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CERN Can Now Produce Antihydrogen Atoms Eight Times Faster Than Before
vendredi 21 novembre 2025, 11:00 , par Slashdot
Antihydrogen is the 'mirror version' of hydrogen, made from an antiproton and a positron. Trapping and studying it helps scientists explore how antimatter behaves, and whether it follows the same rules as matter. Producing and trapping antihydrogen is an extremely complicated process. Previous methods took 24 hours to trap just 2,000 atoms, limiting the scope of experiments at ALPHA. The Swansea-led team has changed that. Using laser-cooled beryllium ions, the team has demonstrated that it is possible to cool positrons to less than 10 Kelvin (below -263C), significantly colder than the previous threshold of about 15 Kelvin. These cooler positrons dramatically boost the efficiency of antihydrogen production and trapping -- allowing a record 15,000 atoms to be trapped in less than seven hours. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/11/21/066251/cern-can-now-produce-antihydrogen-atoms-eight-tim...
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Date Actuelle
ven. 21 nov. - 11:37 CET
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