Their most recent paper, published in Nature Physics, presents new measurements of the properties of antihydrogen's 1S–2S transition, which is an electronic energy transition in antihydrogen atoms.
And now the Antimatter Factory at Cern has succeeded in creating antihydrogen. Researchers hope it could help answer one of the universe’s biggest mysteries: where did all the antimatter go?
An artist's conceptual rendering of antihydrogen atoms falling out the bottom of the magnetic trap of the ALPHA-g apparatus. As the antihydrogen atoms escape, they touch the chamber walls and ...
and saw the ALPHA-g experiment that was set up to test gravity’s effect on antihydrogen. Team member Jeffrey Hangst told us what’s next for antimatter research. Receive a weekly dose of ...
In a paper published today in Nature, the ALPHA collaboration at CERN’s Antimatter Factory, which includes academics from The University of Manchester, shows that within the precision of their ...