What Exactly is Antimatter (Gravitationally Speaking)?
Scott Menary

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the gravitational behavior of antimatter, particularly antihydrogen, considering recent experimental results and QCD insights, and concludes that antimatter is likely more matter-like in gravity, impacting cosmological models.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis combining experimental data and QCD results to argue that antimatter experiences gravity similarly to matter, challenging naive antigravity assumptions.
Findings
Antihydrogen's free-fall acceleration is close to matter's g.
Most of the mass of antiprotons comes from gluonic binding energy.
Antimatter's gravitational behavior implies a matter-antimatter asymmetry from the Big Bang.
Abstract
There has been renewed interest in the idea of antigravity -- that matter and antimatter repel gravitationally - in lieu of the recent beautiful ALPHA-g result for the free-fall acceleration of antihydrogen of . Precision tests of the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) have shown that binding energy (atomic, nuclear, and nucleonic) acts like matter under gravity. Whereas the contribution of atomic binding energy to the mass of antihydrogen is negligible, the majority of the mass of the antiproton comes from the gluonic binding energy. Hence, in terms of antigravity, the antiproton is mostly composed of matter and so even if the antimatter content of the antiproton is repelled by the Earth, there would still be a net attraction of the antihydrogen to the Earth because of its dominant matter content. Using recent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution · Computational Physics and Python Applications
