[Physics FAQ] - [Copyright]

Original by Scott I. Chase.
Revisions by Jim Mitroy (January 1996), and Phil Gibbs (April 1997).
Current version (March 1999) by Momo Jeng, Department of Physics,
University of California at Santa Barbara, momo@sbphy.ucsb.edu


Does antimatter fall up or down?

In theory, antimatter dropped over the surface of the Earth should fall down.  However, the issue has never been successfully experimentally tested.  The theoretical grounds for expecting antimatter to fall down are very strong, so virtually all physicists expect antimatter to fall down; however, some physicists believe that antimatter might fall down with a different acceleration than that of ordinary matter.  Since this has never been experimentally tested, it's important to keep an open mind.

What should we expect theoretically?

Based on what we currently know, we would expect that the only significant force acting on a piece of falling antimatter is gravity; by the equivalence principle, this should make antimatter fall with the same acceleration as ordinary matter.  However, some theories predict new, as yet unseen forces: these forces would make antimatter fall differently than matter.  But in these theories, antimatter always falls slightly faster than matter; antimatter never falls up.  This is because the only force that would treat matter and antimatter differently would be a vector force (mediated by the hypothetical gravivector boson).  Vector forces (like electromagnetism) repel likes and attract opposites, so a gravivector force would pull antimatter down toward the matter-dominated Earth, while giving matter a slight upward push.  See references [1] and [2] below for a detailed discussion of these issues.

Additionally, we can make a very simple argument that antimatter should fall down, by assuming only that energy is conserved and that the values of fundamental constants do not vary with height.  With these assumptions and some well-tested experimental results, we can show that

1/2 (gmatter + gantimatter) = gphoton

where gmatter is the acceleration of falling matter, gantimatter is the acceleration of falling antimatter, and gphoton is a term that gives the gravitational redshift of photons (this equation is explained and proven in the Appendix below).  One of the first predictions of general relativity was that gmatter and gphoton should be exactly the same.

Probably no experiment can ever show that gmatter and gphoton are exactly the same, but experiments have shown that the two differ by less than 0.02%.  See [3] for some background information.  If gmatter and gphoton differ by less than 0.02%, then the equation above implies that gmatter and gantimatter cannot differ by more than 0.04%.  So with only the above assumptions, theory and experiment show that antimatter should fall down, and with an acceleration fairly close to that of normal matter.  Also, note that if matter attracts antimatter, then in theory antimatter should attract matter.  This follows from Newton's third law.

While these theoretical arguments are convincing, experimental results are essential in physics, and we now turn our attention to them.

What does experiment tell us?

The only direct experimental result on antimatter and gravity comes from Supernova 1987A.  This supernova in the Large Magellanic Cloud emitted both neutrinos and antineutrinos, some of which were eventually detected on Earth.  Those neutrinos and antineutrinos took 160,000 years to reach Earth, and while travelling were bent from a "straight line" path by the gravity from our own galaxy.  The bending with gravity changed the time needed to reach Earth by about 5 months, yet both the neutrinos and the antineutrinos reached Earth at roughly the same time (within the same 12 second interval).  This shows that the neutrinos and antineutrinos "fell" similarly, to a very high level of precision (about 1 part in a million).  [4] and [5] provide some background information on this.

However, this does not necessarily tell us that matter and antimatter will fall similarly to the same level of precision when dropped on the Earth, because they could be affected differently be some new, unknown force that has too short a range to be seen on galactic length scales.

So what we would really like to have is a laboratory experiment where we simply drop some antimatter in a lab, and see how fast it falls.  This has not yet been done.  It is often thought that Fairbank and Witteborn at Stanford measured the fall of positrons and electrons and found them to fall at the same rate.  In fact, they only measured the fall of electrons, and it's unclear to this day if, when measuring the fall of electrons, they were able to overcome the difficulties in properly isolating the electrons from stray electromagnetic fields.  And they never reported on the fall of positrons at all.

In order to reduce the effect of stray electromagnetic fields, it would be nice to use objects with the same magnitude of electric charge as electrons and positrons, but with much more mass, to increase the relative effect of gravity on the motion of the particle.  Antiprotons are 1836 times as massive than positrons, so give you three orders of magnitude more sensitivity.  Gerald Gabrielse and his coworkers have been cooling and trapping antiprotons at CERN in order to attempt this and other experiments. The results are still inconclusive.

The key to testing the different theories of gravity will be the creation of the antihydrogen atom.  Because they are electrically neutral, antihydrogen atoms are not as sensitive to stray electric fields as antiprotons.  Unlike many composite objects containing antiparticles, antihydrogen atoms are also absolutely stable, making them the preferred objects to study.

CERN has recently announced the creation of about 10 antihydrogen atoms, but as these were formed in a beam travelling at close to the speed of light, they really can't be used for studying the properties of antihydrogen.  At the moment, a number of different groups around the world are gearing up to form antihydrogen at low energies by introducing positrons into an ion trap that will contain lots of antiprotons.  References [6], [7], [8] and [9] provide further reading on this.

Most people expect that antiatoms will fall down.  But it is important to keep an open mind, since we have never directly observed the effect of gravity on antiparticles on Earth.  This experiment, if successful, will definitely be "one for the textbooks."

Appendix: A derivation

In this appendix we derive the equation used above :

1/2 (gmatter + gantimatter) = gphoton

Our argument, which is an adaptation of the "Morrison argument" described in [2], will only make two basic assumptions.  It will assume that energy is conserved.  And it will assume that "fundamental constants," such as the inertial mass of the proton or electron, or the speed of light, do not vary with height above the Earth.  It will also use well-tested experimental results (such as the fact that E=m c2 has been observed to hold to high accuracy).  As explained above, when this equation is coupled with gravitational redshift experiments, it shows that antimatter must fall down with an acceleration within 0.04% of that of ordinary matter.

Start with a chunk of matter and a chunk of antimatter, each of mass m (mass is always understood here to mean inertial mass), at the top of a tower of height L.  These "chunks" could, for example, be a proton and antiproton, which have been experimentally observed to have the same inertial mass to within one part in 100 thousand million.  If we combine these two chunks, they form a photon (actually a bunch of photons).  If we measure the energy of these photons locally (by, for example, looking at their frequency), special relativity tells us that we will see

E = hf = 2mc2

This relation between energy and mass has been well-tested experimentally in many labs around the world (and thus at different heights above sea level).

Suppose that we now take these photons and send them to someone at the bottom of the tower.  If that person measures the energy of the photons, they will measure a different energy that we did at the top of the tower, because the photons will be blueshifted.  The photons will gain energy as they fall in a gravitational field.  The equivalence principle implies that the energy the observer at the bottom measures is

E = hf = 2mc2 (1 + gphotonL / c2) = 2mc2 + 2m gphoton L

We'll let this equation define gphoton.  General relativity predicts that gphoton should be exactly the same as gmatter = 9.8 m/s2, the rate at which normal matter falls.  But we don't want to assume this, so we'll keep gphoton and gmatter distinct.

Now let's have the person at the bottom of the tower take these photons and turn them back into chunks of matter and antimatter, each of mass m (for example, a proton and antiproton).  By special relativity, we know that the energy 2mc2 is just enough energy to create chunks of matter and antimatter, each of mass m.  But the photons have some extra energy, 2m gphoton L.  This gives the matter and antimatter some extra energy (manifested as kinetic energy).  We want to use this extra energy to move the matter and antimatter back to the top of the tower.  This extra energy must be just enough to move them back to the top of the tower, or else energy would not be conserved.  In other words, this cycle takes us back to the exact same conditions that we started with, so we had better not have lost or gained energy in carrying it out.

So how much energy does it take to move these guys back to the top of the tower?  Well, the matter has an inertial mass m , and "feels" an acceleration gmatter.  So it feels a force m gmatter, and to move it a distance L requires energy m gmatter L. Similarly, it takes an energy m gantimatter L to move the antimatter to the top of the tower.  To conserve energy, these two energies must add up to be the same as the extra photon energy, so we need

m gmatter L + m gantimatter L = 2m gphoton L

Cancelling common factors, we get

1/2 (gmatter + gantimatter) = gphoton

On rearranging:

gantimatter = 2 gphoton - gmatter

or

gantimatter = gmatter (2 +/- 0.04) - gmatter = gmatter (1 +/- 0.04)

References

[1]  "Gravity and Antimatter", Goldman, Hughes and Nieto, Scientific American, March 1988, pg 48. An easy-to-read explanation of gravity and antimatter.

[2]  "The Arguments Against `Antigravity' and the Gravitational Acceleration of Antimatter," Nieto and Goldman, Physics Reports, vol. 205, no. 5, pg 221, and Physics Reports vol. 216 pg 343 (1992). A review of theories on antimatter gravity.

[3]  "New Tests of the Gravitational Redshift Effect", T. Krisher, Modern Physics Letters A, vol. 5, no. 23 pg 1809 (1990). Recent gravitational redshift experiments.

[4]  "Limits on CP invariance in general relativity," J.M. LoSecco, Physics Review D, vol. 38, no. 10 pg 3313 (1988). Supernova 1987A.

[5]  "New Precision Tests of the Einstein Equivalence Principle from SN1987A," M. Longo, Physical Review Letters, vol. 60, no. 3 pg 173 (1988). Supernova 1987A.

[6]  "Antihydrogen Physics", M. Charlton et al., Phys. Rep., vol. 241 pg 65 (1994)

[7]  "The race to create an antiatom", P. Campbell, New Scientist, May 13, pg 32 (1995)

[8]  "The production and study of cold antihydrogen: Letter of intent" By Antihydrogen Trap Collaboration (Gerald Gabrielse et al.). CERN-SPSLC-96-23, March 1996.

[9]  "Antimatter Gravity and Antihydrogen Production", Holzscheiter, Goldman and Nieto, http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/hep-ph/9509336.