Quote:
Originally Posted by higginsdj
So one theory is that all matter has an antimatter mirror and because the universe is not symetrical they don't destroy each other....
We also have a BB theory that says the universe started as extremely hot energy, it cooled a little and particles formed. Well this supposedly means matter and antimatter was created. So when they formed why didn't they destroy each other? I'm basing this on the experiment I saw where a photon collided with a particle to create an electron and positron, ie they were created in the same space and kept apart by electric charge. What would keep them apart during the BB particle formation process?
So is antimatter natural or just the result of artificial experiments?
Cheers
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I was watching Planet Science recently, talking about this exact issue, they were saying that a slight inbalance was resulted that stopped the destruction of all matter. I am not sure how much of this is true or whether it is based of fact, or math or whatever. There is a hole in science that is completely unknown straight after this part of the big bang which is hope that the LHC will discover. The discovery of higgs Bosan energy/particle (whatever)
It was an interesting program and only recently aired, wondering why it is not on IView though.