Confinement of antihydrogen might help provide a future answer. http://arxiv.org/abs/1104.4982
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$\begingroup$ Anti-hydrogen and gravity are also discussed here: physics.stackexchange.com/q/1190/2451 $\endgroup$– Qmechanic ♦Commented May 2, 2011 at 14:11
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$\begingroup$ Also see this article: arxiv.org/abs/0909.3456 $\endgroup$– Zo the RelativistCommented Sep 1, 2011 at 14:03
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$\begingroup$ at least what i can comment is that gravity is strange in itself....Being lowest to such an extent that m-theory researchers say that it is actually escaping from our universe! $\endgroup$– Vineet MenonCommented Sep 2, 2011 at 10:07
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$\begingroup$ I want to give this link for experiment running at CERN to test the behavior of antimatter to gravity home.cern/news/news/experiments/… . $\endgroup$– anna vCommented Dec 7, 2019 at 6:59
3 Answers
Never seen any good reason to think that antimatter is affected any differently.
Light and anti neutrinos (from supernovas) seem to be affected by gravity the same as regular mass, and the theory of gravity (general relativity) doesn't distinguish mass and any other energy. If we beam a gamma photon down the gravitational well (from space to ground, for example), it gets blue shifted a little bit - it gains energy. If we use that gamma photon to produce matter antimatter pair and send the pair up the gravitational well, unless the antimatter is affected by gravity exactly the same as matter (and light), the conservation of energy will be violated. It makes absolutely no sense for antimatter to be affected by gravity differently than light, when the matter is affected by gravity the same as light. (note: no, there is no anti-light)
I guess it is the usual opportunistic fundraising, exploiting the ignorance. It is hard to raise funds for real research, realistically presented - it sounds obscure and layman has no idea what it is for - and it is easy to raise funds for something that layman thinks is a huge question with good likehood of something extremely awesome, like antigravity. When one is perfectly ignorant then the likehood is fifty-fifty.
See the paper http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.4937 by M. Villata for an argument for antimatter falling up. However, see D.J. Cross at http://arxiv.org/abs/1108.5117 for powerful rebuttal arguments, asserting that Villata misapplied the CPT theorem, resulting in an incorrect sign for the matter-antimatter gravitational interaction.
See http://lss.fnal.gov/archive/test-fn/0000/fermilab-fn-0822-cd-t.pdf for a general review of the previously existing experimental evidence from Etvos and other experiments such as accelerometers, Kaons, astrophysical neutrino's from SN1987A.
You're of course right. Experimentally established, known laws of physics - especially the equivalence principle - are enough to be certain that antimatter has the same gravitational properties - including universal attraction - as ordinary matter.
http://motls.blogspot.com/2010/09/can-antimatters-gravity-be-repulsive.html
The justification of further experiments by "tests of antimatter's gravity" is partly based on ignorance and partly on deliberate deception to get funding.
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16$\begingroup$ I think you are being unfair about the funding. It is more the Nobel effect than anything else. There are still experimentalists going for the unexpected so as to make a big splash and that is why they pursue funding for such experiments. In addition your certainty of experimentally established laws of physics has not filtered down to experimentalists, who tend to be measuring limits and pushing them as far as possible.. $\endgroup$– anna vCommented May 2, 2011 at 17:24
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2$\begingroup$ There is an ancient greek proverb : "many despise money, nobody despises glory". It was spoken of generals in the colonial wars of the time. $\endgroup$– anna vCommented May 2, 2011 at 18:11
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6$\begingroup$ Unless I've missed something I don't buy your argument about the nucleon sea. Every $\bar{u}$ is paired with a $u$, every $\bar{d}$ with a $d$... . If we assume some (bizzar!) theory that support anti-matter anti-gravity those contributions cancel out. Not that I expect a surprise here. I know the PIs on at least one proposed experimental test and they expect antimatter to be gravitational attracted to matter. But it remains an important untested prediction. Interesting stuff is rarely found in the well tested parts of theories, but rather when in obscure corners. Dot the i's cross the t's. $\endgroup$ Commented May 4, 2011 at 2:44
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1$\begingroup$ I believe there is a strong justification for tests of the gravitational interaction of antimatter. You speak of "experimentally established, known laws of physics", but strictly speaking in most cases they have only been tested with matter, not with antimatter. For example, there is not even a test of the equivalence principle with antimatter. So in the end, there is still a possibility that matter and antimatter behave differently. Antimatter gravity probably can't be repulsive, but the force of gravity could differ by a few percent from matter gravity. $\endgroup$– SentryCommented Sep 25, 2016 at 23:12
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2$\begingroup$ The experiment in the article you linked did not test the influence of gravity on antimatter. Though there are no details, it seems like it just tested the equality of the strong force for matter and antimatter, which is a completely different question. Second, I did not say that antimatter gravity was repulsive. This case can indeed be considered excluded. The interesting question is if the strength is equal, or if it differs by a small amount. And this has not been conclusively tested, so there is still a good justification for the above experiment $\endgroup$– SentryCommented Oct 10, 2016 at 18:40