BASE breaks new ground in matter–antimatter comparisons
Thursday 13 January 2022

View of the BASE experiment (Image: CERN) 5th January 2022: CERN, Geneva.
In a paper published today in the journal Nature, the BASE collaboration at CERN reports the most precise comparison yet between protons and antiprotons, the antimatter counterparts of protons.
Analysing proton and antiproton measurements taken over a year and a half at CERN’s antimatter factory,
a unique facility for antimatter production and analyses, the BASE team
measured the electric charge-to-mass ratios of the proton and the
antiproton with record precision. The results found these are identical
to within an experimental uncertainty of 16 parts per trillion.
“This
result represents the most precise direct test of a fundamental
symmetry between matter and antimatter, performed with particles made of
three quarks, known as baryons, and their antiparticles,” says BASE
spokesperson Stefan Ulmer.
According to the Standard Model,
which represents physicists’ current best theory of particles and their
interactions, matter and antimatter particles can differ, for example
in the way they transform into other particles, but most of their
properties, including their masses, should be identical. Finding any
slight difference between the masses of protons and antiprotons, or
between the ratios of their electric charge and mass, would break a
fundamental symmetry of the Standard Model, called CPT symmetry, and
point to new physics phenomena beyond the Model.
Such
a difference could also shed light on why the universe is made up
almost entirely of matter, even though equal amounts of antimatter
should have been created in the Big Bang. The differences between matter
and antimatter particles that are consistent with the Standard Model
are smaller by orders of magnitude to be able to explain this observed
cosmic imbalance.
To make their proton and antiproton measurements, the BASE team confined antiprotons and negatively charged hydrogen ions1,
which are negatively charged proxies for protons, in a state-of-the-art
particle trap called a Penning trap. In this device, a particle follows
a cyclical trajectory with a frequency, close to the cyclotron
frequency, that scales with the trap’s magnetic-field strength and the
particle's charge-to-mass ratio.
Alternately
feeding antiprotons and negatively charged hydrogen ions one at a time
into the trap, the BASE team measured, under the same conditions, the
cyclotron frequencies of these two kinds of particle, allowing their
charge-to-mass ratios to be compared.
Performed
over four campaigns between December 2017 and May 2019, these
measurements resulted in more than 24000 cyclotron-frequency
comparisons, each lasting 260 seconds, between the charge-to-mass ratios
of antiprotons and negatively charged hydrogen ions. From these
comparisons, and after accounting for the difference between a proton
and a negatively charged hydrogen ion, the BASE researchers found that
the charge-to-mass ratios of protons and antiprotons are equal to within
16 parts per trillion.
“This result is four times more precise than the previous best comparison
between these ratios, and the charge-to-mass ratio is now the most
precisely measured property of the antiproton.” says Stefan Ulmer. “To
reach this precision, we made considerable upgrades to the experiment
and carried out the measurements when the antimatter factory was closed
down, using our reservoir of antiprotons, which can store antiprotons
for years.” Making cyclotron-frequency measurements when the antimatter
factory is not in operation is ideal, because the measurements are not
affected by disturbances to the experiment’s magnetic field.
In
addition to comparing protons and antiprotons with an unprecedented
precision, the BASE team used their measurements to place stringent
limits on models beyond the Standard Model that violate CPT symmetry, as
well as to test a fundamental physics law known as the weak equivalence
principle.
According
to this principle, different bodies in the same gravitational field
undergo the same acceleration in the absence of friction forces. Because
the BASE experiment is placed on the surface of the Earth, its proton
and antiproton cyclotron-frequency measurements were made in the
gravitational field on the Earth’s surface. Any difference between the
gravitational interaction of protons and antiprotons would result in a
difference between the proton and antiproton cyclotron frequencies.
Sampling
the varying gravitational field of the Earth as the planet orbits
around the Sun, the BASE scientists found no such difference and set a
maximum value on this differential measurement of three parts in 100.
“This limit is comparable to the initial precision goals of experiments
that aim to drop antihydrogen in the Earth’s gravitational field,” says
Ulmer. “BASE did not directly drop antimatter in the Earth’s
gravitational field, but our measurement of the influence of gravity on a
baryonic antimatter particle is conceptually very similar, indicating
no anomalous interaction between antimatter and gravity at the achieved
level of uncertainty.”
Videos:
Video about BASE: https://videos.cern.ch/record/2289533
Video about the Antimatter Factory : https://videos.cern.ch/record/2312142
Photos:
BASE experiment: https://cds.cern.ch/record/2748765
BASE penning trap: https://cds.cern.ch/record/2748764
1 A hydrogen atom that has captured an extra electron.
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