Antimatter
:For the physics of antimatter, see the article on antiparticles.
Antimatter production
Scientists in 1995 succeeded in producing antiatoms of hydrogen, and also antideuteron nuclei, made out of an antiproton and an antineutron, but no antiatom more complex than antideuterium has been created yet. In principle, antiatoms of any element could be built from readily available sources of antiparticles. Such antiatoms would have exactly the same properties as their normal-matter counterparts. The production of antielements in bulk quantities seems unlikely to become ever achievable, however.
Related Topics:
1995 - Hydrogen - Antideuteron - Nuclei - Antiproton - Antineutron
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Positrons and antiprotons can individually be stored in a device called a Penning trap, which uses a combination of magnetic field and electric fields to hold charged particles in a vacuum. Two international collaborations (ATRAP and ATHENA) used these devices to store thousands of slowly moving antihydrogen atoms in 2002. It is the goal of these collaborations to probe the energy level structure of antihydrogen to compare it with that of hydrogen as a test of the CPT theorem. One way to do this is to confine the antiatoms in an inhomogenous magnetic field (one cannot use electric fields since the antiatoms are neutral) and interrogate them with lasers. If the anti-atoms have too much kinetic energy they will be able to escape the magnetic trap, and it is therefore essential that the anti-atoms are produced with as little energy as possible. This is the key difference between the antihydrogen that ATRAP and ATHENA produced, which was made at very low temperatures, and the antihydrogen produced in 1995 which was moving at a speed close to the speed of light.
Related Topics:
Penning trap - Magnetic field - Electric field - Vacuum - ATRAP - ATHENA - Energy level - CPT theorem - Laser - Kinetic energy - Temperature - Speed of light
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Antimatter/matter reactions have practical applications in medical imaging, see positron emission tomography (PET). In some kinds of beta decay, a nuclide loses surplus positive charge by emitting a positron (in the same event, a proton becomes a neutron, and neutrinos are also given off). Nuclides with surplus positive charge are easily made in a cyclotron and are widely generated for medical use.
Related Topics:
Positron emission tomography - Beta decay - Neutrino - Cyclotron
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Antiparticles are created everywhere in the universe where high-energy particle collisions take place, such as in the center of our galaxy, but none have been detected that are residual from the Big Bang, as most normal matter is http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast29may_1m.htm. The unequal distribution between matter and antimatter in the universe has long been a mystery. The solution likely lies in the violation of CP-symmetry by the laws of nature, see baryogenesis.
Related Topics:
Universe - Galaxy - Big Bang - Distribution - CP-symmetry - Baryogenesis
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | History |
| ► | Antimatter production |
| ► | Notation |
| ► | Antimatter as fuel |
| ► | The Antiuniverse |
| ► | Antimatter in popular culture |
| ► | References |
| ► | External links and references |
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