Can Matter and Antimatter Be Indistinguishable?

In summary, applying charge conjugation to matter will result in antimatter. This idea was popular until CP violation was discovered, but it still holds true for most cases. The question of whether two particles with equal mass, opposite spins, and opposite charges would necessarily be a matter-antimatter pair depends on experimental evidence and interactions between the particles. In the case of neutrinos and antineutrinos, the CP operation is necessary to create an antineutrino from a neutrino. However, in principle, there could be particles with equal mass, opposite spin, and opposite charge that are not antiparticles.
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  • #2
I didn't read the blog in detail, but....
I think most physicists would agree that, by definition, "charge conjugation" turns matter into antimatter. In 1956, when both P and C were found to be violated in muon decay, this gave Landau a great idea. If changing particles to antiparticles also included P, then the world would still be symmetric. This idea agreed with all known P and C violation, and was popular until CP was found to be violated. The blog is probably using this Landau idea which, except for CP violation, does make things more symmetric.
 
  • #3
Just trying to get this straight: suppose we found two particles with equal mass but opposite spins and opposite charges. Would they necessarily be a matter-antimatter pair?
Thanks.
 
  • #4
nomadreid said:
Just trying to get this straight: suppose we found two particles with equal mass but opposite spins and opposite charges. Would they necessarily be a matter-antimatter pair?
Thanks.

An antiparticle will have the same spin as the corresponding particle, so we can rephrase your question as "suppose we found two particles with equal mass and spins but opposite charges. Would they necessarily be a matter-antimatter pair?" The answer still depends on finding experimental signatures that all of the interactions of these particles were also charge symmetric. For example, if these particles have nonzero EM charge, there should be quantum processes where an intermediate photon creates a particle-antiparticle pair. If the proper interactions occur, we can decide if they're a particle-antiparticle pair.

If the particles are electrically neutral, there can be additional complications, since it's possible that either each particle is its own antiparticle or that the particle-antiparticle eigenstates are mixed states. There's some discussion here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutral_particle_oscillations
 
  • #5
Thank you, fzero. That is very helpful.
 
  • #6
The relevance of CP for flipping particles ino their antiparticles is dictated by the neutrinos:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antineutrino#Antineutrinos

The antineutrinos observed so far all have right-handed helicity (i.e. only one of the two possible spin states has ever been seen), while the neutrinos are left-handed.

Helicity is the projection of spin on the direction of momentum.
Thus, in order to create an antineutrino out of its neutrino, you woul have to apply the CP-operation. So, the physics of antiparticles is created via CP out of the physics of particles (except for the tiny CP violation).
 
  • #7
nomadreid said:
Just trying to get this straight: suppose we found two particles with equal mass but opposite spins and opposite charges. Would they necessarily be a matter-antimatter pair?
Thanks.
Not necessarily in principle. (They would need the same spin.)
They would also have to be able to annihilate each other,
although I don't know of any case of particles with equal mass and spin, and opposite charge that are not antiparticles.
 

1. What is CP violation?

CP violation, or charge-parity violation, is a phenomenon in particle physics where the laws of physics do not show the same behavior under the combined transformations of charge conjugation (C) and parity (P). This means that the laws of physics do not remain unchanged when particles are replaced with their antiparticles and their spatial coordinates are inverted.

2. What is antimatter?

Antimatter is a type of matter composed of antiparticles, which have the same mass as their corresponding particles but with opposite charge. When a particle and its antiparticle come into contact, they annihilate each other and release energy in the form of gamma rays.

3. What is the significance of CP violation in antimatter?

CP violation is significant in antimatter because it helps to explain the observed imbalance between matter and antimatter in the universe. According to the Big Bang theory, equal amounts of matter and antimatter should have been created in the early universe, but today we see a predominance of matter. CP violation may be responsible for this imbalance.

4. How is CP violation studied in particle physics?

CP violation is studied using high-energy particle accelerators, such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. Scientists use these machines to create and study particles and antiparticles, and observe their behavior to look for signs of CP violation.

5. What are the potential applications of understanding CP violation and antimatter?

Understanding CP violation and antimatter could have significant implications for our understanding of the fundamental laws of physics. It could also lead to advancements in technologies such as medical imaging and energy production. Additionally, understanding the behavior of antimatter could help us better predict and mitigate potential dangers, such as radiation exposure from space travel.

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