Friday, November 29, 2019
Anti-Matter Essays (1208 words) - Antimatter, Elementary Particles
  Anti-Matter  Ordinary matter has negatively charged electrons circling a positively charged  nuclei. Anti-matter however has positively charged electrons - positrons -  orbiting a nuclei with a negative charge - anti-protons. Only anti-protons and  positrons are able to be produced at this time, but scientists in Switzerland  have begun a series of experiments which they believe will lead to the creation  of the first anti-matter element -- Anti-Hydrogen. (Encarta 99) The Research    Early scientists often made two mistakes about anti-matter. Some thought it had  a negative mass, and would thus feel gravity as a push rather than a pull. If  this were so, the antiproton's negative mass/energy would cancel the proton's  when they met and nothing would remain; in reality, two extremely high-energy  gamma photons are produced. Today's theories of the universe say that there is  no such thing as a negative mass. (Encarta 99) The second and more subtle  mistake is the idea that anti-water would only annihilate with ordinary water,  and could safety be kept in (say) an iron container. This is not so: it is the  subatomic particles that react so destructively, and their arrangement makes no  difference. Scientists at CERN in Geneva are working on a device called the LEAR  (low energy anti-proton ring) they are attempting to slow the velocity of the  anti-protons to a billionth of their normal speeds. The slowing of the  anti-protons and positrons, which normally travel at a velocity near the speed  of light, is necessary so that they have a chance of meeting and combining into  anti-hydrogen. The problems with research in the field of anti-matter is that  when the anti-matter elements touch matter elements they annihilate each other.    The total combined mass of both elements are released in a spectacular blast of  energy. Electrons and positrons come together and vanish into high-energy gamma  rays (along with a certain number of harmless neutrinos, which pass through  whole planets without effect). Hitting ordinary matter, 1 kg of anti-matter  explodes with the force of up to 43 million tons of TNT - as though several  thousand Hiroshima bombs were detonated at once. (Encarta 99) So how can  anti-matter be stored? Outer space seems the only place, both for storage and  for large-scale production. On Earth, gravity will sooner or later pull any  anti-matter into disastrous contact with matter. Anti-matter has the opposite  effect of gravity on it, the anti-matter is 'pushed away' by the gravitational  force due to its opposite nature to that of matter. A way around the gravity  problem appears at CERN, where fast moving anti-protons can be held in a'storage ring' around which they constantly move - and kept away from the walls  of the vacuum chamber - by magnetic fields. However, this only works for charged  particles, it does not work for anti-neutrons, for example. The Unanswerable    Question Though anti-matter can be slowly manufactured, natural anti-matter has  never been found. In theory, we should expect equal amounts of matter and  anti-matter to be formed at the beginning of the universe - perhaps some far off  galaxies are the made of anti-matter that somehow became separated from matter  long ago. A problem with the theory is that cosmic rays that reach Earth from  far-off parts are often made up of protons or even nuclei, never of anti-protons  or antinuclei. There may be no natural anti-matter anywhere. In that case, what  happened to it? The most obvious answer is that, as predicted by theory, all the  matter and anti-matter underwent mutual annihilation in the first seconds of  creation; but why there do we still have matter? It seems unlikely that more  matter than anti-matter should be formed. In this scenario, the matter would  have to exceed the anti-matter by one part in 1000 million. An alternative  theory is produced by the physicist M. Goldhaber in 1956, is that the universe  divided into two parts after its formation : the universe that we live in, and  an alternate universe of anti-matter that cannot be observed by us. (Encarta 99)    The Chemistry Though they have no charge, anti-neutrons differ from neutrons in  having opposite 'spin' and 'baryon number'. All heavy particles, like protons or  neutrons, are called baryons. A firm rule is that the total baryon number cannot  change, though this apparently fails inside black holes. A neutron (baryon  number +1) can become a proton (baryon number +1) and an electron (baryon number    0 since an electron is not a baryon but a light particle). The total electric  charge stays at zero and the total baryon number at +1. But a proton    
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