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Physicists lead the field in solving a major mystery of the Big Bang(Forwarded)



 
 
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Old December 10th 03, 10:21 PM
Andrew Yee
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Default Physicists lead the field in solving a major mystery of the Big Bang(Forwarded)

Press & Communications Office
University of Sussex
Falmer, Brighton, U.K.

Contacts:
Jacqui Bealing or Alix Macfarlane
University of Sussex
Tel. 01273 678888, Fax 01273 877456
or

8 December 2003

Physicists lead the field in solving a major mystery of the Big Bang

A Sussex-led team of scientists is ahead in the race to solve one of the biggest
mysteries of our physical world: why the Universe contains matter.

With the help of a new £2.3 million grant, the team is working on a project to
make one of the most sensitive measurements ever of sub-atomic particles. The
results, expected within six years, could finally help to explain the creation
of matter in the aftermath of the Big Bang.

Physicist Dr Philip Harris, the leader of the Sussex group, says: "Although
there are a couple of other teams in the world working in this same area, we're
managing to stay ahead of them, and we are constantly striving to beat our own
world record. This is all very exciting for us. With this new development, we
are on the verge of a major breakthrough in our understanding of the very origin
of matter in the Universe."

The question that has vexed scientists and astronomers for years is why there is
more matter in the Universe than anti-matter. Both were formed at the time of
the Big Bang, about 13.7 billion years ago. For every particle formed, an
anti-particle should also have been formed. Almost immediately, however, the
equal numbers of particles and anti-particles would have annihilated each other,
leaving nothing but light. But a tiny asymmetry in the laws of nature resulted
in a little matter being left over, spread thinly within the empty space of the
Universe. This became the stars and planets that we see around us today.

The only way scientists can verify their theories to explain this anomaly is to
study the corresponding asymmetry in sub-atomic particles. It has taken five
decades of research to reach the stage where measurements of these particles,
called neutrons, have become sensitive enough to test the very best candidate
theories. Neutrons are electrically neutral, but they have positive and negative
charges moving around inside them. If the centres of gravity of these charges
aren't in the same place, it would result in one end of the neutron being
slightly positive, and the other slightly negative. This is called an electric
dipole moment and is the phenomenon that physicists have been working to find
for the past 50 years.

Using a £2.3 million grant from the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research
Council, the Sussex scientists are collaborating with physicists at the
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and the Universities of Oxford and Kure (in
Japan) to develop a new apparatus to measure the electric dipole moment.

The apparatus is a type of atomic clock that uses spinning neutrons instead of
atoms. It will apply 300,000 volts to a container storing neutrons in a bath of
liquid helium, which is kept at a temperature just above absolute zero. The
clock frequency will be measured through nuclear magnetic resonance. Once
completed, the apparatus is predicted to be one hundred times more sensitive
than its predecessor.

 




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