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Recycling antimatter pertains to recycling antiprotons and antihydrogen atoms using a storage ring, the Recycler, in which antiprotons are injected that have survived many hours of collision experiments. When the experiments receive the subsequent batch of antiparticles, the beam will contain recycled antiprotons – assuming scientists manage to keep the antiprotons “alive” inside the Recycler for a long enough time. [1][2][3][4][5][6]


References

Riesselmann, Kurt (February 1, 2002). "Recycling Antimatter Becomes Reality". Fermi News. Fermilab. Retrieved 2014.
Riesselmann, Kurt (February 1, 2002). "Keeping Antiprotons Cool". Fermi News. Fermilab. Retrieved 2014.
van der Meer, Simon (8 December 1984). "Nobel Lecture: Stochastic Cooling and the Accumulation of Antiprotons". Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990. Retrieved 2014.
Hamilton, Paul; Zhmoginov, Andrey; Robicheaux, Francis; Fajans, Joel; Wurtele, Jonathan S.; Müller, Holger (2014). "Antimatter Interferometry for Gravity Measurements". Physical Review Letters 112 (12). arXiv:1308.1079v4. Bibcode:2014PhRvL.112l1102H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.121102.
Regenfus, Christian (26 September 2004). Measurement of antimatter gravity with an (anti) matter wave interferometer (PDF). Anti-protons - Session 2. Villars meeting 22–28 September 2004.CERN.

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