Breakthrough In Antimatter Production

Inside a large hall and in the bottom half of the frame is the ALPHA experiment, which is a large array of cables, computing equipment and tubes. The ALPHA logo is visible on the right-hand side.

The ALPHA experiment in the Antiproton Decelerator hall at CERN (Image: CERN)

In a paper published today in Nature Communications, researchers at the ALPHA experiment at CERN's Antimatter Factory report a new technique that allows them to produce over 15 000 antihydrogen atoms - the simplest form of atomic antimatter - in a matter of hours.

"These numbers would have been considered science fiction 10 years ago," said Jeffrey Hangst, spokesperson for the ALPHA experiment. "With larger numbers of antihydrogen atoms now more readily available, we can investigate atomic antimatter in greater detail and at a faster pace than before."

To create atomic antihydrogen (a positron orbiting an antiproton), the ALPHA collaboration must produce and trap clouds of antiprotons and positrons separately, then cool them down and merge them so that antihydrogen atoms can form. This process has been refined and steadily improved over many years. But now, using a pioneering technique to cool the positrons, the ALPHA team has increased the rate of production of antihydrogen atoms eightfold.

This spectacular advance in the production rate is all down to how the positrons are prepared. First, the positrons are collected from a radioactive form of sodium and contained in what is known as a Penning trap, where fine-tuned electromagnetic fields hold the antiparticles in place. However, they do not remain still. Like a tiger in a zoo, the positrons circle their cage, causing them to lose energy. This cools the cloud of positrons, but not enough for them to efficiently merge with the antiprotons to form antihydrogen atoms. So, the ALPHA team recently tried a new approach, which was to add a cloud of laser-cooled beryllium ions to the trap so that the positrons would lose energy in a process called sympathetic cooling.

This got the positron cloud down to a temperature of around -266 °C, making it much more likely to form antihydrogen atoms when mixed with the antiprotons. This approach allowed over 15 000 antihydrogen atoms to be accumulated in under seven hours. To put this into perspective, it took a previous experiment 10 weeks to accumulate the 16 000 antihydrogen atoms required to measure the spectral structure of antihydrogen with unprecedented precision. "The new technique is a real game-changer when it comes to investigating systematic uncertainties in our measurements. We can now accumulate antihydrogen overnight and measure a spectral line the following day", said Niels Madsen, deputy spokesperson for ALPHA and leader of the positron-cooling project.

Using this approach for cooling positrons, the ALPHA experiment produced over 2 million antihydrogen atoms over the course of the experimental runs of 2023-24. And this year, the researchers are making use of the unprecedented numbers of antihydrogen atoms to study the effect of gravity on antimatter as part of the ALPHA-g experiment. This technique will allow even more precise measurements to be made and make it possible to probe deeper into the properties and behaviour of atomic antimatter.

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