Posted on 09/18/2002 11:47:20 AM PDT by blam
Scientists claim antimatter breakthrough
Scientists have announced the first large-scale production of antimatter.
A team based at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research in Geneva say they have developed a large amount of the substance.
Antimatter is a reverse form of ordinary matter. When the two kinds of matter meet they annihilate each other in an enormous burst of energy.
It's this process which provides the power source for Starship Enterprise in its film and TV space adventures.
Physicists have made only very small quantities of antimatter before. But the CERN team say they have made at least 50,000 atoms of anti-hydrogen, the antimatter counterpart of normal hydrogen.
They admit the achievement will not lead to starship-style warp drives - at least not in the foreseeable future.
But it could help scientists answer some of the greatest unsolved mysteries of the universe.
Team member Professor Michael Charlton from the University of Wales at Swansea said: "This is a milestone that has opened up new horizons, to enable scientists to study symmetry in nature and explore the fundamental laws of physics which govern the universe."
He says it will also help scientists address what happened to the antimatter created in the Big Bang.
According to Nature, the CERN scientists used sophisticated electric and magnetic field traps and ultra-low temperatures to generate the anti-atoms.
Story filed: 19:02 Wednesday 18th September 2002
It makes the biggest nuke look like a kiddy firecracker.
By "large quantitities", they're likely talking micrograms, or milligrams at most. Previous production has been in the several-atomic-particles to several-atoms range. . .
Thanks for running the numbers. I figured that 50,000 hydrogen atoms (or protons, almost the same from a mass/energy standpoint) wasn't enough to even produce a noticeable "pop!", let alone something usefull.
This is mainly because the energy of a chemical or atomic reaction (explosives or nukes) tends to be translated into concussion and other blast effects (not to mention radioactive fallout) that extend the damage radius of the weapon. A matter-antimatter collision releases energy across a wide spectrum with very little concussive effect, making it a great fuel but a lousy bomb...
LOL VERY funny; I think my workmates think I'm crazy for bursting out laughing for no reason just now. hehe
Go here and look at Crystals.
Unfortunately, they seem to be out of stock.
No, but I think that it's more than we have ever made at one time before, so it is a significant accomplishment.
When we manage to make 1.00 mg of anti-hydrogen, and assuming 100% efficiency in annihilation, then we'll be cooking. (180 GJ, or equivalently, 49.9 MWh...)
Note: this topic is from 9/18/2002. Thanks blam.
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