EPJ Web of Conferences (Jan 2015)

Measuring antimatter gravity with muonium

  • Kaplan Daniel M.,
  • Kirch Klaus,
  • Mancini Derrick,
  • Phillips James D.,
  • Phillips Thomas J.,
  • Roberts Thomas J.,
  • Terry Jeff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20159505008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95
p. 05008

Abstract

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The gravitational acceleration of antimatter, ḡ, has never been directly measured and could bear importantly on our understanding of gravity, the possible existence of a fifth force, and the nature and early history of the universe. Only two avenues for such a measurement appear to be feasible: antihydrogen and muonium. The muonium measurement requires a novel, monoenergetic, low-velocity, horizontal muonium beam directed at an atom interferometer. The precision three-grating interferometer can be produced in silicon nitride or ultrananocrystalline diamond using state-of-the-art nanofabrication. The required precision alignment and calibration at the picometer level also appear to be feasible. With 100 nm grating pitch, a 10% measurement of ḡ can be made using some months of surface-muon beam time, and a 1% or better measurement with a correspondingly larger exposure. This could constitute the first gravitational measurement of leptonic matter, of 2nd-generation matter and, possibly, the first measurement of the gravitational acceleration of antimatter.