ANTIPARTICLE

elementary particle corresponding to an ordinary particle such as the proton, neutron, or electron, but having the opposite electrical charge and magnetic moment. Every elementary particle has a corresponding antiparticle; the antiparticle of an antiparticle is the original particle. In a few cases, such as the photon and the neutral pion, the particle is its own antiparticle, but most antiparticles are distinct from their ordinary counterparts.

When a particle and its antiparticle collide, both can be annihilated and other particles such as photons or pions produced. In some cases this represents the total conversion of mass into energy. For example, the collision between an electron and its antiparticle, a positron, results in the conversion of their combined masses into the energy of two photons. The reverse process, pair production, is the simultaneous creation of a particle and its antiparticle from the particles that result from their mutual annihilation.

The existence of antiparticles for electrons was predicted in 1928 by P. A. M. Dirac's relativistic quantum theory of the electron. According to the theory both positive and negative values are possible for the total relativistic energy of a free electron. In 1932, Carl D. Anderson, while studying cosmic rays, discovered the predicted positron, the first known antiparticle. About 23 years passed before the discovery of the next antiparticles—the antiproton was discovered by Owen Chamberlain and Emilio Segrè in 1955 at the Univ. of California, and the antineutron was discovered the following year—but the existence of antiparticles for all known particles was by then firmly established in theory.

The existence of antiparticles makes possible the creation of antimatter, composed of atoms made up of antiprotons and antineutrons in a nucleus surrounded by positrons. A very simple type of "atom" incorporating antiparticles is positronium, a brief pairing of a positron and an electron that may occur before their annihilation. A few simple nuclei of antimatter have been created in the laboratory, such as the antideuteron (see deuterium). In 1995 nine atoms of antihydrogen (a single positively charged positron orbiting a single negatively charged antiproton) were created at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics by an Italian-German team headed by Walter Oelert.

Any antimatter in our part of the universe is necessarily very short-lived (the antihydrogen atoms, for example, survived for only 40 billionths of a second) because of the overwhelming preponderance of ordinary matter, by which the antimatter is quickly annihilated. Although scientists for a time considered the possibility that entire galaxies of antimatter could have evolved in a part of the universe far removed from our own, observations now indicate that this is not the case. The experimental work of Val L. Fitch and James W. Cronin in 1964 demonstrated an asymmetry in matter/antimatter reactions that may explain why the universe is composed mostly of matter. For their discovery, they shared the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Antiparticle
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books on: Antiparticle  - 99 results

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...however has a distinct antiparticle. The neutrino and...motion, whereas its antiparticle has a right-handed...particle and its antiparticle interact mutual annihilation...existence. Not all the antiparticles believed to exist...
...electron, implying that particle and antiparticle do not differ in mass, was challenged...P , and time reversal T every antiparticle behaves like its ordinary counterpart. Since the production of an antiparticle requires energy it was clear that...
...neutral particle has a neutral antiparticle. Only the antiparticle of the electron has its...particle collides with its antiparticle, both are converted to...the photon, are their own antiparticles. The universe today appears...
...when they meet. The positron is called the antiparticle of the electron (and the electron the antiparticle of the positron). We now know that for every particle in nature there is an antiparticle. 4 The antiparticle theory, with its prediction...
...were known, each with its antiparticle. In attempting to understand...peering at tracks. We saw antiparticle tracks every day, in images...composed of negative K mesons antiparticles to the positive K mesons...proton and a negative pion, antiparticle to the positive pi meson...
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journal articles on: Antiparticle  - 5 results

 
 
...strangest atoms. Atoms of power, antiparticles, quarkles, electromagnetic atoms...last one, SUPERTRON + SUPERTRON = ANTIPARTICLE. Then there is subtraction. Here...particle duality, and particle/antiparticle pairs. It states that matter cannot...
...completion of relative polarities in Chinese philosophy, as well as the revelation of modern physics that every particle has an antiparticle, attest to this. A revision of Habermasian theory requires the dissociation of communicative rationality with libertarian...
In 1948, the physicist Richard Feynman showed that temporal symmetry exists in particle/antiparticle trajectories. He proved that an anti- particle moving forward in time is the mathematical equivalent of a particle that moves...
...and worm holes. People were getting Nobel Prizes for discovering that a particle moving forward in time is actually an antiparticle moving backward in time. In addition, what I was talking about was coming from the study of non-ordinary states of consciousness...
...definition of annihilation, and I would like to see it applied to the battlefield: the phenomenon in which a particle or antiparticle (call that a philosophy, idea, or doctrine) as an electron and a positron (call those warriors), disappears with a...


 

magazine articles on: Antiparticle  - 15 results

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...chargeless neutron has an antiparticle. Its called--you...a particle and an antiparticle collide, they will...manufacture a blob of antiparticles at home, you would...when created, every antiparticle is always accompanied...happy without their antiparticles. Are there hidden...
...seethes with pairs of particles and antiparticles that constantly pop in and out of existence...warped that it can create particle-antiparticle pairs out of the vacuum. Occasionally...see a light signal. If a particle-antiparticle pair is created at this horizon, one...
...a particle and its antiparticle meet, they annihilate...Bang, particles and antiparticles had existed in equal...designed to look for antiparticles, especially antiprotons...such missions detect antiparticles of all kinds, so...other particles. The antiparticle detectors work by...
...animate some stills of particle and antiparticle tracks in a bubble chamber (a chamber...proof of the symmetry of particle/antiparticle in the sub-atomic world. We wanted...smashing into a target; this is the way antiparticles are created in the laboratory. To...
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newspaper articles on: Antiparticle  - 1 result

 
 
...puffing hard in hot places, and though I do know some cracking science words, like positron (thats your basic electron antiparticle, of course), my knowledge of physics is full of black holes. So I took my thought processes into more optimistic orbits...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Antiparticle  - 20 results

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...particle is its own antiparticle, but most antiparticles are distinct from...particle and its antiparticle collide, both...the first known antiparticle. About 23 years...discovery of the next antiparticles the antiproton...
...antiparticle , the muon and its antiparticle, the tau and its antiparticle, and the neutrino and...has a positively charged antiparticle, and has an associated...either family and 1 for antiparticles (see conservation laws...
...each of these particles, except the photon, gluon, and Z-boson, there is an antiparticle with the same mass and opposite charge. In most cases the antiparticle is denoted by an overbar over the particle symbol (e.g., the symbol for the...
...and quark also has a corresponding antiparticle : a particle that has the same mass...equivalent to exchanging particles and antiparticles; parity (P), which is a kind of...electron, or positron, which is the antiparticle of the electron; it was first detected...
...and , each have a mass about 273 times that of the electron. The neutral pion is its own antiparticle , while the negative pion is the antiparticle of the positive pion. It is now known that each pion (and, more generally, each meson...
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