Wed. Nov 6th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

One of physics’ greatest mysteries remains unsolved, with scientists reporting that antimatter falls under gravity —  just like ordinary matter.

In the first direct measurement of antimatter’s behaviour under Earth’s gravity, physicists at CERN’s Antimatter Factory made, corralled and dropped the antimatter version of hydrogen atoms in a tube. 

Turns out they fall a lot like plain old ordinary hydrogen atoms.

Antiparticles are almost identical to their ordinary particle “twins”. They have the same mass, but carry the opposite charge.

For instance, an electron has a negative charge, while its antimatter sibling — called a positron — is positively charged.

The CERN experiment, called ALPHA-g, is one of many ways physicists are probing antimatter’s properties and searching for any deviations from ordinary matter.

The reason? To discover the fate of a whole lot of missing antimatter.

Why missing antimatter matters

Pretty much all the matter in the observable universe — the stuff that makes us, cities, planets, stars — is ordinary matter, made from electrons, protons, neutrons and their more obscure kin.

The Standard Model of particle physics outlines all these particles and their interactions that make up the Universe.

And according to this, equal amounts of matter and antimatter should have been made during the Big Bang, Curtin University theoretical physicist Igor Bray, who was not involved in the new study, said.

“But we have only a little bit of antimatter, and many, many orders of magnitude more ordinary matter.”

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