About: Antiparticle is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 946 publications have been published within this topic receiving 18411 citations. The topic is also known as: anti-particle (mutual relationship) & antiparticle (concept or operation).
TL;DR: It is found that the positron fraction increases sharply over much of that range, in a way that appears to be completely inconsistent with secondary sources, and is concluded that a primary source, be it an astrophysical object or dark matter annihilation, is necessary.
Abstract: Antiparticles account for a small fraction of cosmic rays and are known to be produced in interactions between cosmic-ray nuclei and atoms in the interstellar medium(1), which is referred to as a ' ...
TL;DR: The results reveal a spin-momentum locked Dirac cone carrying a non-trivial Berry’s phase that is nearly 100 per cent spin-polarized, which exhibits a tunable topological fermion density in the vicinity of the Kramers point and can be driven to the long-sought topological spin transport regime.
Abstract: Helical Dirac fermions—charge carriers that behave as massless relativistic particles with an intrinsic angular momentum (spin) locked to its translational momentum—are proposed to be the key to realizing fundamentally new phenomena in condensed matter physics. Prominent examples include the anomalous quantization of magneto-electric coupling, half-fermion states that are their own antiparticle, and charge fractionalization in a Bose– Einstein condensate, all of which are not possible with conventional Dirac fermions of the graphene variety. Helical Dirac fermions have so far remained elusive owing to the lack of necessary spin-sensitive measurements and because such fermions are forbidden to exist in conventional materials harbouring relativistic electrons, such as graphene or bismuth. It has recently
been proposed that helical Dirac fermions may exist at the edges of certain types of topologically ordered insulators—materials with a bulk insulating gap of spin–orbit origin and surface states protected against scattering by time-reversal symmetry—and that their peculiar properties may be accessed provided the insulator is tuned into the so-called topological transport regime. However, helical Dirac fermions have not been observed in existing topological insulators. Here we report the realization and characterization of a tunable topological insulator in a bismuthbased class of material by combining spin-imaging and
momentum-resolved spectroscopies, bulk charge compensation,
Hall transport measurements and surface quantum control. Our
results reveal a spin-momentum locked Dirac cone carrying a nontrivial
Berry’s phase that is nearly 100 per cent spin-polarized,
which exhibits a tunable topological fermion density in the vicinity
of the Kramers point and can be driven to the long-sought
topological spin transport regime. The observed topological nodal
state is shown to be protected even up to 300 K. Our demonstration
of room-temperature topological order and non-trivial spintexture
in stoichiometric Bi_2Se_3.M_x (M_x indicates surface doping
or gating control) paves the way for future graphene-like studies of
topological insulators, and applications of the observed spinpolarized
edge channels in spintronic and computing technologies
possibly at room temperature.
TL;DR: This work demonstrates the production of antihydrogen atoms at very low energy by mixing trapped antiprotons and positrons in a cryogenic environment and detects the neutral anti-atoms directly when they escape the trap and annihilate, producing a characteristic signature in an imaging particle detector.
Abstract: A theoretical underpinning of the standard model of fundamental particles and interactions is CPT invariance, which requires that the laws of physics be invariant under the combined discrete operations of charge conjugation, parity and time reversal. Antimatter, the existence of which was predicted by Dirac, can be used to test the CPT theorem—experimental investigations involving comparisons of particles with antiparticles are numerous1. Cold atoms and anti-atoms, such as hydrogen and antihydrogen, could form the basis of a new precise test, as CPT invariance implies that they must have the same spectrum. Observations of antihydrogen in small quantities and at high energies have been reported at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)2 and at Fermilab3, but these experiments were not suited to precision comparison measurements. Here we demonstrate the production of antihydrogen atoms at very low energy by mixing trapped antiprotons and positrons in a cryogenic environment. The neutral anti-atoms have been detected directly when they escape the trap and annihilate, producing a characteristic signature in an imaging particle detector.
TL;DR: In this paper, the classical solutions of a unified field theory in a two-dimensional space-time are considered, and a model of interacting mesons and baryons is presented.
TL;DR: It is found that when intense positron bursts are implanted into a thin film of porous silica, Ps2 is created on the internal pore surfaces much more efficiently than the competing process of spin exchange quenching, which appears to be suppressed in the confined pore geometry.
Abstract: It has been known for many years that an electron and its antiparticle, the positron, may together form a metastable hydrogen-like atom, known as positronium or Ps (ref. 1). In 1946, Wheeler speculated that two Ps atoms may combine to form the di-positronium molecule (Ps2), with a binding energy of 0.4 eV. More recently, this molecule has been studied theoretically; however, because Ps has a short lifetime and it is difficult to obtain low-energy positrons in large numbers, Ps2 has not previously been observed unambiguously. Here we show that when intense positron bursts are implanted into a thin film of porous silica, Ps2 is created on the internal pore surfaces. We found that molecule formation occurs much more efficiently than the competing process of spin exchange quenching, which appears to be suppressed in the confined pore geometry. This result experimentally confirms the existence of the Ps2 molecule and paves the way for further multi-positronium work. Using similar techniques, but with a more intense positron source, we expect to increase the Ps density to the point where many thousands of atoms interact and can undergo a phase transition to form a Bose-Einstein condensate. As a purely leptonic, macroscopic quantum matter-antimatter system this would be of interest in its own right, but it would also represent a milestone on the path to produce an annihilation gamma-ray laser.