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AEgIS (Antimatter Experiment: gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy), AD-6, is an experiment at the Antiproton Decelerator facility at CERN.Its primary goal is to measure directly the effect of Earth's gravitational field on antihydrogen atoms with significant precision. [1]
Antihydrogen atoms have been trapped at CERN, first ALPHA [26] [27] and then ATRAP; [28] in 2012 ALPHA used such atoms to set the first free-fall loose bounds on the gravitational interaction of antimatter with matter, measured to within ±7500% of ordinary gravity, [29] [citation needed] not enough for a clear scientific statement about the ...
AEgIS, Antimatter Experiment: gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy, AD-6, is an experiment at the Antiproton Decelerator. AEgIS would attempt to determine if gravity affects antimatter in the same way it affects normal matter by testing its effect on an antihydrogen beam.
ALPHA experiment. The Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus (ALPHA), also known as AD-5, is an experiment at CERN's Antiproton Decelerator, designed to trap antihydrogen in a magnetic trap in order to study its atomic spectra.
This results in a loss of about 99.9% of antiprotons. The ELENA ring with its efficient beam cooling and deceleration method is meant to increase the effective number of antiprotons that could be made available to the antimatter experiments by reducing the usage of the degrader foils. [1] [9] CERN Antimatter Factory – antiproton decelerator
ATHENA, also known as the AD-1 experiment, was an antimatter research project at the Antiproton Decelerator at CERN, Geneva.In August 2002, it was the first experiment to produce 50,000 low-energy antihydrogen atoms, as reported in Nature.
First elements of the PUMA experiment installed in the AD facility at CERN. The PUMA (antiProton Unstable Matter Annihilation) AD-9 experiment, at the Antiproton decelerator (AD) facility at CERN, Geneva, aims to look into the quantum interactions and annihilation processes between the antiprotons and the exotic slow-moving nuclei.
The Low Energy Anti-Proton Ring (LEAR) was a particle accelerator at CERN which operated from 1982 until 1996. [1] The ring was designed to decelerate and store antiprotons, to study the properties of antimatter and to create atoms of antihydrogen. [2]