Antimatter and matter

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                        Antimatter and matter

In 1928, the British physicist Paul A.M. Dirac (1902-1984) formulated a theory for the motion of electrons in electric and magnetic fields. Such theories had been formulated before, but what was unique about Dirac's was that his included the effects of Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity. Dirac's equations worked exceptionally well, describing many attributes of electron motion that previous equations could not.

But his theory also led to a surprising prediction that the electron must have an "antiparticle," having the same mass but a positive electrical charge (the opposite of a normal electron's negative charge). In 1932 Carl Anderson observed this new particle experimentally and it was named the "positron." This was the first known example of antimatter. In 1955 the antiproton was produced at the Berkeley Bevatron, and in 1995 scientists created the first anti-hydrogen atom at the CERN research facility in Europe by combining the anti-proton with a positron (the normal hydrogen atom consists of one proton and one electron). But when these antihydrogen atoms are produced, they are traveling at nearly the speed of light and don't last too long (40 nanoseconds is typical).

Dirac's equations predicted that all of the fundamental particles in nature must have a corresponding "antiparticle." In each case, the masses of the particle and antiparticle are identical, and other properties are nearly identical. But in all cases, the mathematical signs of some property are reversed. Antiprotons, for example, have the same mass as a proton but the opposite electric charge. Since Dirac's time, scores of these particle-antiparticle pairings have been observed. Even particles that have no electrical charge, such as the neutron, have antiparticles. These have other properties with a sign (such as magnetic moment) that can be reversed.

You`d be forgiven for thinking that an American predicted anti-matter. Or that it only existed in Star Trek. In fact, it was Paul Dirac, a Bristol born physicist, who predicted the stuff that propels starships in science fiction movies and who has also influenced much of our modern day technology, for example, computers.

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The discovery of anti-matter has given us the ability to see organs inside the body such as the brain, using positron emission tomography (PET). This is dealt with in the `anti-matter` poster, where the female character poses confidently between two anti-particles, which would normally annihilate in less than a blink of an eye. In the `spin` poster, whirling yellow balls indicate that spin is fast becoming an exploited property of the electron, with applications such as position and motion sensing in computer video games and keyhole surgery. The poster shows us how our computers can become faster and smaller using ...

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