In poking around, have come across three, recent, mutually consistent statements, among others.
"At first physicists saw no reason why antimatter and matter shouldn't behave symmetrically, that is, obey the laws of physics in the same way. But if so, equal amounts of each would have been made in the big bang -- in which case they should have mutually annihilated, leaving nothing behind. And if somehow that fate were avoided, equal amounts of matter and antimatter should remain today, which is clearly not the case."[1]
"In the beginning, equal amounts of matter and antimatter came into existence. At least that's what scientists believe. Today, antimatter is virtually absent in the natural world. Physicists assume that all that antimatter was annihilated when it came into contact with matter -- and that for some as-yet-unknown reason, the matter we know and love had enough of an advantage for a remnant to survive."[2]
"There is considerable speculation as to why the observable universe is apparently almost entirely matter, whether there exist other places that are almost entirely antimatter instead, and what might be possible if antimatter could be harnessed. At this time, the apparent asymmetry of matter and antimatter in the visible universe is one of the greatest unsolved problems in physics."[3]
It seems perfectly natural for us to assume that the universe of particles ordinarily observed are "normal" and that the rare particles which annihilate them are antimatter. But in view of the asymmetry problem, that might be worth reconsidering.
Granted that two particles capable of annihilation (or emerging from pair creation) comprise a CPT twin:antitwin pair, discerning
which is which might be tricky. If we consistently designate the
rarer partner "antimatter" then matter:antimatter asymmetry is, in fact
guaranteed, and should come as no surprise at all.
As noted in the CPT requirement above, matter and antimatter particles can be quite social (compatible) when that requirement is
not met at the fundamental level. This will seem naïve, but I feel I must take a hint from the following:
"The baryon asymmetry problem in physics refers to the apparent fact that there is an imbalance in baryonic matter and antibaryonic matter in the universe. Neither the standard model of particle physics, nor the theory of general relativity provide an obvious explanation for why this should be so; and it is a natural assumption that the universe be neutral with all conserved charges."[4]
Indeed, gravity might have been overlooked completely, except for the fact that electric charge is so well balanced in the material around us. So if positive and negative charge were considered markers for matter and antimatter respectively, the asymmetry problem would become equally
small for both. Electrons though now considered antimatter would still obediently orbit protons. Protons and neutrons would be considered hybrid matter:antimatter particles (like mesons) but since Up quarks (still matter) are not CPT counterparts for Down quarks (now antimatter) they remain social, as we observe.
As for baryon asymmetry, the vast majority of the mass we observe is comprised by these Up and Down quarks. There seems to me, unavoidable symmetry in that the positive Up quark has
half the mass but
twice the charge of the negative Down quark. In this scenario, matter and antimatter balance, though they are not twin:antitwin. Of course, that is no different than what we already accept for electric charge. Electrons are clearly not twins with protons but the charges balance.
It would seem at first, that the conservation baryon number (CBN) law would be sacrificed under matter:antimatter redesignation by charge. Perhaps not. Consider that baryon number (BN) is already highly contrived, ignoring particle mass, charge, and spin among other properties (covered by their own conservation laws). I would suggest that CBN might be salvaged if it continues as an
absolute value except in the special cases of pair creation (BN then allowed to increase) and annihilation (BN then allowed to decrease). CBN currently does function as an absolute value with respect to electric charge and would naturally have to do the same if that became the designator of matter:antimatter status.
1]
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101117141523.htm
2] http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/11/17/5482096-antimatter-atoms-caught-at-last
3]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimatter
4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryon_asymmetry