Does Antimatter exist in the universe anymore?

Click For Summary
Antimatter exists in the universe and can be created in laboratories, particularly in particle accelerators, where it is produced momentarily before annihilating with matter. While it is challenging to contain significant amounts of antimatter due to its tendency to annihilate upon contact with matter, ongoing research, such as the ALPHA collaboration, studies its properties. Antimatter is also naturally produced through processes like positron emission in proton-rich nuclei and is found in cosmic rays. The early universe likely contained nearly equal amounts of matter and antimatter, but an imbalance allowed some matter to survive annihilation, a phenomenon that remains a mystery. Overall, antimatter continues to be a subject of scientific inquiry, with implications for understanding the universe's composition and fundamental physics.
  • #31
Drakkith said:
The big bang was not an explosion. It was an expansion of space which resulted in a gradual reduction in the temperature and density of the universe over the past 13 billion years. In other words, the big bang was not a single explosive event, but a process of expansion.

You cannot create a big bang by annihilating matter and anti-matter.

How can you expand space when only particles that are intractable with each other can expand?

Is space a particle?

all of space was contained in a single point - There had to have been some large explosion that created this single point in space otherwise we would be able to map the entirety of space based on the Big Bang Theory. But since our universe has a boundary to it I really don't think that we can say that all of space was contained in a single point.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bang
 
Last edited:
Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #32
Dryson said:
How can you expand space when only particles that are intractable with each other can expand? Is space a particle?

Particles themselves don't expand, the distance between each particle increases. The same thing happens with the expansion of space. The distance between unbound objects increases over time. There are plenty of threads in the cosmology subforum about this.
 
  • #33
Dryson said:
How can you expand space when only particles that are intractable with each other can expand?
Intractable means "hard to control or deal with," like an intractable problem. I don't understand what you mean by "particles that are intractable with each other".
 
  • #34
vela said:
Intractable means "hard to control or deal with," like an intractable problem. I don't understand what you mean by "particles that are intractable with each other".

I meant to write particles that interact with each other in an energetic manner.
 
  • #35
Drakkith said:
Particles themselves don't expand, the distance between each particle increases. The same thing happens with the expansion of space. The distance between unbound objects increases over time. There are plenty of threads in the cosmology subforum about this.

If space was a particle then it would have an energetic interaction value present that can be tested. Space is also the distance between each particle that increases and decreases over time based upon particle interaction. If space was expanding then it would have an energetic value.

But since space cannot be tested as an energetic particle but can be proven to be a medium that particles move through perhaps space can be summed up as the residual value of anti-matter that was present in space before our Universe slowly cooled.

I still don't believe that space is expanding but rather the particles in space are moving through space.

I think Spock made the reference that "Space was the thing that was moving."
 
  • #36
@Dryson: That does not make sense at all.
Dryson said:
I still don't believe that space is expanding but rather the particles in space are moving through space.
This is not a question of belief. Particles moving through space are incompatible with our observations.
 
  • #37
Bandersnatch said:
Hannes Alfven in his, now very much dated, 1966 book Worlds-Antiworlds: Antimatter in Cosmology argued that initial annihilation at the boundary would create enough of radiation pressure to push the two kinds of matter apart and subsequently reduce the annihilation rate below detectable levels. I don't remember if he had any calculations there, it's been some years since I've read it. Still, the point can be made that this particular argument can be reasonably circumvented.

There are of course other serious issues with the picture, including the lack of a mechanism to separate matter and antimatter in bulk, but this one is not such a strong one.

mfb said:
Well, that just opens up more questions. Where are those large surfaces without matter (of either kind)? Where are the antihelium nuclei AMS-02 is looking for?

We cannot fully rule out that model, but large amounts of antimatter look very problematic in many aspects.

In early high school (not long after It was published), I was a big 'fan' of Alfven's book. I have a first printing. However, this book was a key part of what led me to pursue study of GR when I read claims it was inconsistent with GR. Indeed, it is fundamentally inconsistent with GR and the book seems blissfully unaware of key mathematical theorems of GR. In particular, this book proposes a cyclic cosmology, but the collapse phase as presented by Alfven would satisfy all conditions of the singularity theorems, so the benign re-expansion powered by boundary layer annihilation is a mathematical absurdity. This book is now only a nice historic curiosity by a very accomplished plasma physicist who seems never to have chosen to put in the effort to learn GR.
 
  • #38
Do we actually create matter in particle accelerators? I mean , sure we collide particles together but do we actually 'create' matter. If yes, then in what sense?
Also, I'd like to clarify: if all the antimatter was annihilated at the Big Bang, that must mean that there was more matter than antimatter to begin with. Was there? Why?
 
  • #39
UncertaintyAjay said:
Do we actually create matter in particle accelerators? I mean , sure we collide particles together but do we actually 'create' matter. If yes, then in what sense?
You could say "produce" or "make" if you like it better :). They don't get created from "nothing". See e.g. http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/particles/accel.html and http://www.fnal.gov/pub/science/inquiring/questions/jackie.html.

UncertaintyAjay said:
Also, I'd like to clarify: if all the antimatter was annihilated at the Big Bang, that must mean that there was more matter than antimatter to begin with.
Have a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryon_asymmetry.
 
  • #40
UncertaintyAjay said:
Do we actually create matter in particle accelerators? I mean , sure we collide particles together but do we actually 'create' matter. If yes, then in what sense?
The antimatter is not there before, and after the collision we have antimatter (and more matter). I would call that "create".
Also, I'd like to clarify: if all the antimatter was annihilated at the Big Bang, that must mean that there was more matter than antimatter to begin with. Was there? Why?
It does not mean that, see the wikipedia link for details.
 
  • #41
I was referring to Novas original statement, in which he said that all the antimatter was anhilliated, in which case there must have been more matter than antimatter. The explanations on the Wikipedia page refer to why we do not observe as much antimatter as we do matter . Or how more matter than anti matter could be produced
 
  • #42
It goes down to basic relativity... matter and energy cannot either be created or destroyed, only changed from one form to another just like a match going from solid matter to plasma by the addition of heat.

Antimatter, despite the connotation follow the same rules as matter... the big misunderstanding is that antimatter is destructive to matter, and it's not. A molecule of water will interact with its antimatter counterpart it will interact with it as if it were any other molecule. The antimatter particle is a MIRROR image of OUR particles. The charges positions of electrons would be reversed.

The Law of Conservation Mass/Energy states that mass/energy ARE the same thing and cannot be created or destroyed, only transformed from one to the other i.e. My monitor is shooting photons that have mass, it is actually shooting matter at me ONLY because it is plugged into the socket. The electricity TRANSFORMS in mass that I can see.

Antimatter is interesting, takes too much energy to feasibly "convert" mass into anitmatter tho. I'm sure it wil change drastically soon and who knows how they may benefit/hurt us...
 
  • #43
My over all point being, yes antimatter CAN be created and converted due to Laws of Relativity and the fact that anitmatter IS mass and reacts like all other mass relatively.
 
  • #44
chkneater said:
It goes down to basic relativity... matter and energy cannot either be created or destroyed, only changed from one form to another just like a match going from solid matter to plasma by the addition of heat.

Matter can be created and destroyed, it happens every day at the LHC and other particle colliders.

Antimatter, despite the connotation follow the same rules as matter... the big misunderstanding is that antimatter is destructive to matter, and it's not. A molecule of water will interact with its antimatter counterpart it will interact with it as if it were any other molecule. The antimatter particle is a MIRROR image of OUR particles. The charges positions of electrons would be reversed.

This is incorrect. A molecule of water interacting with its equivalent antimatter molecule WILL result in an annihilation of both molecules. Note that a normal interaction between two water molecules involves a close range repulsion from their respective electrons. Replace one molecule of water with its antimatter equivalent and you no longer have a repulsion between electrons, but a strong attraction between the electrons and the positrons. The end result is annihilation.

The Law of Conservation Mass/Energy states that mass/energy ARE the same thing and cannot be created or destroyed, only transformed from one to the other i.e. My monitor is shooting photons that have mass, it is actually shooting matter at me ONLY because it is plugged into the socket. The electricity TRANSFORMS in mass that I can see.

This is also incorrect. Conservation laws do not state that mass and energy are the same thing and indeed they are not. Einsteins equation e=mc2 is commonly claimed to tell us that mass and energy are the same thing, but this is also incorrect. The equation tells us that an amount of energy added or removed from a system results in an amount of mass added or removed to the system, with the amount of mass determined by the equation. Mass and energy are NOT the same thing in physics, though they are related. Also, photons do not have mass even though they have energy.

Antimatter is interesting, takes too much energy to feasibly "convert" mass into anitmatter tho. I'm sure it wil change drastically soon and who knows how they may benefit/hurt us...

Unlikely. Matter/antimatter creation using particle colliders is a very complicated process and it is very unlikely we are going to drastically increase the efficiency in the process anytime soon.
 
  • #45
Unfortunately this thread has generated a lot of pseudoscience and personal theories for responses lately that have had to be deleted. Since the original question has been answered adequately I am going to lock this thread to prevent more troublesome replies.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
830
Replies
13
Views
3K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K
Replies
14
Views
6K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
21
Views
3K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
3K