Antihydrogen trapped at CERN!

Analog

Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
12,755
3
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Physicists at CERN in Geneva are the first to capture and store atoms of antimatter for long enough to study its properties in detail. Working at the lab's ALPHA experiment, the team managed to trap 38 anti-hydrogen atoms for about 170 ms. The next step for the researchers is to measure the energy spectrum of the atoms, which could provide important clues as to why there is much more matter than antimatter in the universe.
Anithydrogen is the antimatter version of the hydrogen atom and comprises a positron – or antielectron – and an antiproton. According to the Standard Model of Particle Physics, the energy levels of anti-hydrogen should be identical to those of hydrogen. Any deviations from this could help physicists identify new physics – and explain why there is much more matter than antimatter in the universe.
Although creating positrons and antiprotons is relatively easy, making antihydrogen is much harder. This form of antimatter was not isolated until 1995 – also in experiments at CERN. Making it stick around for long enough to study in detail is even more difficult. But in being able to trap anti-hydrogen atoms for 170 ms, the members of ALPHA, who come from 14 institutions in seven different nations, can now look forward to studying its atomic energy levels.
Colliding clouds

The experiment begins by making a cloud of positrons and a cloud of antiprotons. The antiprotons are created in an accelerator by smashing high-energy protons into a stationary target. The antiprotons are then slowed down and cooled in a series of steps involving a storage ring and electromagnetic traps. The positrons are produced by a radioactive source and then accumulated and cooled in a special trap.
The clouds are injected into a superconducting magnetic trap, where they mix for about 1 s to create anti-hydrogen. The charged positrons and antiprotons are then ejected from the trap, leaving behind neutral antihydrogen. While most of this anti-hydrogen is moving too quickly to be trapped, atoms with very little kinetic energy are held by a magnetic field gradient.
ALPHA researchers then detected the atoms by switching off the trap and setting the antihydrogen free to annihilate with surrounding matter. This created several charged particles including pions, which were spotted by a bank of detectors surrounding the trap. In total, the team has managed to see 38 annihilation events that are consistent with the release of antihydrogen that had been trapped for 170 ms.
Looking for CPT violation

The next step for the researchers is to use the antihydrogen to study a fundamental quantum transformation known as the charge-parity-time (CPT) operation. When the CPT transformation is applied to a physical system, three things happen: every particle is converted to its antiparticle; each spatial co-ordinate is reflected so that left becomes right, up becomes down and forward becomes backward; and time is reversed.
There is currently no experimental evidence that the CPT symmetry is violated, but it could show up as a slight difference in the frequency of certain atomic transitions in hydrogen and antihydrogen atoms. The discovery of such a violation could also help physicists understand why there is much more matter than antimatter in the universe.
 

mizzou

Diamond Member
Jan 2, 2008
9,734
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Ahhh!! When can I use this most abundant resource in the universe to power my cell phone efficeintly?
 

KDOG

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
5,525
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The next step for the researchers is to use the antihydrogen to study a fundamental quantum transformation known as the charge-parity-time (CPT) operation. When the CPT transformation is applied to a physical system, three things happen: every particle is converted to its antiparticle; each spatial co-ordinate is reflected so that left becomes right, up becomes down and forward becomes backward; and time is reversed.
There is currently no experimental evidence that the CPT symmetry is violated, but it could show up as a slight difference in the frequency of certain atomic transitions in hydrogen and antihydrogen atoms. The discovery of such a violation could also help physicists understand why there is much more matter than antimatter in the universe.


Uh, anyone else catch that?
 

silverpig

Lifer
Jul 29, 2001
27,703
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Uh, anyone else catch that?

Real time isn't actually reversed. It just says that under CPT a proton going forward in time looks exactly like an anti-proton going backwards in time.

If we were to make a movie of you handing me a $20 bill, you could play the movie in reverse and it would look exactly like me handing you a $20 bill. Thus, me handing you a $20 bill is the same as you handing me a $20 bill going backwards in time.
 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
49,601
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Wow, somehow we (I) got off onto a tangent in physics today & we ended up discussing antimatter for the last 10 minutes of class. That discussion spilled over into my next class (pre-calculus) for almost 10 minutes.

How do I announce this latest discovery to the interested students (without wasting an entire class period??)
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
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Neo_Whoa.jpg


Awesome find! I hope they are able to discover a great new deal of information (or perhaps confirm a Theory). These are the little steps that can lead to absolutely unimaginable breakthroughs in the progression of technology.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
Real time isn't actually reversed. It just says that under CPT a proton going forward in time looks exactly like an anti-proton going backwards in time.

If we were to make a movie of you handing me a $20 bill, you could play the movie in reverse and it would look exactly like me handing you a $20 bill. Thus, me handing you a $20 bill is the same as you handing me a $20 bill going backwards in time.
Shens.

That's just the excuse a physicist uses to get out of repaying a loan.

:p
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
23,720
1,502
136
Wow, somehow we (I) got off onto a tangent in physics today & we ended up discussing antimatter for the last 10 minutes of class. That discussion spilled over into my next class (pre-calculus) for almost 10 minutes.

How do I announce this latest discovery to the interested students (without wasting an entire class period??)

"An important step in particle physics research took place yesterday: scientists have successfully 'trapped' antimatter particles for a significant amount of time. Antimatter - a new arena of science where up is down, left is right, and time can flow backwards.

Now back to our review of kinematics..."
 

silverpig

Lifer
Jul 29, 2001
27,703
12
81
Wow, somehow we (I) got off onto a tangent in physics today & we ended up discussing antimatter for the last 10 minutes of class. That discussion spilled over into my next class (pre-calculus) for almost 10 minutes.

How do I announce this latest discovery to the interested students (without wasting an entire class period??)

Make it the last thing you say just before lunch. Or the end of the day.
 

Fenixgoon

Lifer
Jun 30, 2003
33,364
12,960
136
Wow, somehow we (I) got off onto a tangent in physics today & we ended up discussing antimatter for the last 10 minutes of class. That discussion spilled over into my next class (pre-calculus) for almost 10 minutes.

How do I announce this latest discovery to the interested students (without wasting an entire class period??)

the better question is: how did you get a class of such smart students? lucky teacher :)

99% of kids i went to school with had little interest in math/science. or at least if they did, they weren't very vocal about it :p
 

Gibsons

Lifer
Aug 14, 2001
12,530
35
91
Wow, somehow we (I) got off onto a tangent in physics today & we ended up discussing antimatter for the last 10 minutes of class. That discussion spilled over into my next class (pre-calculus) for almost 10 minutes.

How do I announce this latest discovery to the interested students (without wasting an entire class period??)

How is that a waste? :p It's still physics!

But probably not on the syllabus.
 

JTsyo

Lifer
Nov 18, 2007
12,038
1,135
126
Wow, somehow we (I) got off onto a tangent in physics today & we ended up discussing antimatter for the last 10 minutes of class. That discussion spilled over into my next class (pre-calculus) for almost 10 minutes.

How do I announce this latest discovery to the interested students (without wasting an entire class period??)

Just write the URL on the board and have them look it up at home.