somewhere something incredible is waiting to be known-
Carl Sagan

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Antimatter atoms held captive by physicists

By Emily Chung, CBC News

Thirteen of the 42 researchers involved in the discovery were from Canada, including, from left to right, Makoto Fujiwara from TRIUMF; Andrea Guitierrez and Walter Hardy from the University of British Columbia; Tim Friesen from the University of Calgary; and Michael Hayden and Mohammned Ashekezari from Simon Fraser University. They are shown with their experimental setup at the CERN Laboratory in Geneva. (ALPHA)For the first time, antimatter atoms have been caged and kept in existence long enough to be probed by scientific instruments.

"We're very excited about the fact that we can actually now trap antimatter atoms long enough to study their properties and see if they're very different from matter," said Makoto Fujiwara, who led the Canadian contribution to ALPHA, the international collaboration that made the discovery.

The results, published online Wednesday in Nature, mean scientists are closer to solving the mystery of what happened to most of the antimatter in the universe, Fujiwara said.

Antimatter is produced in equal quantities with matter when energy is converted into mass — this happens in particle colliders and is believed to have happened during the Big Bang at the beginning of the universe. That's why physicists are puzzled about why there is no longer any significant amount of antimatter in the universe.

The antihydrogen atoms were made by carefully mixing antiprotons and positrons in this container. (ALPHA)Scientists would like to be able to study antimatter to figure out how it is different from matter, as that might provide clues about the apparent disappearance of antimatter. But there's a problem — when antimatter and matter encounter each other, they both get annihilated, producing pure energy.

Because our world is made of matter, antimatter atoms produced artificially until now have lasted just millionths of a second before hitting the matter walls of their container and getting annihilated.The latest study, which took place at the CERN Laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, has found a way to trap atoms of antihydrogen away from the walls of their container to prevent them from getting annihilated for nearly a tenth of a second.Antihydrogen is made by mixing antiprotons (the antimatter counterpart of subatomic particles called protons) and positrons (the antimatter counterpart of electrons). Those particles are charged, so researchers have been able to trap them for up to days using electric fields.

'Tiny, tiny magnet'

Antihydrogen is neutral so it can't be trapped the same way.The Canadian team built the electronics for this annihilation detector, which was used to confirm that 38 atoms of antihydrogen had been trapped. (ALPHA)"But this neutral atom has a tiny, tiny magnet," said Fujiwara, a research scientist at TRIUMF, Canada's national laboratory for particle and nuclear physics in Vancouver.

The magnet is so small that even using an extremely powerful magnetic field generated by a superconducting magnet, the researchers could only generate a small magnetic force on the antihydrogen atoms. But that was enough to create a magnetic trap that could hold some of them. You can only capture really the slowest ones," Fujiwara said.To improve their chances, the researchers mixed the antiprotons and positrons "very gently" in a very cold vacuum so that they were hardly moving at all. After trapping the antimatter atoms for some time, the researchers turned off the magnetic field, letting the atoms out of the trap. The atoms immediately hit matter and were annihilated, producing detectable signals. That is how the researchers knew they had successfully trapped 38 of the atoms.

How the magnetic trap works

The magnetic trap can be imagined as a shallow dish where spherical atoms of antimatter are rolling around like balls on a pool table, and the magnetic force is analogous to gravity. If the beads are moving too quickly, they will jump over the lip of the dish, escape, and hit the matter around them. But if they are moving very slowly, then they will roll back toward the centre of the dish whenever they get too close to the edge.When the magnetic field is turned off, the dish flattens suddenly. When that happens, there is nothing to keep them in the dish and even the slowest atoms of antimatter will roll right over the edge.This is a figurative description of the forces experienced by the antimatter atoms. It doesn't describe their physical environment, which is a metal container under vacuum.

The electronics for the annihilation detector were built by the Canadian members of ALPHA, Fujiwara said.
Richard Hydomako, a PhD student working with Prof. Rob Thompson at the University of Calgary and Prof. Scott Menary at York University played a crucial role in the data analysis, TRIUMF reported.Th e next step for the collaboration is to conduct experiments on the trapped antimatter atoms.University of British Columbia physicist Walter Hardy and Michael Hayden, a physicist at Simon Fraser University, are currently working on a method to find out what colour light the antihydrogen shines when it is hit with microwaves, Fujiwara said.The colours shone by hydrogen atoms are well known and researchers are interested in knowing how similar antihydrogen will be.

"It's going to be a long effort again. This is a very challenging goal," Fujiwara said. But researchers are "very excited" about the possibilities.Forty-two physicists from 15 institutions around the world contributed to the research, including 13 from Canada. Other participating countries were Brazil, Denmark, Israel, Japan, Sweden, the U.K., and the United States.

Canadian funding for the research included contributions from the federal government and the Alberta and Quebec governments, as well as the Killam Trusts.
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2010/11/17/antimatter-antihydrogen-atoms-trap.html#ixzz15Z45Vgz2

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