For example if we think of the
particle as being an electron we understand what is meant by the positive energy state but
what about (b) – the negative energy. Dirac called the particle associated with this negative
energy a positron – the antiparticle of the electron with the same mass but opposite charge.
The positron was discovered by Carl Anderson in 1932 during cosmic ray studies
only four years after Dirac's proposal and this was followed in 1955 by the discovery of the
anti proton at Berkeley in California.
If we can have an anti-electron (a positron) and
an anti proton then why not an anti neutron and in fact a whole set of anti particles that
'mirror' the particles that make up our universe? These anti-particles would combine to form
a 'new' type of matter known as antimatter. In fact antimatter does exists in our universe –
although the exact amount is still not known.
When a gamma ray passes close to a nucleus it
can interact with that nucleus forming a positron and an electron – this is known as pair
production. Matter and anti-matter have been produced from energy (the gamma ray). Figure
1 shows a diagram of this interaction with the positron and the electron curving in opposite
directions through an applied magnetic field.
The reverse of pair production can
occur when a positron meets an electron. In fact something similar when a particle meets its
own antiparticle – the two particles annihilate each other converting their mass back into
energy. (Figure 2)
In the case of the positron and the electron the energy produced is
two gamma rays each with an energy of just over 0.5 MeV.
Such interaction can be observed in particle
accelerators.
It is interesting to imagine what would happen if an object composed
of antimatter met its corresponding object composed of matter.
Would the objects simply
annihilate each other?
I suppose in science fiction, or is it science fact, if you
see yourself coming towards you – run away as fast as possible to avoid ending up as a
flash of gamma radiation!
When matter
falls into a black hole the mass of the black hole increases. However, if antimatter is captured
by a black hole the antimatter will annihilate some of the matter within the black hole and so
the mass of the black hole decreases. If this process continues the black hole will eventually
disappear in a flash of radiation. This is the white hole predicted by the English physicist
Stephen Hawking.
It is believed that black holes the size of Mount Everest that were
formed in the early stages of the Universe are now just reaching their 'full up' state and
gamma ray bursts observed in deep space may be due to this effect.