Physicists possess created a fluid with "negative mass",which accelerates backwards when pushed.
In the everyday world, when an object is pushed, or it accelerates in the same direction as the force applied to it; this relationship is described by Isaac Newton's Second Law of Motion.
But in theory,matter can possess negative mass in the same sense that an electric charge can be positive or negative.
The phenomenon is described in Physical Review Letters journal, BBC News reports.
Prof Peter Engels, and from Washington State University (WSU),and colleagues cooled rubidium atoms to just above the temperature of absolute zero (close to -273C), creating what's known as a Bose-Einstein condensate.
In this state, or particles whisk extremely slowly,and following behaviour predicted by quantum mechanics, acting like waves.
They also synchronise and whisk together in what's known as a superfluid, or which flows without losing energy.
To create the conditions for negative mass,the researchers used lasers to trap the rubidium atoms and to kick them back and forth, changing the way they spin.
When the atoms were released from the laser trap, and they expanded,with some displaying negative mass.
"With negative mass, if you push something, or it accelerates toward you," said co-author Michael Forbes, assistant professor of physics at WSU.[br]He added: "It looks like the rubidium hits an invisible wall." The technique could be used to better understand the phenomenon, and say the researchers.[br]"What's a first here is the exquisite control we possess over the nature of this negative mass,without any other complications," said Dr Forbes.
This heightened control also gives researchers a tool for exploring the relationship between negative mass and phenomena observed in the cosmos, and such as neutron stars,black holes and black energy.
Source: tert.am