Scientists Claim Breakthrough in Antimatter Hunt

Scientists hope discovery will help them understand what happened to antimatter created by the Big Bang

November 18, 2010 RSS Feed Print

By Frank Jordans, Associated Press

GENEVA—Scientists claimed a breakthrough Thursday in solving one of the biggest riddles of physics, successfully trapping the first "anti-atom" that they hope will help them understand what happened to all of the antimatter created by the Big Bang.

The international team of physicist at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, managed to create an atom of anti-hydrogen and then hold onto it for long enough to demonstrate that it can be studied in the lab.

"For us it's a big breakthrough because it means we can take the next step, which is to try to compare matter and antimatter," the team's spokesman, American scientist Jeffrey Hangst, told The Associated Press.

For decades, researchers have puzzled over why antimatter seems to have vanished from the universe. Theory posits it was created in equal amounts as matter at the moment of the Big Bang, which created the universe some 13.7 billion years ago. But while matter—defined as having mass and taking up space—went on to become the building block of everything that exists, antimatter has disappeared except in the lab.

Scientists have long been able to create individual particles of antimatter such as anti-protons, anti-neutrons and positrons—the opposite of electrons. Since 2002, they have also managed to lump these particles together to form anti-atoms, but until recently none could be trapped for long enough to study them, because atoms made of antimatter and matter annihilate each on contact.

"It doesn't help if they disappear immediately upon their creation," said Hangst. "So the big goal has been to hold onto them."

Two teams have been competing for that prize at CERN, the world's largest physics lab best known for its $10 billion smasher, the Large Hadron Collider. The collider, built deep under the Swiss-French border, wasn't used for this experiment

Hangst's ALPHA team got there first, beating the rival ATRAP team led by Harvard physicist Gerald Gabrielse, a veteran of the 20-year hunt for antimatter.

Gabrielse nevertheless welcomed the result. "The atoms that were trapped were not yet trapped very long and in a very usable number, but one has to crawl before you sprint," he told the AP.

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Through all this controversy regarding the missing antimatter I have yet to see a refutation of the notion that antimatter is matter moving backwards in time. Even in the scenarios explaining the nature of antimatter the analogy is that viewing it is like watching a video/motion picture played in reverse.

I have not the credentials to propose this officially, and there is probably a great flaw in my logic but it seems to me that during the 'Big Bang' and the instant that matter/antimatter was created the particles moved apart not in space but in time. Suppose the Universe was created with two 'time' arrows instead of one; each being a mirror of the other. That would account for the missing antimatter. The insignificant amount antimatter created in the laboratory and various particle reactions would be stuck in this 'time' frame and be viewed as mirror particles.

I would like to see an answer refuting this logically as I have had this thought for quite some time and have never seen an adequate explanation to the contrary.

Reeve Apgar of NJ 12:20PM January 12, 2011

Excellent question Richard W.

PAUL of FL 10:43AM December 09, 2010

how do you trap an antimatter atom ?

salem 4:57AM November 30, 2010

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