Tuesday, 2 August 2016

August 2 is reserved to Carl Anderson


August 2 is reserved to Carl Anderson
On this day in 1932, Caltech physicist Carl Anderson discovered the positron, the first particle of antimatter to be identified. Anderson had not set out to hunt antimatter. He had built a cloud chamber to determine the composition of cosmic rays, high-energy particles that rain down from space. The instrument included a magnet, which allowed Anderson to determine whether particles passing through were positively or negatively charged, and a lead plate to slow the particles down.

Anderson took hundreds of photographs of tracks taken by cosmic ray particles, but he was stymied by tracks like the one in this post photo. The curve of the trajectory suggested the particle was positively charged yet far less massive than a proton. An editor at the journal Physical Review suggested the name positron, since the particle was resembled a positively charged electron.

Only later did Anderson realize that the positron was identical to the electron except for the opposite charge—Paul Dirac had predicted the existence of such an antiparticle in 1931. Anderson was awarded the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery.

Bio:
https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1936/anderson-facts.html
http://www.biography.com/people/carl-d-anderson-9184194

Article:
https://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/200408/history.cfm

Photos:
Carl Anderson with cloud chamber via Caltech Archive

Anderson's cloud chamber picture of cosmic radiation from 1932 showing for the first time the existence of the anti-electron. The particle enters from the bottom, strikes the lead plate in the middle and loses energy as can be seen from the greater curvature of the upper part of the track.

#history   #carlanderson   #physics   #positron

1 comment:

  1. Interesting idea...so simplicity is complexity resolved?

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