Thunderstorms hurl antimatter into space

For the first time, scientists have discovered that powerful thunderstorms on earth can fling beams of antimatter into space. The never-before-seen phenomenon, captured by Nasa’s orbiting Fermi gamma-ray observatory, has been billed as the most exciting discoveries in geoscience in a very long time.

Antimatter is a mirror image of normal matter with unusual properties — protons with negative charges, electrons with positive charges, and so on. It was created in equal abundance to normal matter at the beginning of the universe, but was destroyed when it came in contact with the normal matter
“These signals are the first direct evidence that thunderstorms make antimatter particle beams,” lead researcher Michael Briggs, of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, was quoted as saying by LiveScience. “I think this is one of the most exciting discoveries in geoscience in a very long time,” said Duke University’s Steven Cummer, who was not involved in the research. “It seems like something straight out of science Fiction.”
Fermi is designed to monitor gamma rays, the highest-energy form of light. When a piece of antimatter strikes the observatory and collides with “normal” matter, both particles immediately annihilate and are transformed into gamma rays — which Fermi can detect. In the new study, presented at the 217th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Seattle recently, Fermi’s Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) instrument picked up gamma rays with energies of 511,000 electron volts — a telltale sign that an electron has met its antimatter counterpart, a positron.
The gamma-ray detector spotted the antimatter signals while searching for at terrestrial flashes of gamma rays. —PTI

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