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CERN experiment makes spectroscopic measurement of antihydrogen

Scientists are a step closer to making precision comparisons between ordinary matter and antimatter.
By CERN, Geneva, Switzerland Published: March 9, 2012
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The electrodes (gold) for the ALPHA Penning trap being inserted into the vacuum chamber and cryostat assembly. This is the trap used to combine or "mix" positrons and antiprotons to make antihydrogen. Credit: Niels Madsen ALPHA/Swansea
The ALPHA collaboration at CERN reports an important milestone on the way to measuring the properties of antimatter atoms. This follows news reported in June last year that the collaboration had routinely trapped antihydrogen atoms for long periods of time. ALPHA’s latest advance is the next important milestone on the way to being able to make precision comparisons between atoms of ordinary matter and atoms of antimatter, thereby helping unravel one of the deepest mysteries in particle physics and perhaps understanding why a universe of matter exists at all.

“We’ve demonstrated that we can probe the internal structure of the antihydrogen atom, and we’re very excited about that,” said ALPHA collaboration spokesman Jeffrey Hangst. “We now know that it’s possible to design experiments to make detailed measurements of antiatoms.”

Today, we live in a universe that appears to be made entirely of matter, yet at the Big Bang, matter and antimatter would have existed in equal amounts. The mystery is that all the antimatter seems to have gone, leading to the conclusion that nature must have a slight preference for matter over antimatter. If antihydrogen atoms can be studied in detail, as ALPHA’s latest result suggests, they may provide a powerful tool for investigating this preference.

Hydrogen atoms consist of an electron orbiting a nucleus. By firing light at them, the atoms can be excited, with the electrons jumping to higher orbits and eventually relaxing back to their so-called ground state by emitting light. The frequency distribution of the light emitted forms a precisely measured spectrum that, in the matter world, is unique to hydrogen. Basic principles of physics say that antihydrogen should have an identical spectrum to hydrogen, and measuring this spectrum is the ultimate goal of the ALPHA collaboration.

“Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, and we understand its structure extremely well,” said Hangst. “Now we can finally begin to coax the truth out of antihydrogen. Are they different? We can confidently say that time will tell.”

In the paper published March 7, ALPHA reports the first, albeit modest, measurement of the antihydrogen spectrum. In the ALPHA apparatus, antihydrogen atoms are trapped by a sophisticated arrangement of magnetic fields acting on the magnetic orientation of the antihydrogen atoms. By shining microwaves with a precisely tuned frequency on the antihydrogen atoms, the collaboration flips the antiatoms’ magnetic orientation, thereby liberating antihydrogen from the trap. When this happens, the antihydrogen meets ordinary matter and annihilates, leaving a characteristic pattern in particle detectors surrounding the trap. This measurement shows that it is possible to set up experiments in which the internal properties of antihydrogen atoms can be changed by shining microwaves on them. In the near future, ALPHA will work at improving the precision of the microwave measurements and undertake complementary measurements of the antihydrogen spectrum using lasers.

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5 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Very interesting. Just think. All that work might have been done here, if the US Congress had completed the super- conducting supercollider. It would have cost a small fraction of what the 2008 taxpayer bailout of private businesses did.
It is great work, but I doubt it will do much to determine the matter supremacy mystery. But it could. The graphic was a 10. It is rather difficult visualizing how it is done without it. It makes you wonder if anti-matter has anything to do with the expansion of the Universe. And how much is out there. Lightning makes it. I wonder if an arc welder does? It gets pretty hot in that electric arc.
3 stars
RICHARD MCCONNELL said:
We look forward to getting some results from spectroscopic studies: it will be interesting to see if the spectrum of antihydrogen is different from that of hydrogen in any obvious way.
5 stars
GERARDO W FISCHER said:
It is very nice that the CERN measurements show that hydrogen and anti-hydrogen are mirror appearances of each other. If the symmetry is perfect, our existence in a matter- and not antimatter-world cannot be explained by some symmetry-breaking, unjustifiable as I believe. Could it be that we don´t see all observable space? If pure gravitation expands without particles or gravitation quanta, it can do so at much more than the speed of light and this means a space farther out invisible in electromagnetic spectra. But as there seems to exist the so-called black energy which means that the cosmic expansion isn't just constant, originating in a big bang, the missing antimatter may be just outside our relativistic observation limit. What if from the extremely red-shiftet frontier there appear some photons stemming from antimatter disconnected to our relativistically limited world of matter and photons?
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