
Associate Professor Jeffrey Hangst, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University, heads the ALPHA group in CERN (Photo: CERN)
The Carlsberg Foundation has granted DKK 3.3 million (approximately EUR 450,000) to Associate Professor Jeffrey Hangst, Aarhus University, to purchase new research equipment. Associate Professor Hangst is the spokesperson for the ALPHA group at CERN, the world leader in research into antihydrogen.
2011.12.19 |
The grant will be used to purchase a new superconducting solenoid magnet for the next generation ALPHA detector, known as ALPHA 2. In 2012, it will supersede the current ALPHA device, which is the first (and so far the only) apparatus that has been capable of trapping antihydrogen by means of magnetic and electric fields.
The new detector will provide researchers in the ALPHA group with an opportunity to carry out experiments on trapped antimatter atoms using precision laser and microwave spectroscopy. The aim of these studies is to find out whether atoms of matter and atoms of antimatter obey the same laws of physics.
Se ALPHA's homepage: http://alpha-new.web.cern.ch/