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Anti-Universe Could Be Found By Giant Particle Detector Headed To Space

Huffington Post/AP   First Posted: 08/26/10 08:55 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:30 PM ET

Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer

GENEVA — A $2 billion machine that will jump-start the search for antimatter and other phenomena was loaded onto a massive U.S. Air Force plane Wednesday for the final leg of its journey on Earth before it catches the last scheduled shuttle flight into space.

Airmen struggled to stow the 8.3-ton (7.5 metric ton) Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer into a C-5M Super Galaxy at Geneva airport ahead of Thursday's takeoff to Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The military planes are normally used to fly tanks and helicopters around the world, but scientists at the European Center for Nuclear Research, or CERN, had to ask the U.S. Air Force to help them out when they found their 8.3-ton (7.5 metric ton) device wouldn't fit into a 747 jumbo jet.

Even then, workers had to saw off part of the giant shipping crate to squeeze the machine into the Galaxy's hold.

Sam Ting, a Nobel laureate and professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer would be docked to the International Space Station to collect evidence of antimatter, dark matter and other elusive elements of the universe over the next 20 years. "If there is an anti-universe, perhaps out there beyond the edge of our universe, our space-based detector may well be able to bring us signs of its existence," Ting said at a news conference, according to ABC News.

The AMS detector will complement CERN's Large Hadron Collider, a massive atom smasher deep beneath the Swiss-French border that scientists are using to simulate conditions similar to those just after the Big Bang in the hope of better understanding the makeup of the universe.

Antimatter, which the device was primarily designed to find, is sometimes referred to as the 'evil twin' of ordinary matter and scientists believe the Big Bang created both in roughly equal amounts – meaning that, in theory, there could be an identical universe to ours out there made entirely of antimatter.

But so far scientists have been unable to detect antimatter except in the lab. By searching outside the protective shell of Earth's atmosphere they hope to find solid proof of the elusive particle's existence – or reasons for its absence.

The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, which took about 15 years to build and was part-funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, will be one of two payloads carried to the space station on Endeavour STS-134, NASA's last shuttle mission scheduled for Feb. 26, 2011.

Separately, CERN staff protested Wednesday against proposed cuts to their next five-year budget, saying this could "dangerously compromise the running of the organization" they say helped develop scientific breakthroughs such as medical scanners, computer grids and the World Wide Web.

Member states have pressed CERN to sharply reduce its 5 billion Swiss francs ($4.87 billion) budget for the period from 2011 to 2015. The organization recently offered to cut back its funding demands by about 480 million Swiss francs ($467 million) – a move that will require all particle accelerators to be switched in 2012. The $10 billion Large Hadron Collider had already been scheduled to rest that year while technical upgrades take place.

"I don't think this is going to have a major effect on our research program," CERN spokesman James Gillies said of the proposed budget cuts.

The AMS detector was funded separately and wouldn't be affected by any cuts that might be agreed when the organization's finance committee meets Sept. 16, he said.

For more on space, check out our NASA Big News Page our this stunning slideshow of NASA's most incredible images of stars.

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GENEVA — A $2 billion machine that will jump-start the search for antimatter and other phenomena was loaded onto a massive U.S. Air Force plane Wednesday for the final leg of its journey on Earth be...
GENEVA — A $2 billion machine that will jump-start the search for antimatter and other phenomena was loaded onto a massive U.S. Air Force plane Wednesday for the final leg of its journey on Earth be...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
11:32 PM on 08/29/2010
Who cares. I care. I am afraid of imposing universes. Just as I'm realizing I'm not getting a grip on this universe, now I know I won't get a grip on another one. Geez. Leave me alone.
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01:22 PM on 08/29/2010
I don't think the Bible says anything about matter or antimatter. These scientists are loonies with the tinfoil hats. If what they are saying is true, it would be in the bible and my pastor would've preached about it.
06:01 PM on 08/29/2010
God used anti-matter to give boils to the Egyptians, didn't he?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
01:04 PM on 08/30/2010
That was funny.
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sassafra
I yam what I yam and tha's all what I yam
01:32 AM on 08/29/2010
firstly for the doubters antimatter does indeed exist, high energy experimental physicists have created and stored antimatter in magnetic bottles as it results as a by product from collisions of particles accelerated to nearly lightspeed.
what this instrument was designed for was to investigate one of the fundamental mysteries of the big bang: why the observable universe seems to have an infinitesimally slight tendency to favor matter over antimatter on the microcosmic scale as in these experiments but which in the end result in a universe, 13 billion years of age , observable back to within 600 million years of the big bang, momentously only exhibits galaxies and other phenomena solely composed of matter.
this experimentally confirmed and observed tendency of the universe to favor matter over anti matter in seeming contradiction of accepted models of particle physics is known as baryon asymmetry.
it is precisely this phenomenon that this new device is designed to investigate, for it along with other devices like the hubble space telescope, the large hadron collider, and others shall further refine mankind's understanding of the big bang, and fundamental particle physics. they also seek to extract experimental proof that within the great expanse of the cosmos there exists an infinitesimally small representative sample of phenomena composed of antimatter leftover as relics from baryon asymmetry annihilation..
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
05:43 AM on 08/29/2010
Good post. "Contradiction" is may be a bit a strong word here, especially taking into account the audience that like sensations. It is just not explained within framework of the standard model, but it is well recognized that it can be explained expanding the standard model in several ways, it is just not clear which mechanism is at work and why.
And possibility of existence of large antimatter regions of universe is not really excluded.

If for anybody antimatter sounds too exotic, they should read about positron (anti-electron) that is routinely used by certain medical instruments (positron emission tomography).
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10:19 AM on 08/29/2010
excellent post! i would just like to add for the doubters: this is not new. fermilab has been producing antimatter since 1985. also, the P in PET scan stands for positron which is the antimatter partner of the electron. the existence of antimatter is a firmly established fact.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
12:07 AM on 08/29/2010
An article like this, however brief and somewhat misleading, is a white crow on this site.
There is no "science" section here.

There are absolutely sacred sections like "food" and "entertainment", and there are almost obligatory sections like "sports", "living", "comedy" and "style", and then there are attempts to push intellectual boundaries of our society in sections like "media", "religion" and "tech", surprisingly even "books" and "arts" are included - but a section "science" - this would be really a too revolutionary idea.
09:38 PM on 08/28/2010
fascinating
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Max Headroom
Your micro-bio is empty
11:21 PM on 08/29/2010
Live long and prosper.
11:23 PM on 08/29/2010
if only we spent 10% of the money being spent on the Iraq war on new energy research...the world would have been a better place...and one day we would even have had the tech to go to those stars :(
11:47 PM on 08/29/2010
im torn between the star trek and star wars universes....somewhat more partial towards the star wars one :)
12:24 AM on 08/28/2010
I'm surprised the Electric Universe people haven't come out to play. For those who are unfamiliar, these folks hold highly unconventional opinions about how stars burn, how galaxies work, and the universe at large -- which are contradicted by huge mountain of evidence collected by astronomers and physicists over the last century, a fact that bothers them not at all. As Churchill said in another context, "Against such opinions it is vain to argue."
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
05:58 PM on 08/27/2010
If we discover the anti-universe, can we send to it the people who believe that the earth is 6,000 years old? They already live in their own universe.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
11:27 PM on 08/29/2010
Sorry, that's a third universe.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rjhuntington
left is right and right is wrong
04:00 PM on 08/27/2010
$2 billion to look for antimatter. Too bad you can't eat antimatter, even if you could find some, which you can't. Nice waste of money, though. I wonder how much health care $2 billion would buy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joey Y
04:37 PM on 08/27/2010
You can't eat x-rays or magnetic fields either, but they sure have come in handy for modern life in the form of CAT scans and MRIs, and CERN wasn't looking for ways to check out your lungs. I guess thinking beyond the obvious is why they are the researchers, and you're not.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ltyler01
04:40 PM on 08/27/2010
Great point.

Make you think that guys like this character's existence is a waste
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fnordlord
04:39 PM on 08/27/2010
Yes, the pursuit of knowledge is always a waste of money.
03:47 PM on 08/27/2010
We are stardust!

We are golden

We are billion year old carbon!

:-)
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04:22 PM on 08/27/2010
13 billion year old carbon
05:58 PM on 08/29/2010
Well, the carbon is of different ages, since it came out of more than one exploding star. But most of it is more than 4 1/2 billion years old.
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03:46 PM on 08/27/2010
To folks in Antimatter Land, they are matter and we are antimatter.
03:30 PM on 08/27/2010
"...scientists at the European Center for Nuclear Research, or CERN, had to ask the U.S. Air Force to help them out when they found their 8.3-ton (7.5 metric ton) device wouldn't fit into a 747 jumbo jet."

Wow.

I guess they were just hoping it would fit.

Scientists who don't know what a tape rule is should not be allowed to probe for cosmic secrets.
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03:53 PM on 08/27/2010
They didn't allow for the crate and other packing materials. Not to worry, the Antonov 225 is much larger than even the C-5 and could have handled it easily.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
01:14 PM on 08/30/2010
Roll of the dice. Poor planning. They should be looking for particles in their heads huh?
03:28 PM on 08/27/2010
I thought that the anti-Universe had already been discovered, it is called the Republican Party.
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SolarPowerGuy
Ph.D., Immunology; Solar power @ home; Green Party
04:00 PM on 08/27/2010
Shucks, you beat me to it. :^)
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toocoolfoschool1234
Stab your television. Get a guitar.
05:38 PM on 08/27/2010
predictable
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rheuer111
03:19 PM on 08/27/2010
think how much more we learned about the universe when we sent a telescope into space. the idea of a particle detector in space is very exciting.
03:08 PM on 08/27/2010
In the anti-universe, I will have a goatee.
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04:22 PM on 08/27/2010
I will have dimples.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rheuer111
02:14 AM on 08/29/2010
i would be straight and left-handed and not allergic to anticats.
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02:55 PM on 08/27/2010
I found the anti-universe the other day when I accidentally switched to Fo­x Ne­ws for a few seconds.