CERN to test first road transport of antiprotons

CERN researchers are set to transport around 100 antiprotons by truck around the campus near Geneva, Switzerland, on Tuesday. This marks the first demonstration of a planned antimatter delivery service to labs across Europe. The experiment, known as STEP, aims to enable precision measurements away from the noisy antimatter factory.

The Symmetry Tests in Experiments with Portable antiprotons (STEP) is part of CERN's Baryon Antibaryon Symmetry Experiment (BASE). Project leader Christian Smorra described it as “groundbreaking for antimatter science,” noting that the concept of transporting antiprotons has existed since the facility's start but is now feasible for the first time. Antiprotons, the antimatter counterparts to protons known since the 1920s, were first confined at CERN in the 1980s. CERN's Antimatter Decelerator remains the world's only facility producing millions of them on demand for seven experiments probing matter-antimatter asymmetry, which could explain the universe's matter dominance. In 2018, Smorra's team identified magnetic field interference at the factory hindering precision tests. They developed a portable trap using a 30-litre liquid helium tank, battery power for the test, and a custom vacuum system to handle road vibrations. Earlier in 2024, the setup successfully transported regular protons around the campus. About a week ago, roughly 100 antiprotons were loaded into the 850-kilogram device. On Tuesday morning, a crane will load it onto a specially driven truck for a 4-kilometre loop back to the factory. Success could lead to deliveries to sites like Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, though CERN's Large Hadron Collider upgrade from July will delay this until late 2028. Smorra emphasized safety: “There’s nothing dangerous about the transport of antimatter, because the amount that we are transporting is so small. If you transport 1000 antiprotons and it gets lost, you won’t even notice it.”

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Police-escorted heavy truck carrying nuclear waste Castor container on closed German motorway at dusk.
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First nuclear waste transport from Jülich to Ahaus underway

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The first transport of highly radioactive nuclear waste from Jülich to the interim storage facility in Ahaus began on Tuesday evening. A heavy goods vehicle carrying a Castor container is escorted by around 2,400 police officers. Motorway sections in North Rhine-Westphalia are temporarily closed.

Scientists at CERN have successfully transported antimatter by road for the first time, moving 92 antiprotons around a 4-kilometre loop on the laboratory's campus near Geneva, Switzerland. The 20-minute journey on a truck marks a key test for a planned antimatter delivery service across Europe. Researchers say this breakthrough will enable more precise experiments on the elusive particles.

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An international team has initiated the MACE experiment to detect a rare transformation of muonium into its antimatter counterpart, antimuonium. This process, if observed, would challenge the Standard Model of particle physics by violating lepton flavor conservation. The project aims to vastly improve upon previous searches conducted over two decades ago.

China's China Spallation Neutron Source (CSNS) has reached a significant milestone in its Phase II construction, with its first beamline—the neutron technology development station—successfully producing a neutron beam. This marks the completion of equipment development and installation for the beamline. Located in Dongguan, Guangdong province, the facility operates like a super microscope, using neutrons to examine materials and support breakthroughs in renewable energy, aerospace, and bioscience.

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Physicists at Heidelberg University have developed a theory that unites two conflicting views on how impurities behave in quantum many-body systems. The framework explains how even extremely heavy particles can enable the formation of quasiparticles through tiny movements. This advance could impact experiments in ultracold gases and advanced materials.

Nuclear physicists at the University of Tennessee have made three key findings about the rapid neutron-capture process that forms heavy elements like gold in stellar events. Their research, conducted at CERN's ISOLDE facility, clarifies how unstable atomic nuclei decay. The results, published in Physical Review Letters, could refine models of element formation in the universe.

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Scientists at the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society and international collaborators say they have reconstructed a real-time “movie” of atoms moving for up to a picosecond before an electron-transfer-mediated decay (ETMD) event, showing that nuclear motion and geometry can strongly influence when the decay occurs and what it produces.

 

 

 

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