Jagiellonian University via project no. CRP/0641.221.2020, the Austrian Science Fund FWF-P26783. as well as the SciMat and DigiWorld Priority Research Area budgets under the programme Excellence Initiative - Research University at the Jagiellonian University.

Author contributions

The experiment was conducted using the J-PET apparatus developed by the J-PET collaboration. The J-PET detector and the techniques of the experiment were conceived by P.M. The data analysis was conducted by A.G. and M.M. The positronium production chamber was designed and constructed by M.G., J.G., B.J., and A.S. P.M., A.G., M. M., J. C., N.C., C.C., E.C., M.D., K.D., B.C.H., Ł.K., H.K., D.K., G.K., N.K., T.K., E.K., S.N., S.P., M.P.N., J.R., S.S., Shivani, M. Silarski, M. Skurzok, E.Ł.S. and F.T. participated in the construction, commissioning and operation of the experimental setup. K.D., A.G., K.Kacprzak, K.Klimaszewski, P.K., N.K., W.K., S.N., L.R., R.Y.S., and W.W. participated in the development of data reconstruction and analysis procedures. The manuscript was prepared by P.M. and A.G. and was then edited and approved by all authors.

Data availability

The datasets collected in the experiment and analysed during the current study are available under restricted access due to the large data volume. Direct access to the data can be arranged on a reasonable request by contacting the corresponding authors.

Competing interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

Footnotes

Peer review informationNature Communications thanks Hong Joo Kim and the other anonymous reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work.

Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Contributor Information

P. Moskal, Email: p.moskal@uj.edu.pl

A. Gajos, Email: aleksander.gajos@uj.edu.pl

Supplementary information

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41467-021-25905-9.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Supplementary Information (110.7KB, pdf)

Data Availability Statement

The datasets collected in the experiment and analysed during the current study are available under restricted access due to the large data volume. Direct access to the data can be arranged on a reasonable request by contacting the corresponding authors.


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