But the opportunity to actually learn the properties of antimatter is an accomplishment researchers such as Fujiwara have been painstakingly trying to achieve for years.
“Nobody right now can explain why matter — everything that’s around us, earth, sun, the galaxy — nobody knows how it is that we exist at all in the form of matter,” Fujiwara said.
Anti-hydrogen atoms were first made in large quantities at a CERN laboratory eight years ago. CERN is the European Organization for Nuclear Research.
They couldn’t be stored, however, because whenever the anti-atoms touched the walls of a bottle — matter, in other words — the two substances would destroy one another. Because the antimatter came in such a small quantity, it did no visible damage to the bottles by annihilating their equivalent masses in matter.
The ALPHA team Fujiwara works with is made of up 40 researchers, 14 of them Canadian. They come from the University of B.C., the University of Calgary, Simon Fraser University and York University in Toronto.
They worked at the same facility that contains the Large Hadron Collider particle accelerator — the machine some feared would destroy the world by creating microscopic black holes. (It didn’t). The accelerator is buried underground beneath the border between France and Switzerland.
The team created a cylindrical container or “magnetic bottle” that is about five by 25 centimetres. It uses magnets to keep the anti-hydrogen atoms from touching its walls, suspending the antimatter atoms away from any matter that would cause their destruction.
“It has to be suspended in vacuum ... you need a nearly perfect vacuum,” Fujiwara said.
Now that they’ve sustained their anti-hydrogen atoms for 1,000 seconds, scientists can began to examine them and see how they compare to ordinary hydrogen atoms.
The first step likely will be subjecting them to microwaves to determine if they absorb exactly the same frequencies (or energies) as their matter twins.
Scientists want to know whether, as predicted, the laws of physics are the same for both matter and antimatter.

Makoto Fujiwara (TRIUMF scientist & Calgary professor), Andrea Gutierrez (UBC graduate student), Walter Hardy (UBC professor), Tim Friesen (Calgary graduate student) , Michael Hayden (SFU professor) and Mohammad Ashkezari (SFU graduate student) with the Alpha Apparatus in Vancouver's TRIUMF laboratory. They have succeeded in storing antimatter atoms for more than 16 minutes — a virtual eternity for a rare substance that scientists have struggled to keep intact for more than a few fractions of a second. |