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7th January 2013

New antimatter method to provide 'a major experimental advantage'

Researchers have proposed a method for cooling trapped antihydrogen which could offer 'a major experimental advantage' and help to map the mysterious properties of antimatter that have to date remained elusive.

 

antimatter

 

The new method, developed by a group of researchers from the USA and Canada, could potentially cool trapped antihydrogen atoms to temperatures 25 times colder than already achieved, making them much more stable and a lot easier to experiment on.

The suggested method, which is published today in the Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, involves a laser, directed at antihydrogen atoms to give them a 'kick', causing them to lose energy and cool down.

Antihydrogen atoms are formed in an ultra-high vacuum trap by injecting antiprotons into positron plasma. An atomic process causes the antiproton to capture a positron which gives an electronically excited antihydrogen atom.

Typically, the antihydrogen atoms have a lot of energy compared to the trapping depth which can distort the measurements of their properties. As it is only possible to trap very few antihydrogen atoms, the main method for reducing the high energies is to laser cool the atoms to extremely low temperatures.

Co-author of the study, Professor Francis Robicheaux of Auburn University in the USA, said: "By reducing the antihydrogen energy, it should be possible to perform more precise measurements of all of its parameters. Our proposed method could reduce the average energy of trapped antihydrogen by a factor of more than 10.

 

antimatter trapped

 

"The ultimate goal of antihydrogen experiments is to compare its properties to those of hydrogen. Colder antihydrogen will be an important step for achieving this."

This process, known as Doppler cooling, is an established method for cooling atoms; however, because of the restricted parameters that are needed to trap antimatter, the researchers need to be absolutely sure that it is possible.

"It is not trivial to make the necessary amount of laser light at a specific wavelength of 121 nm. Even after making the light, it will be difficult to mesh it with an antihydrogen trapping experiment. By doing the calculations, we've shown that this effort is worthwhile," continued Professor Robicheaux.

Through a series of computer simulations, they showed that antihydrogen atoms could be cooled to around 20 millikelvin; trapped antihydrogen atoms so far have energies up to 500 millikelvin.

In 2011, researchers from CERN reported that they had trapped antimatter for over 1000 seconds – a record. In 2012, the first experiments were performed on antihydrogen whilst it was trapped between a series of magnets. Even though the processes that control the trapping are largely unknown, the researchers believe that the laser cooling should increase the amount of time antihydrogen can be trapped for.

"Whatever the processes are, having slower moving and more deeply trapped antihydrogen should decrease the loss rate," said Professor Robicheaux.

Colder antihydrogen atoms could also be used to measure the gravitational property of antimatter. "No one has ever seen antimatter actually fall in the field of gravity," said co-author Dr Makoto Fujiwara of TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics. "Laser cooling would be a very significant step towards such an observation."

Antimatter facts:

  • Every particle has an antiparticle. For example, an electron's antiparticle is the positron and a proton's antiparticle is an antiproton.

  • An antiparticle is exactly the same as its corresponding particle but carries an opposite charge.

  • If a particle and its corresponding antiparticle meet, they destroy each other. This is known as annihilation.

  • The combination of one positron and one antiproton creates antihydrogen.

  • Theories suggest that after the Big Bang, equal amounts of matter and antimatter should have formed. As the Universe today is composed almost entirely of matter, it remains a great mystery why we don't have this symmetry.

  • Scientists such as the ALPHA collaboration at CERN have been trying to measure the properties of antihydrogen to find clues as to why this asymmetry exists.

In the future, antimatter could be used as a fuel for interplanetary travel – or even interstellar travel – as part of antimatter catalysed nuclear pulse propulsion, or other antimatter-based rocketry such as the redshift rocket. Since the energy density of antimatter is much higher than that of conventional fuels, an antimatter fueled spacecraft would have a higher thrust-to-weight ratio than a conventional spacecraft.

At a recent presentation with NASA's Future In-Space Operations working group, an expert claimed that such technology may be possible within 50 or 60 years. Spacecraft could reach Jupiter within four months, potentially opening up parts of the outer Solar System to manned exploration.

 

antimatter spacecraft

 

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