Cern Scientists Trap First Antimatter Atoms

Scott Bullock

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Cern Scientists Trap First Antimatter Atoms


Scientists have announced the first successful attempt to trap and hold antimatter atoms.

The research team managed to hold on to 38 antimatter atoms for about 2 tenths of a second. It may not sound like much, but it's the first time that such atoms have existed for more than a mere instant.

Antimatter atoms, like the antihydrogen used in this experiment, were first created only 8 years ago. The difficulty in hanging on to them lies in the fact that antimatter must be kept from coming in contact with any form of matter, or the antimatter and matter will annihilate each other in a burst of energy.

While manipulating a standard atom or molecule can be done easily, the inability to come into direct contact with the antihydrogen atoms made trapping them difficult, especially considering they have no net charge, so cannot be trapped using traditional electric or magnetic fields.

Instead, scientist built a 'magnetic bottle' using sculpted magnetic fields, which could hold the atoms, assuming they were not moving too fast.

Gerald Gabrielse of Harvard is one of the scientists working on the project, and was the first to propose the magnetic bottle. "I'm delighted that it worked as we said it should," he said.

So are we going to see an antimatter-powered starship any time soon?

Probably not. "We have a long way to go yet; these are atoms that don't live long enough to do anything with them. So we need a lot more atoms and a lot longer times before it's really useful - but one has to crawl before you sprint," said Gabrielse.

Source: BBC News [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11773791]

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bojac6

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Some days you just have to stop and think "Wow, I'm living in the future."


Then, of course, you spend the rest of the day feeling cheated because you don't have Rocketpants.
 
Apr 28, 2008
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That is amazing.

Fantastic accomplishment. Can't wait to see whats next. Hopefully it doesn't end up exploding everything :p
 

VGStrife

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May 27, 2009
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Just whack some Dilithium in there, sort all your problems out.

OT: That is actually a really big step, beers will be had tonight at CERN. (Physicists do drink beer, right?)
 

TheYellowCellPhone

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I don't care what you apocolyptic people think: CERN is the coolest invention of the present. I will now use this thread as QED.
 

rainman2203

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Oct 22, 2008
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That's pretty awesome, yet also terrifying. What if they mess up and end up wormholing out entire solar system?

/puts on tinfoil hat
 

Smooth Operator

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Oct 5, 2010
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What do you mean first time?
Scientists have been at this a good long while now, and the magnetic coil idea is used in several places, most notable one being the Large Hadron Collider where they produce antimatter on a regular basis (and before you freak out, it's a few atoms at a time).
 

teh_Canape

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Irridium said:
That is amazing.

Fantastic accomplishment. Can't wait to see whats next. Hopefully it doesn't end up exploding everything :p
antimatter laser guns for some overmilitarized country

(nothing personal, but I see the USA is more likely to do so, like they did with Einstein's theory and built up atomic bombs, again, nothing personal, just a possibly and hopefully wrong opinion)

guns that, you know, we will be using to shoot down some terminators and (as MrBrightside919 said) skynet controlled Gundams....

on serious note, that's fucking impressive.

next up in line will be jet packs and cybernetical magnetic rollerblades
 

Frotality

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thank you science; everytime im about to declare stupidity the official language of all humanity, you come around and prove that some of us are actually still trying to advance our species and not stagnate in our own filth.

its just too bad the moment it becomes a practical energy source, the stupids are gonna take it over like they always do.
 

Andronicus

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Mar 25, 2009
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Okay, I get that this is a big deal and everything, we've never been able to hold antimatter before.

But what can we actually do with it. How the hell do we harness its "energy" to, uh make starships. I'm not a physics nut, so can someone explain this to me? I'm only just finishing my first year Chemistry at uni, and from what little physics-based stuff I was able to get from that, I would have thought something with no net charge would be pretty useless.
 

Kinokohatake

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Scott Bullock said:
Cern Scientists Trap First Antimatter Atoms

The difficulty in hanging on to them lies in the fact that antimatter must be kept from coming in contact with any form of matter, or the antimatter and matter will annihilate each other in a burst of energy.
Am I the only one who let out a tiny eep when I read this?
 

megs1120

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Jul 27, 2009
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Frotality said:
thank you science; everytime im about to declare stupidity the official language of all humanity, you come around and prove that some of us are actually still trying to advance our species and not stagnate in our own filth.

its just too bad the moment it becomes a practical energy source, the stupids are gonna take it over like they always do.
ANTI-MATTER MORE LIKE ANTI-CHRIST, JESUS WILL RETURN ON CHRISTMAS 2012 AND KNOCK YOUR INFIDEL SOCKS OFF!!

* Runs around screaming as hundreds of end times pamphlets pop out of the printer *
 

KeyMaster45

Gone Gonzo
Jun 16, 2008
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Mr.K. said:
What do you mean first time?
Scientists have been at this a good long while now, and the magnetic coil idea is used in several places, most notable one being the Large Hadron Collider where they produce antimatter on a regular basis (and before you freak out, it's a few atoms at a time).
...I'm guessing you don't know that the Collider was built and run by C.E.R.N.? They've been MAKING them for years but have never been able to actual catch them like they've done here.(apparently)

OT: And they said we'd all get sucked into a man-made black hole. I mean come on, how crazy can you g--- .....does anyone else hear that soul-sucking "woosh" noise coming from the general direction of Europe?
 

Newbonomicon

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Oct 21, 2010
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You know, if da Orkz ever came to Earth, they would convince themselves that the stuff we do at CERN should blow up the planet. This, obviously, would make it blow up the planet.