Scientists shed new light on the difference between matter and antimatter

Stars and galaxies, and everything in between that makes up our everyday lives exist because they are made up of matter. Matter consists of sub-atomic particles such as electrons, quarks and neutrinos, and for each particle there is a corresponding counterpart made of antimatter, creating “antiparticles”. According to this theory, the Big Bang should have created matter and antimatter in equal amounts, but today the Universe is made up of far more matter than antimatter.
Researchers from the University of Sheffield, as part of an international group of more than 350 scientists in the T2K Collaboration, have taken a step towards answering why there is so much more matter than antimatter. The study was published in Nature and took place in Japan, utilising the SuperKamiokande detector to observe neutrinos (matter) and antineutrinos (their antimatter counterparts), which were generated 295km away at the Japanese Proton Accelerator Research Complex (J-PARC). Physicists believe that a difference (asymmetry) in the physical properties of neutrinos and antineutrinos might help us understand why the universe is predominantly made of matter.
“Astronomers find that the matter in the universe is overwhelmingly just that: matter, with positively charged atomic nuclei surrounded by negative electrons,” said Professor Lee Thompson, of the University of Sheffield’s Department of Physics and Astronomy.
“When particle physicists make new particles in accelerators, they always find that they produce particle-antiparticle pairs: for every negative electron, a positively charged positron. So why isn’t the universe 50 per cent antimatter? This is a long-standing problem in cosmology – what happened to the antimatter?
“This work brings together particle physics and cosmology – by studying neutrinos, the most elusive of the elementary particles, we learn something about the largest of astrophysical topics, the universe itself.”
The next-generation neutrino experiment DUNE, currently being constructed in a mine in South Dakota, might detect the effect of CP violation in neutrinos faster than expected. This could bring us closer to creating a model that explains how the Universe evolved to become mostly made of matter.

Latest

Liberty Belle reveal Forge Arts & Theatre Editor on 2024/25 Committee

Editor Jasmine Pegg joins former Arts & Theatre Editor Faith Suronku-Lindsay & a team of ten other students leading this year's magazine

Sheffield United Women disappoint in defeat to Bristol City

Sheffield United slipped to a seventh consecutive league defeat after being outclassed by Bristol City at Bramall Lane.

Unveiling the Untold: Asian Literature Feature

Taking a deep dive into the rich world of Asian literature, we look at some of the best of these stories, & their writers

Rak-Sakyi nets twice as Sheffield United continue unbeaten start against Luton Town

Sheffield United continued their unbeaten start to the EFL Championship season with a comfortable win over Luton Town on Saturday.

🔴 Sheffield United Women vs Bristol City: LIVE updates from the FA WSL 2

Follow along with live updates from Hillsborough as Sheffield Wednesday host West Bromwich Albion in the EFL Championship.

Margaret Beaufort: Kingmaker unveils 7 SUTCo debuts in cast

Composed of returning faces & new students, Margaret Beaufort: Kingmaker is the first semester one show to announce its cast

African Film Stars to lead Sheffield Theatres’ & Utopia Production

Stars of African media lead the 26-person cast of 'Death and the King's Horseman', the first staging in Sheffield in its history