CERN transports antimatter by road for the first time

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.

Around 100 antiprotons completed a 20-minute trip on the back of a lorry around CERN's particle physics laboratory campus near Geneva, Switzerland. This demonstration tested a portable container designed for a future antimatter delivery service, allowing antiprotons to be sent on demand to laboratories across Europe for experiments probing their properties and the universe's matter-antimatter imbalance. Christian Smorra at CERN, who leads the effort, said: “I’m very happy that we are now at the stage where it’s possible to [transport antimatter]. It has been a long journey, and it’s a lot of sweat and tears that went into this to make it work.” The Symmetry Tests in Experiments with Portable antiprotons (STEP) project, launched in 2018 by Smorra's team, uses a tank of liquid helium and powerful magnetic fields to contain the antiprotons, slowing them from near-light speeds produced at CERN's Antimatter Decelerator hall, known as the antimatter factory. During the test, 92 antiprotons travelled the 4-kilometre road loop from the factory and back, arriving intact despite the challenges of magnetic interference. Jeffrey Hangst at Aarhus University in Denmark, who runs the nearby ALPHA experiment studying antihydrogen atoms, noted: “This really opens up many more years of precision measurements, because this stops them from being hindered by the noise in the hall.” The team aims to extend the service beyond CERN, but upgrades to the Large Hadron Collider will close much of the facility until the end of 2028.

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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.

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.

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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.

물리학자 판 지엔웨이와 그의 팀이 단일 원자를 사용해 100킬로미터 거리에서 장치 독립 양자 키 분배를 시연하며, 실험실 실험과 실제 적용 간 격차를 좁혔다. 이 획기적 성과는 얽힌 원자의 양자역학적 행동을 통해 보안을 강화해, 장치에 결함이 있거나 조작당하더라도 양자 통신 시스템을 현실 세계 취약점으로부터 보호한다.

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Researchers have discovered that entropy remains constant during the transition from a chaotic quark-gluon state to stable particles in proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider. This unexpected stability serves as a direct signature of quantum mechanics' unitarity principle. The finding, based on refined models and LHC data, challenges initial intuitions about the process's disorder.

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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Researchers using the SNO+ detector in Canada have observed solar neutrinos converting carbon-13 into nitrogen-13, marking one of the lowest-energy neutrino interactions detected. This achievement relied on tracking paired light bursts separated by minutes. The finding builds on prior neutrino research that earned a Nobel Prize.

 

 

 

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