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Keyword: positrons

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  • Physicists create tabletop antimatter 'gun'

    06/25/2013 10:10:32 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 49 replies
    Phys.Org ^ | 06-25-2013 | Bob Yirka
    (Phys.org) —An international team of physicists working at the University of Michigan has succeeded in building a tabletop antimatter "gun" capable of spewing short bursts of positrons. In their paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the team describes how they created the gun, what it's capable of doing, and to what use it may be put. Positrons are anti-particles, the opposite twin of electrons. Besides being created in physics labs, they are also found in jets emitted by black holes and pulsars. To date, the creation of positrons for study has involved very big and expensive machines. One...
  • Antimatter: The Conundrum of Storage

    03/11/2011 10:39:51 PM PST · by LibWhacker · 15 replies
    Centauri Dreams ^ | 3/11/11 | Paul Gilster
    Antimatter: The Conundrum of Storage by Paul Gilster on March 11, 2011 Are we ever going to use antimatter to drive a starship? The question is tantalizing because while chemical reactions liberate about one part in a billion of the energy trapped inside matter — and even nuclear reactions spring only about one percent of that energy free — antimatter promises to release what Frank Close calls ‘the full mc2 latent within matter.’ But assuming you can make antimatter in large enough amounts (no mean task), the question of storage looms large. We know how to store antimatter in...
  • Billions of Positrons Created in Laboratory (anti-matter!)

    11/18/2008 1:23:54 PM PST · by LibWhacker · 23 replies · 647+ views
    « Irradiate a millimeter-thick gold target with the right kind of laser and you might get a surprise in the form of 100 billion positrons, the antimatter equivalent of electrons. Researchers had been studying the process at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, where they used thin targets that produced far fewer positrons. The new laser method came about through simulations that showed a thicker target was more effective.And suddenly lasers and antimatter are again making news. Hui Chen is the Livermore scientist behind this work: “We’ve detected far more anti-matter than anyone else has ever measured in a laser experiment....