lmoh said:
Is it true that antimatter is positive matter traveling backwards in time? I have recently heard some say that it is and is part of the mainstream interpretation, but others say that it shouldn't be taken too literally, but I myself am not sure. What is the general consensus on the matter if there is any?
First of all, you have to define what "going back in time" means. In Relativity there are two concepts of time:
- coordinate time is measured by a clock at rest in frame of the observer
- proper time of an object is measured by a clock co-moving with the object
AFAIK the "antimatter going back in time" idea refers to proper time. I'm not sure how useful the idea is, but here some points:
In Feynman Diagrams the anti particles are shown to be moving back in time:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feynman_diagram#Electron-positron_annihilation_example
There are also the Epstein diagrams which contrary to Minkowski diagrams don't use coordinate time, but rather proper time on the time axis. In this diagrams the length contraction from movement can be derived from the projection of the object roated in space-time onto the spatial dimensions:
Raum = space
Eigenzeit = proper time
Object at rest in space moving only through time, therefore advancing vertically in space-time (only along the proper time dimension):
Object is now also moving in space, therefore advancing obliquely in space-time, therefore rotated in space-time, therefore contracted spatially:
Now, what would happen if the proper-time component of that space-time-advancement vector would become negative, so the arrow points down?
Obviously the spatial projection would not only be contracted but mirrored. And anti-matter shows properties which are mirrored compared to matter. So it might make sense to interpret matter and anti-matter as advancing in opposite directions along a proper-time dimension.
Note that "forward" & "backward in time" become arbitrary. An alien made of anti-matter would claim that we are moving backwards in proper-time.