One of the
great mysteries of modern physics is why antimatter did not destroy the
universe at the beginning of time. To explain it, physicists suppose there must
be some difference between matter and antimatter – apart from electric charge.
Whatever that difference is, it’s not in their magnetism, it seems.
Physicists
at CERN in Switzerland have made the most precise measurement ever of the
magnetic moment of an anti-proton – a number that measures how a particle
reacts to magnetic force – and found it to be exactly the same as that of the
proton but with opposite sign. The work is described in Nature.
“All of our observations find a complete symmetry between matter and antimatter, which is why the universe should not actually exist,” says Christian Smorra, a physicist at CERN’s Baryon–Antibaryon Symmetry Experiment (BASE) collaboration. “An asymmetry must exist here somewhere but we simply do not understand where the difference is.”
Antimatter
is notoriously unstable – any contact with regular matter and it annihilates in
a burst of pure energy that is the most efficient reaction known to physics.
That’s why it was chosen as the fuel to power the starship Enterprise in Star
Trek. The standard model predicts the Big Bang should have produced equal
amounts of matter and antimatter – but that’s a combustive mixture that would
have annihilated itself, leaving nothing behind to make galaxies or planets or
people.
To explain
the mystery, physicists have been playing spot the difference between matter
and antimatter – searching for some discrepancy that might explain why matter came
to dominate. So far they’ve performed extremely precise measurements for all
sort of properties: mass, electric charge and so on, but no difference has yet
been found. Last year, scientists at CERN’s Antihydrogen Laser PHysics
Apparatus (ALPHA) experiment probed an atom of anti-hydrogen with light for the
first time, again finding no difference when compared with an atom of hydrogen.
But one
property was known only to middling accuracy compared to the others – the
magnetic moment of the antiproton. Ten years ago, Stefan Ulmer and his team at
BASE collaboration set themselves the task of trying to measure it. First they
had to develop a way to directly measure the magnetic moment of the regular
proton. They did this by trapping individual protons in a magnetic field, and
driving quantum jumps in its spin using another magnetic field. This
measurement was itself a groundbreaking achievement reported in Nature in 2014.
Next, they
had to perform the same measurement on antiprotons – a task made doubly difficult
by the fact that antiprotons will immediately annihilate on contact with any
matter. To do it, the team used the coldest and longest-lived antimatter ever
created. After creating the antiprotons in 2015, the team was able to store
them for more than a year inside a special chamber about the size and shape of
a can of Pringles. Since no physical container can hold antimatter, physicists
use magnetic and electric fields to contain the material in devices called
Penning traps.
Usually the
antimatter lifetime is limited by imperfections in the traps – little
instabilities allow the antimatter to leak through. But by using a combination
of two traps, the BASE team made the most perfect antimatter chamber ever –
holding the antiprotons for 405 days. This stable storage allowed them to run
their magnetic moment measurement on the antiprotons. The result gave a value
for the antiproton magnetic moment of −2.7928473441 μN. (μN is a constant
called the nuclear magneton.) Apart from the minus sign, this is identical to
the previous measurement for the proton.
The new
measurement is precise to nine significant digits, the equivalent of measuring
the circumference of the Earth to within a few centimeters, and 350 times more
precise than any previous measurement.
“This result is the culmination of many years of continuous research and development, and the successful completion of one of the most difficult measurements ever performed in a Penning trap instrument,” says Ulmer.
The
universe’s greatest game of spot the difference goes on. The next hotly
anticipated experiment is over at ALPHA, where CERN scientists are studying the
effect of gravity of antimatter – trying to answer the question of whether
antimatter might fall ‘up’.
Via
CosmosMagazine
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