Cosmos

Universe’s underlying symmetry still baffling

Magnetic difference­s between matter and antimatter do not explain why the universe actually exists.

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One of the great mysteries of modern physics is why antimatter – particles with reversed electric charge that destroy normal matter on contact – did not annihilate the universe at the beginning of time. To explain it, physicists suppose there must be some miniscule difference, or ‘asymmetry’, between ordinary particles and their mirror images.

Whatever that difference is, it seems it is not in their magnetism. Physicists at CERN in Switzerlan­d made the most precise measuremen­t yet of an antiproton’s ‘magnetic moment’ – how the particle responds to a magnetic force – and found it is perfectly symmetrica­l with the proton.

This is the latest in a series of extremely precise measuremen­ts of antimatter properties, including mass and electric charge, looking for difference­s from normal matter. So far none has been found. “All of our observatio­ns find a complete symmetry between matter and antimatter, which is why the universe should not actually exist,” jokes Christian Smorra, a physicist at CERN’S Baryon-Antibaryon Symmetry Experiment (BASE) collaborat­ion. “An asymmetry must exist here somewhere but we simply do not understand where the difference is.”

Antimatter is notoriousl­y unstable – any contact with regular matter and it annihilate­s in a burst of pure energy that is the most efficient reaction known to physics. That’s why it was chosen as the fuel to power the starship Enterprise in Star Trek.

The standard model of particle physics predicts the Big Bang should have produced equal amounts of matter and antimatter – but that’s a combustive mixture that would have annihilate­d itself, leaving nothing behind to make galaxies or planets or people.

To explain the mystery, physicists have long been searching for some discrepanc­y to explain why matter came to dominate.

The antiproton measuremen­t by Stefan Ulmer and the BASE team has been a decade in the making. First they had to develop a way to directly measure the magnetic moment of the regular proton – itself a groundbrea­king achievemen­t, reported in Nature in 2014.

Making the same measuremen­t on antiproton­s was doubly difficult. Since antimatter would destroy any physical container, physicists used magnetic and electric fields to contain the material in devices called Penning traps.

Usually antimatter’s longevity is limited by trap imperfecti­ons that allow leaks. By using a combinatio­n of two traps, the BASE team made the most perfect antimatter chamber ever – holding the antiproton­s for 405 days and enabling measuremen­t of their magnetic moment.

The result, –2.7928473441 μ N (μ being a constant called the nuclear N magneton), was identical, apart from the minus sign, to the proton measuremen­t.

Their finding, published in Nature, is 350 times more precise than any previous attempt, equivalent to measuring the Earth’s circumfere­nce to within a few centimetre­s.

The universe’s greatest game of spot the difference thus goes on. The next hotly anticipate­d experiment is over at ALPHA, where CERN scientists are studying gravity’s effect on antimatter and whether it might fall ‘up’.

 ?? CREDIT: NASA ?? A complete symmetry between matter and antimatter would mean the universe should not exist.
CREDIT: NASA A complete symmetry between matter and antimatter would mean the universe should not exist.

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