The first antihydrogen was produced in 1995 by a team led by
Walter Oelert at CERN using a method first proposed by
Charles Munger Jr.,
Stanley Brodsky and
Ivan Schmidt Andrade. In the
LEAR, antiprotons from an
accelerator were shot at
xenon clusters, producing electron-positron pairs. Antiprotons can capture positrons with probability about , so this method is not suited for substantial production, as calculated.
Fermilab measured a somewhat different cross section, in agreement with predictions of
quantum electrodynamics. Both resulted in highly energetic, or hot, anti-atoms, unsuitable for detailed study. Subsequently, CERN built the
Antiproton Decelerator (AD) to support efforts towards low-energy antihydrogen, for tests of fundamental symmetries. The AD supplies several CERN groups. CERN expects their facilities will be capable of producing 10 million antiprotons per minute.
Low-energy antihydrogen Experiments by the
ATRAP and ATHENA collaborations at CERN, brought together positrons and antiprotons in
Penning traps, resulting in synthesis at a typical rate of 100 antihydrogen atoms per second. Antihydrogen was first produced by ATHENA in 2002, and then by ATRAP and by 2004, millions of antihydrogen atoms were made. The atoms synthesized had a relatively high temperature (a few thousand
kelvins), and would hit the walls of the experimental apparatus as a consequence and annihilate. Most precision tests require long observation times. ALPHA, a successor of the ATHENA collaboration, was formed to stably trap antihydrogen. In November 2010, the ALPHA collaboration announced that they had trapped 38 antihydrogen atoms for a sixth of a second, the first confinement of neutral antimatter. In June 2011, they trapped 309 antihydrogen atoms, up to 3 simultaneously, for up to 1,000 seconds. They then studied its hyperfine structure, gravity effects, and charge. ALPHA will continue measurements along with experiments ATRAP, AEgIS and GBAR. In 2018, AEgIS has produced a novel pulsed source of antihydrogen atoms with a production time spread of merely 250 nanoseconds. The pulsed source is generated by the
charge exchange reaction between Rydberg
positronium atoms -- produced via the injection of a pulsed positron beam into a nanochanneled Si target, and excited by laser pulses -- and antiprotons, trapped, cooled and manipulated in electromagnetic traps. The pulsed production enables the control of the antihydrogen temperature, the formation of an antihydrogen beam, and in the next phase a precision measurement on the gravitational behaviour using an atomic interferometer, the so-called
Moiré deflectormeter.
Larger antimatter atoms Larger antimatter atoms such as
antideuterium (),
antitritium (), and
antihelium () are much more difficult to produce. Antideuterium, antihelium-3 () and antihelium-4 () nuclei have been produced with such high velocities that synthesis of their corresponding atoms poses several technical hurdles. ==See also==