Difference between revisions of "Antimatter" - New World Encyclopedia

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:''For the [[physics]] of antimatter, see the article on [[antiparticle]]s.''
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{{Claimed}}
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{{Antimatter}}
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In [[particle physics]] and [[quantum chemistry]], it extends the concept of the [[antiparticle]] to [[matter]], whereby antimatter is composed of antiparticles in the same way that normal matter is composed of particles. For example an antielectron (a [[positron]], an electron with a positive charge) and an antiproton (a proton with a negative charge) could form an antihydrogen atom in the same way that an electron and a proton form a ''normal matter'' hydrogen atom. Furthermore, mixing of matter and antimatter would lead to the annihilation of both in the same way that mixing of antiparticles and particles does, thus giving rise to high-energy [[photon]]s ([[gamma ray]]s) or other particle–antiparticle pairs. The particles resulting from matter-antimatter annihilation are endowed with energy equal to the difference between the [[rest mass]] of the products of the annihilation and the rest mass of the original matter-antimatter pair, which is often quite large.
  
'''Antimatter''' is [[matter]] that is composed of the [[antiparticle]]s of those that constitute normal matter. If a particle and its antiparticle come in contact with each other, the two [[Annihilation|annihilate]] and produce a burst of [[energy]], which results in the production of other particles and antiparticles or [[electromagnetic radiation]]. In these reactions, [[rest mass]] is not conserved, although (as in any other reaction) mass-energy ([[E=mc²]]) is conserved.
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There is considerable speculation both in [[science]] and [[science fiction]] as to why the observable universe is apparently almost entirely matter, whether other places are almost entirely antimatter instead, and what might be possible if antimatter could be harnessed, but at this time the apparent [[asymmetry]] of matter and antimatter in the visible universe is one of the greatest [[unsolved problems in physics]]. Possible processes by which it came about are explored in more detail under [[baryogenesis]].
  
== History ==
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==History==
  
In [[1928]] [[Paul Dirac]] developed a [[relativity|relativistic]] equation for the [[electron]], now known as the [[Dirac equation]]. Curiously, the equation was found to have negative energy solutions in addition to the normal positive ones. This presented a problem, as electrons tend toward the lowest possible energy level; energies of negative infinity are nonsensical. As a way of getting around this, Dirac proposed that the vacuum can be considered a "sea" of negative energy, the [[Dirac sea]]. Any electrons would therefore have to sit on top of the sea.
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In December 1927, [[Paul Dirac]] developed a [[theory of relativity|relativistic]] equation for the [[electron]], now known as the [[Dirac equation]]. Curiously, the equation was found to have negative-energy solutions in addition to the normal positive ones. This presented a problem, as electrons tend toward the lowest possible energy level; energies of negative infinity are nonsensical. As a way of getting around this, Dirac proposed that the [[vacuum state|vacuum]] is filled with a "sea" of negative-energy electrons, the [[Dirac sea]]. Any real electrons would therefore have to sit on top of the sea, having positive energy.
  
Thinking further, Dirac found that a "hole" in the sea would have a positive charge. At first he thought that this was the [[proton]], but [[Hermann Weyl]] pointed out the hole should have the same mass as the electron. The existence of this particle, the [[positron]], was confirmed experimentally in [[1932]] by [[Carl D. Anderson]].
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Thinking further, Dirac found that a "hole" in the sea would have a positive charge. At first he thought that this was the [[proton]], but [[Hermann Weyl]] pointed out that the hole should have the same mass as the electron. The existence of this particle, the [[positron]], was confirmed experimentally in 1932 by [[Carl D. Anderson]]. During this period, antimatter was sometimes also known as "'''contraterrene matter'''."
  
Today's [[standard model]] shows that every particle has an antiparticle, for which each additive [[quantum number]] has the negative of the value it has for the normal matter particle. The sign reversal applies only to quantum numbers (properties) which are additive, such as [[charge]], but not to [[mass]], for example. The [[positron]] has the opposite charge but the same mass as the electron. An [[atom]] of [[antihydrogen]] is composed of a negatively-charged [[antiproton]] being [[atomic orbital|orbited]] by a positively-charged [[positron]].
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Today's [[Standard Model]] shows that every particle has an [[antiparticle]], for which each additive [[quantum number]] has the negative of the value it has for the normal matter particle. The sign reversal applies only to quantum numbers (properties) which are additive, such as [[electric charge|charge]], but not to [[mass]], for example. The [[positron]] has the opposite charge but the same mass as the electron. For particles whose additive quantum numbers are all zero, the particle may be its own antiparticle; such particles include the [[photon]] and the neutral [[pion]].
  
== Antimatter production ==
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==Production==
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===Artificial production===
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The artificial production of atoms of antimatter (specifically [[antihydrogen]]) first became a reality in the early 1990s. An [[atom]] of antihydrogen is composed of a negatively-charged [[antiproton]] being [[atomic orbital|orbited]] by a positively-charged [[positron]]. Stanley Brodsky, Ivan Schmidt and Charles Munger at [[SLAC]] realized that an antiproton, traveling at [[relativistic]] speeds and passing close to the [[atomic nucleus|nucleus]] of an atom, would have the potential to force the creation of an [[electron]]-positron pair. It was postulated that under this scenario the antiproton would have a small chance of pairing with the positron (ejecting the electron) to form an antihydrogen atom.
  
Scientists in [[1995]] succeeded in producing antiatoms of [[hydrogen]], and also [[antideuteron]] [[nuclei]], made out of an [[antiproton]] and an [[antineutron]], but no antiatom more complex than antideuterium has been created yet. In principle, antiatoms of any element could be built from readily available sources of antiparticles. Such antiatoms would have exactly the same properties as their normal-matter counterparts. The production of antielements in bulk quantities seems unlikely to become ever achievable, however.
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In 1995 [[CERN]] announced that it had successfully created nine antihydrogen atoms by implementing the SLAC/Fermilab concept during the [[PS210 experiment]]. The experiment was performed using the Low Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR), and was led by Walter Oelert and Mario Macri. Fermilab soon confirmed the CERN findings by producing approximately 100 antihydrogen atoms at their facilities.
  
Positrons and antiprotons can individually be stored in a device called a [[Penning trap]], which uses a combination of [[magnetic|magnetic field]] and [[electric field]]s to hold charged particles in a [[vacuum]]. Two international collaborations ([[ATRAP]] and [[ATHENA]]) used these devices to store thousands of slowly moving antihydrogen atoms in 2002. It is the goal of these collaborations to probe the [[electronic configuration|energy level]] structure of antihydrogen to compare it with that of hydrogen as a test of the [[CPT theorem]]. One way to do this is to confine the antiatoms in an inhomogenous magnetic field (one cannot use electric fields since the antiatoms are neutral) and interrogate them with [[laser]]s. If the anti-atoms have too much [[kinetic energy]] they will be able to escape the magnetic trap, and it is therefore essential that the anti-atoms are produced with as little energy as possible. This is the key difference between the antihydrogen that [[ATRAP]] and [[ATHENA]] produced, which was made at very low [[temperature]]s, and the antihydrogen produced in 1995 which was moving at a speed close to the [[speed of light]].
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The antihydrogen atoms created during PS210, and subsequent experiments (at both [[CERN]] and Fermilab) were extremely energetic ("hot") and were not well suited to study. To resolve this hurdle, and to gain a better understanding of antihydrogen, two collaborations were formed in the late 1990s—[[ATHENA]] and [[ATRAP]]. The primary goal of these collaborations is the creation of less energetic ("cold") antihydrogen, better suited to study.
  
Antimatter/matter reactions have practical applications in medical imaging, see [[positron emission tomography]] (PET). In some kinds of [[beta decay]], a nuclide loses surplus positive charge by emitting a positron (in the same event, a proton becomes a neutron, and [[neutrino]]s are also given off). Nuclides with surplus positive charge are easily made in a [[cyclotron]] and are widely generated for medical use.
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In 1999 [[CERN]] activated the [[Antiproton Decelerator]], a device capable of decelerating antiprotons from 3.5 [[GeV]] to 5.3 [[MeV]]—still too "hot" to produce study-effective antihydrogen, but a huge leap forward.
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In late 2002 the ATHENA project announced that they had created the world's first "cold" antihydrogen. The antiprotons used in the experiment were cooled sufficiently by decelerating them (using the Antiproton Decelerator), passing them through a thin sheet of foil, and finally capturing them in a [[Penning trap]]. The antiprotons also underwent [[stochastic cooling]] at several stages during the process.
  
Antiparticles are created everywhere in the [[universe]] where high-energy particle collisions take place, such as in the center of our [[milky way|galaxy]], but none have been detected that are residual from the [[Big Bang]], as most normal matter is [http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast29may_1m.htm]. The unequal [[distribution]] between matter and antimatter in the universe has long been a mystery. The solution likely lies in the violation of [[CP-symmetry]] by the laws of nature, see [[baryogenesis]].
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The ATHENA team's antiproton cooling process is effective, but highly inefficient. Approximately 25 million antiprotons leave the Antiproton Decelerator; roughly 10 thousand make it to the Penning trap.
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In early 2004 ATHENA researchers released data on a new method of creating low-energy antihydrogen. The technique involves slowing antiprotons using the Antiproton Decelerator, and injecting them into a Penning trap (specifically a Penning-Malmberg trap). Once trapped the antiprotons are mixed with electrons that have been cooled to an energy potential significantly less than the antiprotons; the resulting [[Coulomb potential|Coulomb]] collisions cool the antiprotons while warming the electrons until the particles reach an equilibrium of approximately 4 K.  
  
== Notation ==
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While the antiprotons are being cooled in the first trap, a small cloud of positron [[plasma (physics)|plasma]] is injected into a second trap (the mixing trap). Exciting the [[resonance]] of the mixing trap’s confinement fields can control the temperature of the positron plasma; but the procedure is more effective when the plasma is in thermal equilibrium with the trap’s environment. The positron plasma cloud is generated in a positron accumulator prior to injection; the source of the positrons is usually radioactive sodium.
  
Physicists need a notation to distinguish particles from antiparticles. One way is to denote an antiparticle by adding a bar (or [[macron]]) over the symbol for the particle. For example, the proton and antiproton are denoted as <math>\mathrm{p}\,</math> and <math>\bar{\mathrm{p}}</math>, respectively.
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Once the antiprotons are sufficiently cooled, the antiproton-electron mixture is transferred into the mixing trap (containing the positrons). The electrons are subsequently removed by a series of fast pulses in the mixing trap's electrical field. When the antiprotons reach the positron plasma further Coulomb collisions occur, resulting in further cooling of the antiprotons. When the positrons and antiprotons approach thermal equilibrium antihydrogen atoms begin to form. Being electrically neutral the antihydrogen atoms are not affected by the trap and can leave the confinement fields.
  
Another convention is to distinguish particles by their [[electric charge]]. Thus, the electron and positron are denoted simply as e<sup>&minus;</sup> and e<sup>+</sup>. Adding a bar over the e<sup>+</sup> symbol would be redundant and is not done.
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Using this method ATHENA researchers predict they will be able to create up to 100 antihydrogen atoms per operational second.
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ATHENA and ATRAP are now seeking to further cool the antihydrogen atoms by subjecting them to an inhomogeneous field. While antihydrogen atoms are electrically neutral, their spin produces [[magnetic moment]]s. These magnetic moments vary depending on the spin direction of the atom, and can be deflected by inhomogeneous fields regardless of electrical charge.
  
== Antimatter as fuel ==
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The biggest limiting factor in the production of antimatter is the availability of antiprotons. Recent data released by [[CERN]] states that when fully operational their facilities are capable of producing 10<sup>7</sup> antiprotons per second. Assuming an optimal conversion of antiprotons to antihydrogen, it would take two billion years to produce 1 gram of antihydrogen.
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Another limiting factor to antimatter production is storage. As stated above there is no known way to effectively store antihydrogen. The ATHENA project has managed to keep antihydrogen atoms from annihilation for tens of seconds—just enough time to briefly study their behaviour.
  
In antimatter-matter collisions, the entire rest [[mass]] of the particles is converted to [[energy]]. The [[Energies per unit mass|energy per unit mass]] is about 10 orders of magnitude greater than chemical energy, and about 2 orders of magnitude greater than nuclear energy that can be liberated today using chemical reactions or nuclear fission/fusion. The reaction of 1 [[kilogram|kg]] of antimatter with 1 kg of matter would produce 1.8&times;10<sup>17</sup> [[joule|J]] (180 quadrillion Joules) of energy (by the equation ''[[E=mc²]]''). In contrast, burning a kilogram of [[petrol|gasoline]] produces 4.2&times;10<sup>7</sup> J, and [[nuclear fusion]] of a kilogram of hydrogen would produce 2.6&times;10<sup>15</sup> J.
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[[CERN]] laboratories, which produces antimatter on a regular basis, said:
Not all of that energy can be utilized by any realistic technology, because as much as 50% of energy produced in reactions between nucleons and antinucleons is carried away by [[neutrinos]], so, for all intents and purposes, it can be considered lost. [http://gltrs.grc.nasa.gov/reports/1996/TM-107030.pdf]
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{{cquote|If we could assemble all of the antimatter we've ever made at [[CERN]] and annihilate it with matter, we would have enough energy to light a single electric light bulb for a few minutes.<ref>
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[http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/Content/Chapters/Spotlight/SpotlightAandD-en.html CERN laboratories website]</ref>}}
  
The scarcity of antimatter means that it is not readily available to be used as fuel, although it could be used in [[antimatter catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion]]. Generating a single antiproton is immensely difficult and requires particle accelerators and vast amounts of energy&mdash;millions of times more than is released after it is annihilated with ordinary matter, due to inefficiencies in the process.  Known methods of producing antimatter from energy also produce an equal amount of normal matter, so the theoretical limit is that half of the input energy is converted to antimatter.  Counterbalancing this, when antimatter annihilates with ordinary matter energy equal to twice the mass of the antimatter is liberated&mdash;so energy storage in the form of antimatter could (in theory) be 100% efficient.  Antimatter production is currently very limited, but has been growing at a nearly geometric rate since the discovery of the first antiproton in 1955[http://ffden-2.phys.uaf.edu/212_fall2003.web.dir/tyler_freeman/history.htm].  The current antimatter production rate is between 1 and 10 nanograms per year, and this is expected to increase dramatically with new facilities at [[CERN]] and [[Fermilab]].  With current technology, it is considered possible to attain antimatter for [[United States dollar|$]]25 million per gram by optimizing the collision and collection parameters (given current electricity generation costs).  Antimatter production costs, in mass production, are almost linearly tied in with electricity costs, so economical pure-antimatter thrust applications are unlikely to come online without the advent of such technologies as [[deuterium]]-deuterium fusion power. Several [[NASA Institute of Advanced Concepts]]-funded studies [http://www.niac.usra.edu/studies/study.jsp?id=1071&cpnum=05-01&phase=I&last=Bickford&first=Jim&middle=&title=Extraction%20of%20antiparticles%20Concentrated%20in%20Planetary%20Magnetic%20Fields&organization=Draper%20Labratory&begin_date=2005-09-01%2000:00:00.0&end_date=2006-03-31%2000:00:00.0] are exploring whether the antimatter that occurs naturally in the [[Van Allen belt]]s of Earth, and ultimately, the gas giants like [[Jupiter]], might be able to be collected with magnetic scoops, at hopefully lower cost per gram.
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===Naturally occurring production===
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Antiparticles are created everywhere in the [[universe]] where high-energy particle collisions take place. High-energy [[cosmic ray]]s impacting Earth's atmosphere (or any other matter in the [[solar system]]) produce minute quantities of antimatter in the resulting [[particle jet]]s, which are immediately annihilated by contact with nearby matter. It may similarly be produced in regions like the center of the [[Milky Way Galaxy]] and other galaxies, where very energetic celestial events occur (principally the interaction of [[relativistic jet]]s with the interstellar medium). The presence of the resulting antimatter is detectable by the [[gamma ray]]s produced when it annihilates with nearby matter.
  
Since the energy density is vastly higher than these other forms, the thrust to weight equation used in [[antimatter rocket]]ry and [[spacecraft]] would be very different. In fact, the energy in a few grams of antimatter is enough to transport an unmanned spacecraft to [[Mars]] in about a month&mdash;the [[Mars Global Surveyor]] took eleven months to reach Mars.  It is hoped that antimatter could be used as [[fuel]] for [[interplanetary travel]] or possibly [[interstellar travel]], but it is also feared that if humanity ever gets the capabilities to do so, there could be the construction of [[antimatter weapon]]s.
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Antiparticles are also produced in any environment with a sufficiently high temperature (mean particle energy greater than the [[pair production]] threshold). The period of [[baryogenesis]], when the universe was extremely hot and dense, matter and antimatter were continually produced and annihilated. The presence of remaining matter, and absence of detectable remaining antimatter,<ref>[http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast29may_1m.htm NASA Science News]</ref> also called [[baryon asymmetry]], is attributed to [[CP-violation|violation]] of the [[CP-symmetry]] relating matter and antimatter. The exact mechanism of this violation during baryogenesis remains a mystery.
  
== The Antiuniverse ==
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Positrons are also produced from the radioactive decay of nuclides such as carbon-11, nitrogen-13, oxygen-15, fluorine-18, and iodine-121
  
Dirac himself was the first to consider the existence of antimatter in an astronomical scale. But it was only after the confirmation of his theory, with the discovery of the positron, antiproton and antineutron that real speculation began on the possible existence of an antiuniverse. In the following years, motivated by basic [[symmetry]] principles, it was believed that the [[universe]] must consist of both matter and antimatter in equal amounts. If, however there were an isolated system of antimatter in the universe, free from interaction with ordinary matter, no earthbound observation could distinguish its true content, as photons (being their own antiparticle) are the same whether they are in a “universe” or an “antiuniverse”.
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==Uses==
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===Medical===
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Antimatter-matter reactions have practical applications in medical imaging, such as [[positron emission tomography]] (PET). In positive [[beta decay]], a [[nuclide]] loses surplus positive charge by emitting a positron (in the same event, a proton becomes a neutron, and [[neutrino]]s are also given off). Nuclides with surplus positive charge are easily made in a [[cyclotron]] and are widely generated for medical use.
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===Fuel===<!-- This section is linked from [[Deuterium]] —>
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In antimatter-matter collisions resulting in [[photon]] emission, the entire [[rest mass]] of the particles is converted to [[kinetic energy]]. The [[energy density|energy per unit mass]] (9×10<sup>16</sup> J/kg) is about 10 [[order of magnitude|orders of magnitude]] greater than [[chemical energy]] (compared to [[trinitrotoluene|TNT]] at 4.2×10<sup>6</sup> J/kg, and [[heat of formation|formation]] of [[water]] at 1.56×10<sup>7</sup> J/kg), about 4 orders of magnitude greater than [[nuclear energy]] that can be liberated today using [[nuclear fission]] (about 40 [[MeV]] per [[Uranium|<sup>238</sup>U]] nucleus transmuted to [[Lead]], or 1.5×10<sup>13</sup> J/kg), and about 2 orders of magnitude greater than the best possible from [[nuclear fusion|fusion]] (about 6.3×10<sup>14</sup> J/kg for the [[proton-proton chain reaction|proton-proton chain]]). The reaction of 1&nbsp;[[kilogram|kg]] of antimatter with 1&nbsp;kg of matter would produce 1.8×10<sup>17</sup>&nbsp;[[joule|J]] (180 petajoules) of energy (by the [[mass-energy equivalence]] formula ''E'' = ''mc''²), or the rough equivalent of 43 megatons of TNT.
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Not all of that energy can be utilized by any realistic technology, because as much as 50% of energy produced in reactions between nucleons and antinucleons is carried away by [[neutrino]]s, so, for all intents and purposes, it can be considered lost.<ref >[http://gltrs.grc.nasa.gov/reports/1996/TM-107030.pdf  Comparison of Fusion/Antiproton Propulsion systems]</ref>
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The scarcity of antimatter means that it is not readily available to be used as fuel, although it could be used in [[antimatter catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion]].  Generating a single antiproton is immensely difficult and requires particle accelerators and vast amounts of energy—millions of times more than is released after it is annihilated with ordinary matter, due to inefficiencies in the process.  Known methods of producing antimatter from energy also produce an equal amount of normal matter, so the theoretical limit is that half of the input energy is converted to antimatter.  Counterbalancing this, when antimatter annihilates with ordinary matter, energy equal to twice the mass of the antimatter is liberated—so energy storage in the form of antimatter could (in theory) be 100% efficient.  Antimatter production is currently very limited, but has been growing at a nearly geometric rate since the discovery of the first antiproton in 1955.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}  The current antimatter production rate is between 1 and 10 nanograms per year, and this is expected to increase to between 3 and 30 nanograms per year by 2015 or 2020 with new superconducting linear accelerator facilities at [[CERN]] and [[Fermilab]]. Some researchers claim that with current technology, it is possible to obtain antimatter for [[United States dollar|US$]]25 million per gram by optimizing the collision and collection parameters (given current electricity generation costs). Antimatter production costs, in mass production, are almost linearly tied in with electricity costs, so economical pure-antimatter thrust applications are unlikely to come online without the advent of such technologies as [[deuterium]]-tritium [[fusion power]] (assuming that such a power source actually would prove to be cheap). Many experts, however, dispute these claims as being far too optimistic by many orders of magnitude. They point out that in 2004; the annual production of antiprotons at CERN was several picograms at a cost of $20 million. This means to produce 1 gram of antimatter, CERN would need to spend 100 quadrillion dollars and run the antimatter factory for 100 billion years. Storage is another problem, as antiprotons are negatively charged and repel against each other, so that they cannot be concentrated in a small volume. [[Plasma oscillation]]s in the charged cloud of antiprotons can cause instabilities that drive antiprotons out of the storage trap. For these reasons, to date only a few million antiprotons have been stored simultaneously in a magnetic trap, which corresponds to much less than a femtogram. Antihydrogen atoms or molecules are neutral so in principle they do not suffer the plasma problems of antiprotons described above. But cold antihydrogen is far more difficult to produce than antiprotons, and so far not a single antihydrogen atom has been trapped in a magnetic field.
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Several [[NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts]]-funded studies are exploring whether it might be possible to use magnetic scoops to collect the antimatter that occurs naturally in the [[Van Allen belt]]s of Earth, and ultimately, the belts of gas giants like [[Jupiter]], hopefully at a lower cost per gram.<ref>[http://www.niac.usra.edu/files/studies/abstracts/1071Bickford.pdf Extraction of Antiparticles in Planetary Magnetic Fields]</ref>
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Since the energy density is vastly higher than these other forms, the thrust to weight equation used in [[antimatter rocket]]ry and [[spacecraft]] would be very different. In fact, the energy in a few grams of antimatter is enough to transport an unmanned spacecraft to [[Mars]] in about a month—the [[Mars Global Surveyor]] took eleven months to reach Mars.  It is hoped that antimatter could be used as [[fuel]] for [[interplanetary travel]] or possibly [[interstellar travel]], but it is also feared that if mankind ever gets the capabilities to do so, there could be the construction of [[antimatter weapon]]s.
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===Military===
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Because of its potential to release immense amounts of energy in contact with normal matter, there has been interest in various [[antimatter weapon|weapon uses]], potentially enabling miniature warheads of pinhead-size to be more destructive than modern-day [[nuclear weapon]]s. An antimatter particle colliding with a matter particle releases 100% of the energy contained within the particles, while an H-bomb only releases about 7% of this energy. This gives a clue to how effective and powerful this force is. However, this development is still in early planning stages, though antimatter weapons are very popular in [[science fiction]] such as in [[Peter F. Hamilton]]'s ''[[Night's Dawn Trilogy]]'' and [[Dan Brown]]'s ''[[Angels and Demons]]'' where the production of antimatter leads to the possibility of use as both a fuel and highly effective weapon.
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Another use could be the creation of antimatter bullets of the correct material to cause human flesh to dissapear and expel huge amounts of energy, turning an enemy soldier into a bomb.
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==Antiuniverse==
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Dirac himself was the first to consider the existence of antimatter on an astronomical scale. But it was only after the confirmation of his theory, with the discovery of the positron, antiproton and antineutron that real speculation began on the possible existence of an antiuniverse. In the following years, motivated by basic [[symmetry in physics|symmetry]] principles, it was believed that the [[universe]] must consist of both matter and antimatter in equal amounts. If, however, there were an isolated system of antimatter in the universe, free from interaction with ordinary matter, no earthbound observation could distinguish its true content, as photons (being their own antiparticle) are the same whether they originate from a “universe” or an “antiuniverse.
  
 
But assuming large zones of antimatter exist, there must be some boundary where antimatter atoms from the antimatter [[galaxies]] or [[stars]] will come into contact with normal atoms. In those regions a powerful flux of [[gamma rays]] would be produced. This has never been observed despite deployment of very sensitive instruments in space to detect them.
 
But assuming large zones of antimatter exist, there must be some boundary where antimatter atoms from the antimatter [[galaxies]] or [[stars]] will come into contact with normal atoms. In those regions a powerful flux of [[gamma rays]] would be produced. This has never been observed despite deployment of very sensitive instruments in space to detect them.
  
It is now thought that symmetry was broken in the early universe when [[charge]] and [[parity]] symmetry was violated (CP-violation). Standard [[Big Bang]] cosmology tells us that the universe initially contained equal amounts of matter and antimatter: however particles and [[antiparticle]]s evolved slightly differently. It was found that a particular heavy unstable particle, which is its own antiparticle, decays slightly more often to positrons (e+) than to electrons (e-). How this accounts for the preponderance of matter over antimatter has not been completely explained. The [[Standard Model]] of [[particle physics]] does have a way of accommodating a difference between the evolution of matter and antimatter, but it falls short of explaining the net excess of matter in the universe by about 10 orders of magnitude.
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It is now thought that symmetry was broken in the early universe during a period of [[baryogenesis]], when [[CP-violation|matter-antimatter symmetry]] was violated. Standard [[Big Bang]] [[physical cosmology|cosmology]] tells us that the universe initially contained equal amounts of matter and antimatter: however particles and [[antiparticle]]s evolved slightly differently. It was found that a particular heavy unstable particle, which is its own antiparticle, decays slightly more often to positrons (e<sup>+</sup>) than to electrons (e<sup>−</sup>). How this accounts for the preponderance of matter over antimatter has not been completely explained. The [[Standard Model]] of [[particle physics]] does have a way of accommodating a difference between the evolution of matter and antimatter, but it falls short of explaining the net excess of matter in the universe by about 10 orders of magnitude.
  
After Dirac, the sci-fi writers had a field day with visions of antiworlds,
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After Dirac, [[science fiction]] writers produced myriad visions of antiworlds, antistars and antiuniverses, all made of antimatter, and it is still a common [[plot device]]; however, no positive evidence of such antiuniverses exists.
antistars and antiuniverses, all made of antimatter, and it is still a common [[plot device]], however suppositions of the existence a coeval, antimatter duplicate of this universe are not taken seriously in modern [[cosmology]].
 
  
see: *[http://www2.slac.stanford.edu/tip/special/cp.htm What is direct CP-violation?]
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===Antihelium===
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The Balloon-borne Experiment with Superconducting Spectrometer ([[BESS]]) is searching for larger antinuclei, in particular antihelium, that are very unlikely to be produced by collisions. (One of the current experiments, under assumptions of current theory, would take 15 billion years on average to encounter a single antihelium atom made that way.<ref>Barry, P. (2007). The hunt for Antihelium, ''Science News'' vol.171, pp.296-300</ref>)
  
== Antimatter in popular culture ==
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Antihelium Isotope, <span style="text-decoration: overline">³He</span> was created.<ref>[http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/1367-2630/5/1/301 Antihelium-3 production in lead-lead collisions at 158 A GeV/c], R Arsenescu et al 2003 New J. Phys. 5 1</ref>
  
A famous fictional example of antimatter in action is in the [[science fiction]] franchise ''[[Star Trek]]'', where it is a common energy source for [[starship]]s. Antimatter engines also appear in various books of the ''[[Dragonriders of Pern]]'' series by [[Anne McCaffrey]]. In [[Larry Niven|Niven's]] ''[[Ringworld]]'' series, antimatter appears as a weapon useful against even the super-dense matter [[scrith]]. [[Dan Brown]] explores the use of antimatter as a [[weapon]] in his novel ''[[Angels and Demons]]'', where terrorists threaten to destroy the [[Vatican City|Vatican]] with potentially unstable antimatter stolen from [[CERN]]. In ''[[The Night's Dawn Trilogy]]'' by [[Peter F. Hamilton]], antimatter is characterized as the most dangerous substance imaginable and outlawed across the Galaxy. Antimatter is also briefly referenced in the 1966 movie "Batman," (several evil henchmen are turned into antimatter when they are revived using "heavy water" from the batcave), but the concept remains completely unexplained in this example. Also, in the episode of ''[[Doctor Who]]'', "The Planet of Evil", the scientist Dr Sorenson is transformed into an 'antiman' due to exposure to antimatter.
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==Notation==
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One way to denote an antiparticle is by adding a bar (or [[macron]]) over the particle's symbol. For example, the proton and antiproton are denoted as <math>\mathrm{p}\,</math> and <math>\bar{\mathrm{p}}</math>, respectively. The same rule applies if you were to address a particle by its constituent components. A proton is made up of <math>\mathrm{u}\,</math><math>\mathrm{u}\,</math><math>\mathrm{d}\,</math> [[quark]]s, so an antiproton must therefore be formed from <math>\bar{\mathrm{u}}</math><math>\bar{\mathrm{u}}</math><math>\bar{\mathrm{d}}</math> [[quark#Antiquarks|antiquark]]s. Another convention is to distinguish particles by their [[electric charge]]. Thus, the electron and positron are denoted simply as e<sup>−</sup> and e<sup>+</sup>.
  
In [[comic books]] produced by [[DC Comics]], the notion of an antiuniverse, or in DC's parlance Anti-Matter Universe, was first utilized in the ''[[Green Lantern]]'' series in the [[1960s]]. The Anti-Matter Universe contains a world known as [[Qward]], home to the [[Green Lantern Corps]]' sworn enemies, the Weaponers of Qward.
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==Value==
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Antimatter is currently the most valuable substance in existence, with an estimated worth of $300 billion per milligram. This is because production is difficult (only a few atoms are produced in reactions in particle accelerators) and because there is higher demand for the other uses of particle accelerators.{{Fact|date=June 2007}}
  
In [[1985]], a powerful, twisted denizen of the Anti-Matter Universe known as the [[Anti-Monitor]] succeeded in destroying most of the DC [[Multiverse]] during the events of the twelve-issue limited series ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]''.
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==See also==
  
== References ==
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*[[Matter]]
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*[[Particle accelerator]]
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*[[Positron]]
  
*{{Book reference | Author=Tipler, Paul; Llewellyn, Ralph | Title=Modern Physics (4th ed.) | Publisher=W. H. Freeman | Year=2002 | ID=ISBN 0716743450}}
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== Notes ==
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<references/>
  
== External links and references ==
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== References ==
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'''<<We need at least 3 reliable references here, properly formatted.>>'''
  
* [http://livefromcern.web.cern.ch/livefromcern/antimatter/webcast/AM-webcast06.html CERN Webcasts (Realplayer required)]
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==External links==
  
[[Category:Antimatter| ]]
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* [http://www.vega.org.uk/video/programme/14 Freeview Video 'Antimatter' by the Vega Science Trust and the BBC/OU]
[[Category:Physical_sciences]]
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* [http://livefromcern.web.cern.ch/livefromcern/antimatter/webcast/AM-webcast06.html CERN Webcasts (Realplayer required)]
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* [http://www.positron.edu.au/faq.html What is Antimatter?] (from the Frequently Asked Questions at the Center for Antimatter-Matter Studies)
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* [http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/Content/Chapters/Spotlight/SpotlightAandD-en.html FAQ from CERN] with lots of information about antimatter aimed at the general reader, posted in response to antimatter's fictional portrayal in [[Angels and Demons]]
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*[http://www2.slac.stanford.edu/tip/special/cp.htm What is direct CP-violation?]''
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* [http://www.exploratorium.edu/origins/cern/tools/animation.html Animated illustration of antihydrogen production at CERN] from the [[Exploratorium]].
  
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Revision as of 21:38, 29 October 2007

Antimatter
Overview
Annihilation
Devices
Antiparticles
Uses
Scientific Bodies
  • ALPHA Collaboration
  • ATHENA
  • ATRAP
  • CERN
People
edit

In particle physics and quantum chemistry, it extends the concept of the antiparticle to matter, whereby antimatter is composed of antiparticles in the same way that normal matter is composed of particles. For example an antielectron (a positron, an electron with a positive charge) and an antiproton (a proton with a negative charge) could form an antihydrogen atom in the same way that an electron and a proton form a normal matter hydrogen atom. Furthermore, mixing of matter and antimatter would lead to the annihilation of both in the same way that mixing of antiparticles and particles does, thus giving rise to high-energy photons (gamma rays) or other particle–antiparticle pairs. The particles resulting from matter-antimatter annihilation are endowed with energy equal to the difference between the rest mass of the products of the annihilation and the rest mass of the original matter-antimatter pair, which is often quite large.

There is considerable speculation both in science and science fiction as to why the observable universe is apparently almost entirely matter, whether other places are almost entirely antimatter instead, and what might be possible if antimatter could be harnessed, but at this time the apparent asymmetry of matter and antimatter in the visible universe is one of the greatest unsolved problems in physics. Possible processes by which it came about are explored in more detail under baryogenesis.

History

In December 1927, Paul Dirac developed a relativistic equation for the electron, now known as the Dirac equation. Curiously, the equation was found to have negative-energy solutions in addition to the normal positive ones. This presented a problem, as electrons tend toward the lowest possible energy level; energies of negative infinity are nonsensical. As a way of getting around this, Dirac proposed that the vacuum is filled with a "sea" of negative-energy electrons, the Dirac sea. Any real electrons would therefore have to sit on top of the sea, having positive energy.

Thinking further, Dirac found that a "hole" in the sea would have a positive charge. At first he thought that this was the proton, but Hermann Weyl pointed out that the hole should have the same mass as the electron. The existence of this particle, the positron, was confirmed experimentally in 1932 by Carl D. Anderson. During this period, antimatter was sometimes also known as "contraterrene matter."

Today's Standard Model shows that every particle has an antiparticle, for which each additive quantum number has the negative of the value it has for the normal matter particle. The sign reversal applies only to quantum numbers (properties) which are additive, such as charge, but not to mass, for example. The positron has the opposite charge but the same mass as the electron. For particles whose additive quantum numbers are all zero, the particle may be its own antiparticle; such particles include the photon and the neutral pion.

Production

Artificial production

The artificial production of atoms of antimatter (specifically antihydrogen) first became a reality in the early 1990s. An atom of antihydrogen is composed of a negatively-charged antiproton being orbited by a positively-charged positron. Stanley Brodsky, Ivan Schmidt and Charles Munger at SLAC realized that an antiproton, traveling at relativistic speeds and passing close to the nucleus of an atom, would have the potential to force the creation of an electron-positron pair. It was postulated that under this scenario the antiproton would have a small chance of pairing with the positron (ejecting the electron) to form an antihydrogen atom.

In 1995 CERN announced that it had successfully created nine antihydrogen atoms by implementing the SLAC/Fermilab concept during the PS210 experiment. The experiment was performed using the Low Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR), and was led by Walter Oelert and Mario Macri. Fermilab soon confirmed the CERN findings by producing approximately 100 antihydrogen atoms at their facilities.

The antihydrogen atoms created during PS210, and subsequent experiments (at both CERN and Fermilab) were extremely energetic ("hot") and were not well suited to study. To resolve this hurdle, and to gain a better understanding of antihydrogen, two collaborations were formed in the late 1990s—ATHENA and ATRAP. The primary goal of these collaborations is the creation of less energetic ("cold") antihydrogen, better suited to study.

In 1999 CERN activated the Antiproton Decelerator, a device capable of decelerating antiprotons from 3.5 GeV to 5.3 MeV—still too "hot" to produce study-effective antihydrogen, but a huge leap forward. In late 2002 the ATHENA project announced that they had created the world's first "cold" antihydrogen. The antiprotons used in the experiment were cooled sufficiently by decelerating them (using the Antiproton Decelerator), passing them through a thin sheet of foil, and finally capturing them in a Penning trap. The antiprotons also underwent stochastic cooling at several stages during the process.

The ATHENA team's antiproton cooling process is effective, but highly inefficient. Approximately 25 million antiprotons leave the Antiproton Decelerator; roughly 10 thousand make it to the Penning trap. In early 2004 ATHENA researchers released data on a new method of creating low-energy antihydrogen. The technique involves slowing antiprotons using the Antiproton Decelerator, and injecting them into a Penning trap (specifically a Penning-Malmberg trap). Once trapped the antiprotons are mixed with electrons that have been cooled to an energy potential significantly less than the antiprotons; the resulting Coulomb collisions cool the antiprotons while warming the electrons until the particles reach an equilibrium of approximately 4 K.

While the antiprotons are being cooled in the first trap, a small cloud of positron plasma is injected into a second trap (the mixing trap). Exciting the resonance of the mixing trap’s confinement fields can control the temperature of the positron plasma; but the procedure is more effective when the plasma is in thermal equilibrium with the trap’s environment. The positron plasma cloud is generated in a positron accumulator prior to injection; the source of the positrons is usually radioactive sodium.

Once the antiprotons are sufficiently cooled, the antiproton-electron mixture is transferred into the mixing trap (containing the positrons). The electrons are subsequently removed by a series of fast pulses in the mixing trap's electrical field. When the antiprotons reach the positron plasma further Coulomb collisions occur, resulting in further cooling of the antiprotons. When the positrons and antiprotons approach thermal equilibrium antihydrogen atoms begin to form. Being electrically neutral the antihydrogen atoms are not affected by the trap and can leave the confinement fields.

Using this method ATHENA researchers predict they will be able to create up to 100 antihydrogen atoms per operational second. ATHENA and ATRAP are now seeking to further cool the antihydrogen atoms by subjecting them to an inhomogeneous field. While antihydrogen atoms are electrically neutral, their spin produces magnetic moments. These magnetic moments vary depending on the spin direction of the atom, and can be deflected by inhomogeneous fields regardless of electrical charge.

The biggest limiting factor in the production of antimatter is the availability of antiprotons. Recent data released by CERN states that when fully operational their facilities are capable of producing 107 antiprotons per second. Assuming an optimal conversion of antiprotons to antihydrogen, it would take two billion years to produce 1 gram of antihydrogen. Another limiting factor to antimatter production is storage. As stated above there is no known way to effectively store antihydrogen. The ATHENA project has managed to keep antihydrogen atoms from annihilation for tens of seconds—just enough time to briefly study their behaviour.

CERN laboratories, which produces antimatter on a regular basis, said:

If we could assemble all of the antimatter we've ever made at CERN and annihilate it with matter, we would have enough energy to light a single electric light bulb for a few minutes.[1]

Naturally occurring production

Antiparticles are created everywhere in the universe where high-energy particle collisions take place. High-energy cosmic rays impacting Earth's atmosphere (or any other matter in the solar system) produce minute quantities of antimatter in the resulting particle jets, which are immediately annihilated by contact with nearby matter. It may similarly be produced in regions like the center of the Milky Way Galaxy and other galaxies, where very energetic celestial events occur (principally the interaction of relativistic jets with the interstellar medium). The presence of the resulting antimatter is detectable by the gamma rays produced when it annihilates with nearby matter.

Antiparticles are also produced in any environment with a sufficiently high temperature (mean particle energy greater than the pair production threshold). The period of baryogenesis, when the universe was extremely hot and dense, matter and antimatter were continually produced and annihilated. The presence of remaining matter, and absence of detectable remaining antimatter,[2] also called baryon asymmetry, is attributed to violation of the CP-symmetry relating matter and antimatter. The exact mechanism of this violation during baryogenesis remains a mystery.

Positrons are also produced from the radioactive decay of nuclides such as carbon-11, nitrogen-13, oxygen-15, fluorine-18, and iodine-121

Uses

Medical

Antimatter-matter reactions have practical applications in medical imaging, such as positron emission tomography (PET). In positive beta decay, a nuclide loses surplus positive charge by emitting a positron (in the same event, a proton becomes a neutron, and neutrinos are also given off). Nuclides with surplus positive charge are easily made in a cyclotron and are widely generated for medical use.

Fuel

In antimatter-matter collisions resulting in photon emission, the entire rest mass of the particles is converted to kinetic energy. The energy per unit mass (9×1016 J/kg) is about 10 orders of magnitude greater than chemical energy (compared to TNT at 4.2×106 J/kg, and formation of water at 1.56×107 J/kg), about 4 orders of magnitude greater than nuclear energy that can be liberated today using nuclear fission (about 40 MeV per 238U nucleus transmuted to Lead, or 1.5×1013 J/kg), and about 2 orders of magnitude greater than the best possible from fusion (about 6.3×1014 J/kg for the proton-proton chain). The reaction of 1 kg of antimatter with 1 kg of matter would produce 1.8×1017 J (180 petajoules) of energy (by the mass-energy equivalence formula E = mc²), or the rough equivalent of 43 megatons of TNT.

Not all of that energy can be utilized by any realistic technology, because as much as 50% of energy produced in reactions between nucleons and antinucleons is carried away by neutrinos, so, for all intents and purposes, it can be considered lost.[3]

The scarcity of antimatter means that it is not readily available to be used as fuel, although it could be used in antimatter catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion. Generating a single antiproton is immensely difficult and requires particle accelerators and vast amounts of energy—millions of times more than is released after it is annihilated with ordinary matter, due to inefficiencies in the process. Known methods of producing antimatter from energy also produce an equal amount of normal matter, so the theoretical limit is that half of the input energy is converted to antimatter. Counterbalancing this, when antimatter annihilates with ordinary matter, energy equal to twice the mass of the antimatter is liberated—so energy storage in the form of antimatter could (in theory) be 100% efficient. Antimatter production is currently very limited, but has been growing at a nearly geometric rate since the discovery of the first antiproton in 1955.[citation needed] The current antimatter production rate is between 1 and 10 nanograms per year, and this is expected to increase to between 3 and 30 nanograms per year by 2015 or 2020 with new superconducting linear accelerator facilities at CERN and Fermilab. Some researchers claim that with current technology, it is possible to obtain antimatter for US$25 million per gram by optimizing the collision and collection parameters (given current electricity generation costs). Antimatter production costs, in mass production, are almost linearly tied in with electricity costs, so economical pure-antimatter thrust applications are unlikely to come online without the advent of such technologies as deuterium-tritium fusion power (assuming that such a power source actually would prove to be cheap). Many experts, however, dispute these claims as being far too optimistic by many orders of magnitude. They point out that in 2004; the annual production of antiprotons at CERN was several picograms at a cost of $20 million. This means to produce 1 gram of antimatter, CERN would need to spend 100 quadrillion dollars and run the antimatter factory for 100 billion years. Storage is another problem, as antiprotons are negatively charged and repel against each other, so that they cannot be concentrated in a small volume. Plasma oscillations in the charged cloud of antiprotons can cause instabilities that drive antiprotons out of the storage trap. For these reasons, to date only a few million antiprotons have been stored simultaneously in a magnetic trap, which corresponds to much less than a femtogram. Antihydrogen atoms or molecules are neutral so in principle they do not suffer the plasma problems of antiprotons described above. But cold antihydrogen is far more difficult to produce than antiprotons, and so far not a single antihydrogen atom has been trapped in a magnetic field.

Several NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts-funded studies are exploring whether it might be possible to use magnetic scoops to collect the antimatter that occurs naturally in the Van Allen belts of Earth, and ultimately, the belts of gas giants like Jupiter, hopefully at a lower cost per gram.[4]

Since the energy density is vastly higher than these other forms, the thrust to weight equation used in antimatter rocketry and spacecraft would be very different. In fact, the energy in a few grams of antimatter is enough to transport an unmanned spacecraft to Mars in about a month—the Mars Global Surveyor took eleven months to reach Mars. It is hoped that antimatter could be used as fuel for interplanetary travel or possibly interstellar travel, but it is also feared that if mankind ever gets the capabilities to do so, there could be the construction of antimatter weapons.

Military

Because of its potential to release immense amounts of energy in contact with normal matter, there has been interest in various weapon uses, potentially enabling miniature warheads of pinhead-size to be more destructive than modern-day nuclear weapons. An antimatter particle colliding with a matter particle releases 100% of the energy contained within the particles, while an H-bomb only releases about 7% of this energy. This gives a clue to how effective and powerful this force is. However, this development is still in early planning stages, though antimatter weapons are very popular in science fiction such as in Peter F. Hamilton's Night's Dawn Trilogy and Dan Brown's Angels and Demons where the production of antimatter leads to the possibility of use as both a fuel and highly effective weapon. Another use could be the creation of antimatter bullets of the correct material to cause human flesh to dissapear and expel huge amounts of energy, turning an enemy soldier into a bomb.

Antiuniverse

Dirac himself was the first to consider the existence of antimatter on an astronomical scale. But it was only after the confirmation of his theory, with the discovery of the positron, antiproton and antineutron that real speculation began on the possible existence of an antiuniverse. In the following years, motivated by basic symmetry principles, it was believed that the universe must consist of both matter and antimatter in equal amounts. If, however, there were an isolated system of antimatter in the universe, free from interaction with ordinary matter, no earthbound observation could distinguish its true content, as photons (being their own antiparticle) are the same whether they originate from a “universe” or an “antiuniverse.”

But assuming large zones of antimatter exist, there must be some boundary where antimatter atoms from the antimatter galaxies or stars will come into contact with normal atoms. In those regions a powerful flux of gamma rays would be produced. This has never been observed despite deployment of very sensitive instruments in space to detect them.

It is now thought that symmetry was broken in the early universe during a period of baryogenesis, when matter-antimatter symmetry was violated. Standard Big Bang cosmology tells us that the universe initially contained equal amounts of matter and antimatter: however particles and antiparticles evolved slightly differently. It was found that a particular heavy unstable particle, which is its own antiparticle, decays slightly more often to positrons (e+) than to electrons (e). How this accounts for the preponderance of matter over antimatter has not been completely explained. The Standard Model of particle physics does have a way of accommodating a difference between the evolution of matter and antimatter, but it falls short of explaining the net excess of matter in the universe by about 10 orders of magnitude.

After Dirac, science fiction writers produced myriad visions of antiworlds, antistars and antiuniverses, all made of antimatter, and it is still a common plot device; however, no positive evidence of such antiuniverses exists.

Antihelium

The Balloon-borne Experiment with Superconducting Spectrometer (BESS) is searching for larger antinuclei, in particular antihelium, that are very unlikely to be produced by collisions. (One of the current experiments, under assumptions of current theory, would take 15 billion years on average to encounter a single antihelium atom made that way.[5])

Antihelium Isotope, ³He was created.[6]

Notation

One way to denote an antiparticle is by adding a bar (or macron) over the particle's symbol. For example, the proton and antiproton are denoted as and , respectively. The same rule applies if you were to address a particle by its constituent components. A proton is made up of quarks, so an antiproton must therefore be formed from antiquarks. Another convention is to distinguish particles by their electric charge. Thus, the electron and positron are denoted simply as e and e+.

Value

Antimatter is currently the most valuable substance in existence, with an estimated worth of $300 billion per milligram. This is because production is difficult (only a few atoms are produced in reactions in particle accelerators) and because there is higher demand for the other uses of particle accelerators.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

References
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External links

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