Abstract
We have studied the radiative decay of atomic hydrogen in strong magnetic fields of up to $4\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\mathrm{T}$. We have followed the radiative cascade from completely $l,m$ mixed distributions of highly excited states as well as from distributions that involve highly excited states with $\ensuremath{\mid}m\ensuremath{\mid}\ensuremath{\sim}n$. We have found that the time it takes to populate the ground state is not affected by the magnetic field for the initial states with $n\ensuremath{\lesssim}20$. For higher $n$ manifolds, the electrons in the most negative $m$ states are substantially slowed down by the magnetic field resulting in a much longer lifetime. We show that less than 10% of the antihydrogen atoms with $n\ensuremath{\sim}35$ generated in antihydrogen experiments at $4\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\mathrm{K}$ will decay to their ground states before they hit the wall of the vacuum container unless they are trapped. We have also found that the decay time is mainly determined by the fraction of atoms that were initially in highest negative $m$ states due to the fact that only $\ensuremath{\mid}\ensuremath{\Delta}m\ensuremath{\mid}+\ensuremath{\mid}\ensuremath{\Delta}\ensuremath{\pi}\ensuremath{\mid}=1$ transitions are allowed in the magnetic field. We give a semiclassical method for calculating the decay rates for circular states and show that when the initial states have high-$\ensuremath{\mid}m\ensuremath{\mid}$, semiclassical rates agree with the full quantum mechanical rates within a couple of percent for states with effective $n\ensuremath{\gtrsim}20$.
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