The whole world, nay the whole universe is
made of matter. Everything. You, me, pizza, black holes, puppies, dark
matter. Everything. But there’s also this lil’ thing called
antimatter. Around the turn of the last century, Einstein
was working on the theory of relativity and other physicists were trying to figure out
how the tiniest parts of our universe worked -- this is called quantum theory. This was all done with math. Lots of math. At one point a physicist named Paul Dirac
realized… X-squared equals 4 has two answers. Two. AND Negative two. This means, if matter is the two, there must
be some kind of opposite to fit with the negative two. Physicists called this opposite antimatter. The reason you don’t see antimatter around,
is because if it were to pop into existence and hit regular matter -- the twos would cancel
each other out and disappear in a burst of energy called an annihilation. You probably know that all matter is made
of protons and electrons… their antimatter opposites are called antiprotons and positrons. A proton is a positive heavy particle -- an
antiproton is a negative heavy particle. Electrons are light and negative, positrons
are light and positive. Again, because of their opposite-ness, if
they touch, BOOM. Gone. But we’ll come back to that. Even though they have these opposite charges…
in theory, antimatter should be the same as matter. After The Big Bang, the universe should have
created equal amounts of matter and antimatter. But there’s not really any antimatter around. Because, in the first second after the Big
Bang, all the matter and antimatter in the newborn universe found each other and BAM! ANNIHILATIONS GALORE. All the antimatter disappeared in bursts of
energy, leaving behind just… matter. No one knows why the Big Bang made more matter
than antimatter. But these scientists are making antimatter
to find out more about it… this facility creates antimatter using the
particle beams at CERN we convert protons into antiprotons
CERN is the Center for European Nuclear Research, we went there last year, and it’s where
the Large Hadron Collider lives. This Antimatter Factory takes protons shooting
along the LHC and converts them to antihydrogen -- the antimatter version of hydrogen. Then Dr. Bertsche and his team trap the antihydrogen
to study it. We know a lot about hydrogen, so we wanna
see how antihydrogen might be different. But remember, you can’t let antimatter touch
matter, ever. No air, no fancy containers… nothing that’s
made of matter. So, the scientists use magnetic fields to
hold the antihydrogen inside this trap. They behave like little tiny refrigerator
magnets and consequently we basically have to arrange a magnetic field geometry that
looks kind of like a bathtub. So, the antihydrogen atoms basically sit in
a magnetic bathtub or magnetic bottle. But it's really actually physically shaped
like a bathtub. it's about the size of sort of a two liter
coke bottle. The magnetic bathtub is called a Penning-Malmberg
trap. The magnetic field keeps the antihydrogen
from hitting the walls of the trap and annihilating -- because remember, no touch matter. Powerful magnets and lasers force the antihydrogen
to get stuck inside the magnetic field like a piece of candy in a bowl. Once they’ve trapped the antimatter, the
scientists at the Factory can learn things about this mysterious mirror of our universe’s
matter. For example, what color it is… it’s pink. We have reason to believe that there's some
difference that we don't understand yet between matter and antimatter If I had a glass bowl full of hydrogen gas,
I could make like a neon lamp. If you had a antihydrogen lamp it would be
a sort of pinkish purplish color. Disappointingly, antimatter isn’t some kind
of miracle form of matter. It doesn’t have antigravity, it doesn’t
do… well, anything different. If you could build an antimatter table, it
would just… be a table. That is weird, right? What if -- in those few hot moments after
the Big Bang -- the universe was completely made of antimatter? Would it feel exactly the same? I mean, think about it. If antimatter and matter are exactly the same. Then what is the difference? If the whole universe was made of antimatter
we’d just call that matter. And what we think of as matter would be called
antimatter. All the things we call positive are just relative! All the charges are relative to our experience
with our universe which arbitrarily is made of matter. Physics get’s really weird when you get
right down to it. In the end, an antimatter universe -- based
on everything we know, would look and feel exactly the same as our own. But more research is needed. Scientists trapped antimatter for the first
time in 2010. Now, just a few short years later, they’ve
learned to trap more than a dozen antiatoms at a time over and over again! WoooooooooooOOoOOoo
Antimatter has been held by experiments here for many many months and indeed one of the
experiments has a collection of antiprotons that they grabbed onto some time early last
year and they've actually still have the same antiprotons that they've had the whole time
They want to hold onto it so they can keep testing it. But even still, after a bit they have to let
the antimatter go. Then it annihilates and disappears. But even though annihilation sounds like a
big, violent, terrible, thing… it’s actually kind of like a … The scientists see some gamma radiation, and
that’s all she wrote. Practically speaking, CERN has only made 10
nanograms of antimatter. Ever. All the energy from annihilating it, could
only power one light bulb for, 4 hours. And to make that antimatter takes a billion
times more energy than what we get back from annihilating it. There’s not a lot of practical applications
for this antimatter research yet… but… Antimatter is actually commonly used in a
lot of medical techniques such as a positron emission tomography. // Also called a PET scan, it’s used for cancer
diagnoses. Look, Star Trek famously traveled the universe
using engines that ran on matter-antimatter reactions. But, based on what we know of antihydrogen,
whether we could do that is a big old shrug. At the moment, almost a century after it was
first theorized, antimatter research is still in its infancy, but thanks to Dr. Bertsche
and dozens of grad students and scientists around the world, maybe someday we’ll know
more. The antimatter factory make their antiprotons
using the Large Hadron Collider. But do you even know what the Large Hadron
Collider is? We went there. Check it out here, it's going to blow your
mind. How do you guys feel about physics with no
practical application? Boring or incredible? Tell us in the comments, please subscribe
for more Seeker and thank you so much for watching.