Does Antimatter Repel Matter Due to CPT Symmetry?

In summary, CPT symmetry refers to the concept that if you reverse charge, reflect in a mirror, and reverse time for all particles, the universe will still behave the same. This means that matter and antimatter would attract each other via gravity, but when they get near each other, they repel due to their opposite charges. Gravity only cares about energy, so it does not distinguish between matter and antimatter. However, they can be distinguished by their rest mass. This concept leads to interesting discussions about the behavior of matter and antimatter in a gravity field.
  • #1
Johnleprekan
57
0
According to CPT Symmetry matter has reversed charge, spatial coordinates, and time. This includes gravity. So this means that antimatter would attract other antimatter and matter would attract other matter. The difference is when antimatter gets near matter. They repel each other.

First, can someone explain what CPT is in layman's terms? What does it mean to have spatial coordinates reversed? For time, it does not mean time is reversed but direction is. Can someone explain this one anyway?

If the cpt is reversed, why does antimatter repel matter? What is happening on a quantum level that causes it to repel?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Johnleprekan said:
According to CPT Symmetry matter has reversed charge, spatial coordinates, and time. This includes gravity. So this means that antimatter would attract other antimatter and matter would attract other matter. The difference is when antimatter gets near matter. They repel each other.

No. Matter and antimatter attract each other via gravity. Gravity only cares about energy, and matter and antimatter both have positive energy.

CPT has three parts:

Slightly simplified, these are:
C - Charge conjugation. This is flipping positive and negative charges.
P - Parity. This is just reflection in a mirror.
T - Time reversal. This is just reversing the direction of motion of all particles.

CPT symmetry means that if you do all of these things at once--reflect the universe in a mirror, flip all positive charges with negative ones, and reverse the direction of motion of all particles--you get a universe that looks and acts exactly like the original one. The laws of physics will not notice if you perform C, P, and T all at once.
 
Last edited:
  • #3
Thank you.
 
  • #4
The_Duck said:
No. Matter and antimatter attract each other via gravity. Gravity only cares about energy, and matter and antimatter both have positive energy.
Matter and antimatter are attracted by charge difference, e.g., a positron is attracted to an electron, and both are annihilated.

Matter and antimatter have rest mass, and a mass (e.g., kg) of antimatter would behave the same in a gravity field as would the same quantity of mass of matter, i.e., gravity does not distinguish between matter and antimatter, as far as we know.
 

1. What is antimatter matter repulsion?

Antimatter matter repulsion is a phenomenon where particles of antimatter and matter repel each other due to their opposite charges.

2. How does antimatter matter repulsion occur?

Antimatter matter repulsion occurs due to the fundamental force of electromagnetism. Antimatter particles have the opposite charge to matter particles, causing them to repel each other when they come into contact.

3. What are the potential applications of antimatter matter repulsion?

One potential application of antimatter matter repulsion is in propulsion systems, where it could be used to create thrust for spacecraft. It could also be used in medical imaging and cancer treatment, as well as in theoretical studies of the universe.

4. Can antimatter matter repulsion be harnessed?

Currently, antimatter matter repulsion is still a theoretical concept and has not been harnessed for practical use. However, scientists are actively researching ways to harness this phenomenon for various applications.

5. Is there a difference between antimatter matter repulsion and antimatter annihilation?

Yes, there is a difference between antimatter matter repulsion and antimatter annihilation. While antimatter matter repulsion involves repelling forces between particles, antimatter annihilation is the process of particles of antimatter and matter colliding and converting their mass into energy.

Similar threads

  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
5
Views
962
Replies
5
Views
738
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
34
Views
4K
Replies
12
Views
1K
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
22
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
18
Views
3K
Replies
8
Views
818
  • Other Physics Topics
Replies
1
Views
1K
Back
Top