Physicists have studied antimatter, the opposite of ordinary matter, with great awe for decades. They know that antiparticles have the same mass as ordinary particles, but opposite charge. But no one knows what effect gravity will have on such particles!!
Scientists are now planning to create a horizontal beam of antimatter and measure how much gravity deflects it.
Possible results include:
- No difference: Antimatter may relate again to matter and react to gravity in exactly the same way in its response to gravity.
- WTF?? Hows that possible??: Antimatter reacts to gravity in a totally different manner to that of matter, which could point the way to new gravity-like forces, or perhaps even this new force that sci-fi enthusiasts have christened "antigravity".
In ordinary matter, these forces would oppose each other, and the net effect would be zero!! For antimatter however, these two forces could add up, pulling such particles towards Earth with even more force.
As for the possibility of antigravity, it is not ruled out in the standard model of physics. As a result, some researchers have suggested antimatter may be repelled by gravity. That could explain why so little antimatter is found today, even though theories predict it should have been as plentiful as matter (1 million antimatter particles to 1 million AND ONE particles of matter) in the early universe.
A proposal for an experiment called AEGIS, which would be set up at CERN's Antiproton Decelerator has been declared, and if approved, it might be able to return its experimental data within five years.
Each experiment would test the effect of gravity on antihydrogen, particles which have the same mass as hydrogen but contain antiprotons instead of protons and positrons instead of electrons.The AEGIS team says the project is worth the effort.
the early 1990's, a sub-atomic replication of Galileo's Leaning Tower of Pisa experiment was set up at CERN to test how quickly protons and antiprotons fall through gravity.
Hmm... I think I'll sleep well tonight!! Finally some physics fodder for the mentally unstable mind!! Antimatter+Matter=Kaboom!! I just hope these experiment don't end up in the same manner.....
If antimatter fell down faster, it would mean the discovery of at least one new force, probably two. If it fell up, it would mean our understanding of general relativity is incorrect -- Thomas Phillips, University in Durham, North Carolina
1 comments :
Enjoyed the write up, thanks.
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