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| An aerial view of the ALPHA experimental area. Photo Credit: © CERN, Julien Marius Ordan. |
Swansea University physicists, as leading members of the ALPHA (Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus) collaboration at CERN, have demonstrated that atoms of antihydrogen fall to Earth in the same way as their matter equivalents for the first time.
Published in Nature, the study's groundbreaking results rule out the possibility of antimatter being accelerated upwards in Earth's gravity and bring researchers one step closer to unravelling one of the most high-profile problems in physics.
ALPHA creates antihydrogen atoms by taking negatively charged antiprotons and binding them with positively charged positrons. The neutral but slightly magnetic antimatter atoms are then confined in a magnetic trap, which prevents them from coming into contact with matter and annihilating.
Using a vertical apparatus called ALPHA-g, the 'g' denoting the local acceleration of gravity, the ALPHA team can measure the vertical positions at which antihydrogen atoms annihilate with matter once the trap's magnetic field is switched off, allowing the atoms to escape.





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