http://www.spacedaily.com/news/antimatter-03a.html

The best look yet at how a solar explosion becomes an antimatter factory
gave unexpected insights into how the tremendous explosions work. The
observation may upset theories about how the explosions, called solar
flares, create and destroy antimatter. It also gave surprising details about
how they blast subatomic particles to almost the speed of light.
Solar flares are among the most powerful explosions in the solar system; the
largest can release as much energy as a billion one-megaton nuclear bombs. A
team of researchers used NASA's Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar
Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) spacecraft to take pictures of a solar flare
on July 23, 2002, using the flare's high-energy X-rays and gamma radiation.

"We are taking pictures of flares in an entirely new color, one invisible to
the human eye, so we expect surprises, and RHESSI gave us a couple already,"
said Dr. Robert Lin, a faculty member in the Dept. of Physics, University of
California, Berkeley, who is the Principal Investigator for RHESSI.

Gamma-rays and X-rays are the most energetic forms of light, with a particle
of gamma ray light at the top of the scale carrying millions to billions of
times more energy than a particle of visible light. The results are part of
a series of papers about the RHESSI observation to be published in
Astrophysical Journal Letters October 1.

Antimatter annihilates normal matter in a burst of energy, inspiring science
fiction writers to use it as a supremely powerful source to propel
starships. Current technology only creates minute quantities, usually in
miles-long machines employed to smash atoms together, but scientists
discovered the July 2002 flare created a half-kilo (about one pound) of
antimatter, enough to power the entire United States for two days. According
to the RHESSI images and data, this antimatter was not destroyed where
expected.

Antimatter is rare in the present-day universe. However, it can be created
in high-speed collisions between particles of ordinary matter, when some of
the energy from the collision goes into the production of antimatter.
Antimatter is created in flares when the fast-moving particles accelerated
during the flare collide with slower particles in the Sun's atmosphere.

According to flare theory, these collisions happen in relatively dense
regions of the solar atmosphere, because many collisions are required to
produce significant amounts of antimatter. Scientists expected that the
antimatter would be annihilated near the same places, since there are so
many particles of ordinary matter to run into. "Antimatter shouldn't get
far," said Dr. Gerald Share of the Naval Research Laboratory, Washington,

D. C., lead author of a paper on RHESSI's observations of the antimatter
destruction in the July 23 flare.

However, in a cosmic version of the shell game, it appears that this flare
might have shuffled antimatter around, producing it in one location and
destroying it in another. RHESSI allowed the most detailed analysis to date
of the gamma rays emitted when antimatter annihilates ordinary matter in the
solar atmosphere. The analysis indicates that the flare's antimatter might
have been destroyed in regions where high temperatures made the particle
density 1,000 times lower than where the antimatter should have been
created.

Alternatively, perhaps there is no "shell game" at all, and flares are able
to create significant amounts of antimatter in less dense regions, or flares
somehow may be able to maintain dense regions despite high temperatures, or
the antimatter was created "on the run" at high speeds, and the high-speed
creation gave the appearance of a high-temperature region, according to the
team.

Solar flares are also capable of blasting electrically charged particles in
the Sun's atmosphere (electrons and ions) to almost the speed of light
(about 186,000 miles per second or 300,000 km/sec.). The new RHESSI
observation revealed that solar flares somehow sort particles, either by
their masses or their electric charge, as they propel them to ultra-high
speeds.

"The result is as surprising as gold miners blasting a cliff face and
discovering that the explosion threw all the dirt in one direction and all
the gold in another direction," said Dr. Craig DeForest, a solar researcher
at the South West Research Inst. Boulder, Colo. The means by which flares
sort particles by mass is unknown; there are many possible mechanisms,
according to the team. Alternatively, the particles could be sorted by their
electric charge, since ions are positively charged and electrons negatively
charged.



xponent

Anti-Matters Maru

rob


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