Does Antimatter Fall Up Or Down?
KentuckyFC writes "There are enough loopholes in the general theory of relativity to allow antimatter to fall up rather than down in a gravitational field. We've never been able to make enough of the stuff to do the experiment. But at the European particle physics laboratory at CERN, where scientists have been refining the technique for making antihydrogen, researchers are designing an experiment called AEGIS that will finally settle the matter. The idea is simple — fire a beam of antihydrogen atoms and watch which way they fall — but the details are fiendish (abstract). The answer should help solve a number of important conundrums such as why there is so little antimatter in our part of the universe and what the value of the cosmological constant is."
Or will it settle (or unsettle) the anti-matter?
According to GR, gravity is the curvature of Space-Time. As the anti-matter moves through space it has to follow this curvature. If it does not, that means GR is wrong (which may be the case, but I doubt this experiment will disprove GR).
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It doesn't-matter.
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If that were true, while it would have no practical use in the near future
Not necessarily - Merely opening that particular conceptual door would lead to a massive influx of funding and revisited anomalous past results.
Interesting thing about experimentation, even the most honest of researchers tends to throw away "bad" results (in the sense of not publishing them, not in the academically-dishonest sense of omitting them from the data). If the scientific community suddenly accepted the possibility of spooky-effect-X, you can bet that dozens or even hundreds of research groups would dredge up their past efforts to see if effect-X explains their results.
Case in point, l'Acedemie des Sciences and meteorites. Up to the turn of the 19th century, only idiots would dare claim that rocks could fall from space... Until the scientific community decided they could, at which point a huge body of past evidence appeared practically overnight supporting the existance of such falling objects.
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As I rememeber, this has already been tested by drifting positrons down the length of the SLAC accelerator tube and measuring the beam deflection due to gravity (at least 20+ years ago).
Yes, anti-matter does fall down just like matter.
Dr. Frank J. Nagy Fermilab Computing Division Authentication and Directory Services Group
There are enough loopholes in the general theory of relativity to allow antimatter to fall up rather than down in a gravitational field.
Uh, no there are not. Gravity (or geometry, same thing in the theory) depends on mass energy in General Relativity. Stuff (with mass energy) follows the metric (the local geodesic). Even photons (which are their own anti-particles) follow the geodesic - and that has certainly been tested. Equivalence principle tests also show that different sorts of nuclear matter (including neutrons) individually follow the geodesic. Anti-matter certainly has mass energy, and (with matter) can be converted to photons and is no different in the theory. In other words "there is only one type of geodesics and there are no antigeodesics for antimatter."
The original article talks about "flavors" of General Relativity. Ain't so such beasties. Period. If you go to the real original article, you find a proposal for a 1% test of the equivalence principle for antimatter, and no such claims of flavors. Now, the equivalence principle has been tested to better than parts per trillion, and part of the mass energy in ordinary matter is made up of antimatter (in virtual particle pairs), so (based on the experimental evidence) I would claim that this test will be negative and is not actually that interesting as new physics. (The articles say that these older tests are "model dependent," but they are not model dependent enough to matter for this.)
That doesn't mean that this shouldn't be done (everything should be tested in physics, and different tests are always useful), but the prediction of General Relativity is clear : if anti-matter has anti-gravity, then General Relativity is wrong. The experimental evidence is also clear : this isn't going to be accurate enough to matter. Will make for some good public relations, though.
You mean apart from all of the air in-between you and the target?
Publicity is especially important in quantum physics because we don't know if they are working or not working until they are observed.
Layne
I saw a paper in the Journal of Irreproducible Results advancing the theory that the age of the universe is a nonlinear function of time.
They plotted on a graph the age people (or rather, western civilization) thought that the age of the universe was at various points in history--when the 19th century geologists said it had to be at least hundreds of thousands of years old, when the 20th century astronomers said that it had to be even older than that-- and plotted the points on a graph. They formed a smooth curve demonstrating (I think) a geometric increase.
So their theory was that, assuming all the age-of-the-universe estimates were correct, that means the beginning of the universe is moving backwards in time, away from us. In 1000ad, the universe really was 6000 years old, and now it really is 14.5 billion years old, and in another century, it will probably be in the trillions of years old
(I love the Journal of Irreproducible Results!)