Antimatter, Negative Mass, & Gravity: Unveiling the Mysteries

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the properties of antimatter, particularly its interaction with gravity, the concept of negative mass, and whether antimatter behaves differently from normal matter in gravitational fields. Participants explore theoretical implications, experimental challenges, and the definitions of antimatter.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that antimatter reacts to gravity in the same way as normal matter, challenging the idea that it has antigravity properties.
  • Others argue that the terminology surrounding antimatter is misleading, emphasizing that it is still matter with opposite charges for certain particles.
  • There are claims that experiments have not definitively shown whether antimatter has positive or negative gravitational effects, with references to ongoing research at CERN and Fermilab.
  • Concerns are raised about the feasibility of conducting gravity experiments with charged antimatter due to the dominance of electromagnetic forces over gravitational effects.
  • Some participants recall historical plans for experiments designed to test the gravitational behavior of antiprotons, questioning whether such experiments have been conducted or achieved conclusive results.
  • Discussions include the idea that the labels of matter and antimatter are arbitrary and do not affect the fundamental physics governing their interactions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express disagreement on the nature of antimatter's interaction with gravity, with some asserting it behaves like normal matter while others question this assumption. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the definitive experimental evidence for these claims.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the lack of definitive experimental results regarding the gravitational behavior of antimatter and the challenges posed by electromagnetic forces in conducting such experiments. The discussion also reflects uncertainty about the historical context of proposed experiments.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those studying particle physics, gravitational theory, and the properties of antimatter, as well as individuals curious about the experimental challenges in these areas.

joychandra
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In many websites I read that antimatter has antigravity properties. Does negative mass exist. Does antimatter react differently with gravity.
 
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That's false, antimatter reacts to gravity the same way normal matter does.
 
"antimatter" is kind of a bad name - it's still matter in most senses of the word. What makes it "anti" is that certain types of charges, like electric charge, are opposite for a particle and its antiparticle partner. The positron is just an electron with opposite electric charge - in all other ways they're identical. Some particles have no charge at all, so their antimatter partners are exactly the same as they are.
 
joychandra said:
In many websites I read that antimatter has antigravity properties. Does negative mass exist. Does antimatter react differently with gravity.

No on all counts. Antimatter does not have any "anti-gravity" properties, whatever that means. Negative mass does not exist and antimatter acts like regular matter in a gravitational field.
 
Cern (in Switzerland) has been making neutral anti-hydrogen atoms, but there is no difinitive experiment on whether they have positive or negative gravity with respect to ordinary matter. Fermilab (near Chicago) has been producing antiprotons since 1985, and they behave just as expected; same mass as protons, opposite charge, and annihilates very fast unless they are contained in relativistic beams at very-very high vacuum.. Antiprotons have positive mass, the same as protons. They are very expensive to produce (guess 10 million antiprotons per $?). The neutral pion is its own antiparticle, and it has a very short half life, so all we can study are its decay products.
 
Bob S said:
Cern (in Switzerland) has been making neutral anti-hydrogen atoms, but there is no difinitive experiment on whether they have positive or negative gravity with respect to ordinary matter. Fermilab (near Chicago) has been producing antiprotons since 1985, and they behave just as expected; same mass as protons, opposite charge, and annihilates very fast unless they are contained in relativistic beams at very-very high vacuum.. Antiprotons have positive mass, the same as protons. They are very expensive to produce (guess 10 million antiprotons per $?). The neutral pion is its own antiparticle, and it has a very short half life, so all we can study are its decay products.

This statement doesn't even make sense. For one it's contradictory. Anti-hydrogen is an anti-proton. Why do you believe that anti-matter doesn't behave like normal matter in a gravitational field? Mass is not something that changes between matter and anti-matter.
 
Pengwuino said:
This statement doesn't even make sense. For one it's contradictory. Anti-hydrogen is an anti-proton. Why do you believe that anti-matter doesn't behave like normal matter in a gravitational field? Mass is not something that changes between matter and anti-matter.
An anti-proton has a charge of about -1.6 x 10-19 Coulombs. An anti-hydrogen atom has a positron attached (charge = +1.6 x 10-19 Coulombs), in an (anti-)Bohr orbit, so it has no net charge. I agree that mass does not change between matter and anti-matter, but would you be willing to say that charge does not change either? Electromagnetic forces are so large relative to gravitational forces that no gravity experiments are possible on charged anti-matter. As for how antimatter behaves in a gravitational field of normal stellar matter, we simply do not know. CERN would like to do that experiment.

PS We do know that whenever anti-matter annihilates with matter, it produces an equal amount of matter and antimatter, so this in itself does not prove that antimatter has positive mass. But matter - anti-matter annihilation at rest produces 2 x the rest mass energy of one particle (e.g., electron or proton) so we can say that matter and anti-matter have the same "rest mass" (m0c2).
 
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I'd be inclined to say that even perturbation effects in charge distributions of a neutral atom would far dominate any gravitational effects. But then again I could be wrong since GR, etc, isn't really my bag.
 
Bob S said:
Electromagnetic forces are so large relative to gravitational forces that no gravity experiments are possible on charged anti-matter.
It would not be hard in principle to test the response of an antielectron or antiproton in the Earth's gravitational field, for example... has that really never been done?
 
  • #10
I don't know if it would be. Which makes me question if it's actually been done.
 
  • #11
diazona said:
It would not be hard in principle to test the response of an antielectron or antiproton in the Earth's gravitational field, for example... has that really never been done?
It would be very hard. At Fermilab, the anti-protons have a total mass E of about 9 times the rest mass m0c2, and its position is controlled by both electric and magnetic fields. Checking the gravitational force on charged anti-matter would have to be done in an extremely high vacuum, and without any electric fields. A charged particle can create an image charge (of opposite sign) on any grounded metal surface which will attract it to the surface. How do you maintain an extremely high vacuum without an enclosure, except in outer space? I have looked at singly-charged ion charges with microscopes (like the Michelson Oil Drop Experiment) but we would need anti-oil drops to do it.
 
  • #12
Years ago (late 80's, maybe early 90's) I recall reading about plans for an experiment in which someone was going to create a vacuum chamber many meters tall (I don't recall how many, but I remember picturing it as being something like 20 m) and inject antiprotons upward at the bottom so that they could shoot ballistically to the top and then fall back down again. The idea, of course, was to verify that they would take the same time as for protons, thus confirming that their gravitational interactions were the same.

Anyone else remember hearing about this? Did it ever happen?
 
  • #13
As electric charge, the labels off pairs of particles as matter and antimatter, such as e+ and e-, are artificial. Physics is invariant under an arbitrary relabeling of any set of particle-antiparticle pairs.

If all references in the world to an anti-S quark were replaced with an S quark, and all references to an S quark were replaced with an anti-S quark, statements in physics would remain the same--true statements about them would still true statements.
All the equations of particle interaction would remain true as the original.
 
  • #14
Quote from belliott4488:
Years ago (late 80's, maybe early 90's) I recall reading about plans for an experiment in which someone was going to create a vacuum chamber many meters tall (I don't recall how many, but I remember picturing it as being something like 20 m) and inject antiprotons upward at the bottom so that they could shoot ballistically to the top and then fall back down again. The idea, of course, was to verify that they would take the same time as for protons, thus confirming that their gravitational interactions were the same."

I am not aware of such an experiment. Neutrons (a neutral particle) with several hundred micro-electron-volt energy will rise only several feet (more or less, I forget) before falling back down. Charged antiprotons would be much more difficult. For those who are interested in details of proposed anti-gravity (or anti-matter gravity) experiments, read the articles in the second document under "some useful documents" in this article:
http://capp.iit.edu/hep/pbar/
These are very large files.
 
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  • #15
Well yes, in theory, but that's the whole point that we're talking about. It's always been taken as a given that antiparticles behave identically to particles, its just never, actually, been checked.

P.S. In regards to belliot's comment, that seems like a very doable experiment which suggests to me that it may not be accurate enough given the cloud of doubt over the issue
 
  • #16
maverick_starstrider said:
Well yes, in theory, but that's the whole point that we're talking about. It's always been taken as a given that antiparticles behave identically to particles, its just never, actually, been checked.

P.S. In regards to belliot's comment, that seems like a very doable experiment which suggests to me that it may not be accurate enough given the cloud of doubt over the issue
Let's calculate the velocity of a 100 micro-eV antiproton, and decide if it is low enough.

So (1/2) Mv2 = 0.1 milli-eV
Mv2 = 0.2 meV
But Mv2 = Mc2(v/c)2 = 0.2 meV
Or (v/c)2 = 0.2 meV/938 x 106 eV = 2.1 x 10-13
Or v = 140 meters per sec (still much too fast).
How do you cool anti-protons to 100 micro-eV, and keep them away from electric fields that might upset the experiment?
 
  • #17
My "Well yes, in theory" was in regards to Phrak's comment. Not yours Bob S. I guess we were just posting at the same time so your post got in ahead of mine.
 
  • #18
maverick_starstrider said:
My "Well yes, in theory" was in regards to Phrak's comment. Not yours Bob S. I guess we were just posting at the same time so your post got in ahead of mine.

Yeah. In theory. If a particle and its antiparticle were found experimentally to fall at different rates, this would be a nice development. Anything to throw a shoe into the works.
 
  • #19
Hey, as a person who deals pretty much entirely with large non-relativistic quantum systems my intuition would say they're identical. I'm just saying it's probably true that no one's checked and no harm in that
 
  • #20
maverick_starstrider said:
Hey, as a person who deals pretty much entirely with large non-relativistic quantum systems my intuition would say they're identical. I'm just saying it's probably true that no one's checked and no harm in that
Certainly CPT (charge parity time) reversal invariance is the same. Based on Fermilab and CERN experiments, the (absolute)* masses are the same (based on magnetic field strengths to deflect antiprotons).
recall E2 = (Mc2)2 + (pc)2

Magnet systems measure momentum pc

pc = +/- sqrt(E2 -(Mc2)2)
Is pc > 0 or < 0 in this equation?

Is the fact that Fermilab has to change the polarity of their magnets to bend and store antiprotons sufficient proof that pc > 0? Then is M > 0? So let's forget about negative masses and think about +/- gravity..
 
  • #21
Bob S said:
Certainly CPT (charge parity time) reversal invariance is the same. Based on Fermilab and CERN experiments, the (absolute)* masses are the same (based on magnetic field strengths to deflect antiprotons).
recall E2 = (Mc2)2 + (pc)2

Magnet systems measure momentum pc

pc = +/- sqrt(E2 -(Mc2)2)
Is pc > 0 or < 0 in this equation?

Is the fact that Fermilab has to change the polarity of their magnets to bend and store antiprotons sufficient proof that pc > 0? Then is M > 0? So let's forget about negative masses and think about +/- gravity..

I don't follow. But you're on to something. The equivalence principle says you don't change the polarity to hold protons with negative mass. You have to keep them from falling into the center of curvature by pushing them outward.
 
  • #22
Phrak said:
I don't follow. But you're on to something. The equivalence principle says you don't change the polarity to hold protons with negative mass. You have to keep them from falling into the center of curvature by pushing them outward.
Right now (I just checked) the Fermilab Tevatron is running at 980.2 GeV (980 x 109 eV), and the protons (about 7 x 1012) are going in one direction (around a 4-mile-circumference ring), and the antiprotons (about 1.6 x 1012) are going in the other. This proves that the anti-proton has either the same sign mass and opposite sign charge, or vice-versa. The fact that an anti-proton with a positron makes anti-hydrogen shows that they have the opposite sign charge to a positron and a proton. So they have the same sign mass.
 
  • #23
Bob S said:
Right now (I just checked) the Fermilab Tevatron is running at 980.2 GeV (980 x 109 eV), and the protons (about 7 x 1012) are going in one direction (around a 4-mile-circumference ring), and the antiprotons (about 1.6 x 1012) are going in the other. This proves that the anti-proton has either the same sign mass and opposite sign charge, or vice-versa. The fact that an anti-proton with a positron makes anti-hydrogen shows that they have the opposite sign charge to a positron and a proton. So they have the same sign mass.

Same. But equal?
 
  • #24
If the same EM fields are acting on both the protons and antiprotons to keep them going in circles, wouldn't that imply that their masses must be exactly the same? I can imagine that even the slightest difference in mass would make either the protons or antiprotons fly out of the centre of the tube in a matter of nanoseconds in that speed...
 
  • #25
joychandra said:
In many websites I read that antimatter has antigravity properties.

Which websites? This is not a true statement, so I would question the reliability of those sites.

Bob S said:
Cern (in Switzerland) has been making neutral anti-hydrogen atoms, but there is no difinitive experiment on whether they have positive or negative gravity with respect to ordinary matter.

I strongly disagree. If anti-matter gravitated differently, photons must also (at least if you want energy to be conserved) as they are self-conjugate. But Pound and Rebka showed that photons gravitate exactly like ordinary matter.

Additionally, if antimatter gravitated differently, the sea antiquarks in nuclei would gravitate differently and you'd see a composition dependent force of gravity. Eotvos and others have failed to find such a thing to exquisite precision.
 
  • #26
Vanadium 50 said:
If anti-matter gravitated differently, photons must also (at least if you want energy to be conserved) as they are self-conjugate. But Pound and Rebka showed that photons gravitate exactly like ordinary matter.
That's a good point. If one wanted to postulate that particles and their antimatter partners somehow had different gravitational properties, then the particles that are self-conjugate in the Standard model would suddenly have to have different particle/antiparticle states, one with each of the allegedly different gravitational properties. It's not clear to me how that could make any sense, e.g. an "antiphoton" would have different gravitational interactions than a photon (??).
 
  • #27
From Bob S:
The fact that an anti-proton with a positron makes anti-hydrogen shows that they have the opposite sign charge to a positron and a proton. So they have the same sign mass.
Phrak said:
Same. But equal?
Based on the fact that the proton and anti-proton have equal but opposite Q/pc = Q/βγMc2 (same orbit in Tevatron), and the fact that they have the same β and γ (exact same revolution frequency in Tevatron), their masses are the same.
α β γ δ ε ζ η θ ι κ λ μ ν ξ ο π ρ ς σ τ υ φ χ ψ ω
 
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  • #28
joychandra said:
In many websites I read that antimatter has antigravity properties. Does negative mass exist. Does antimatter react differently with gravity.

Antimatter is predicted to have the same response to gravity as matter. However, as has been stated, testing this would require making a large enough mass of antimater to measure gravitational effects.

Negative mass is a different matter. Negative energy would have negative mass, and is predicted to be gravitationaly repulsive. I have a link to a site, but I rather suspect the site is a voilation of copyright. There was an article in the January 2000 issue of SciAm.
 
  • #29
Vanadium 50 said:
I strongly disagree. If anti-matter gravitated differently, photons must also (at least if you want energy to be conserved) as they are self-conjugate. But Pound and Rebka showed that photons gravitate exactly like ordinary matter..
The Mossbauer Effect experiment at Harvard is a beautiful experiment, and it showed that photons from iron-57 gravitate. It certainly implies that antimatter also would gravitate. But photons do not have quarks, or "mass" meaning E2 - (pc)2 =0.

Vanadium 50 said:
Additionally, if antimatter gravitated differently, the sea antiquarks in nuclei would gravitate differently and you'd see a composition dependent force of gravity. Eotvos and others have failed to find such a thing to exquisite precision.
.
protons are uud, neutrons are udd, I believe that anti-protons are u-bar,u-bar,d-bar, anti-neutrons are u-bar,d-bar,d-bar.
 
  • #30
This thread has made me think about the gravitational effect of antimatter from the point of view of the dirac sea, and to my surprise this line of thinking would predict that the 'holes' will repel matter gravitationally (because the holes represent an abscence of mass, which means less gravitational attraction in the direction of the hole). Does anyone know how to resolve this non-standard prediction within the dirac sea picture, or do we just say that the gravitational effect of antimatter is beyond the limits of the dirac sea picture?
 

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