Is Antimatter Naturally Occurring in Outer Space or Only Created on Earth?

AI Thread Summary
Antimatter is produced both on Earth and in outer space, occurring naturally during processes like pair production when high-energy photons interact with matter. While particle accelerators create antimatter in controlled environments, it also forms within the human body as a result of radioactive decay and other interactions. Antimatter and matter are created simultaneously due to the principles of quantum mechanics, following Einstein's equation E = mc^2. However, once created, antimatter quickly annihilates upon contact with matter, converting back into energy. This phenomenon is utilized in medical imaging techniques like Positron Emission Tomography (PET).
Neopet
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
On the Earth, it is produced in tiny quantities in particle accelerators, but it's also produced say, in outer space as well ? is this true?
Are human being made of anti matter, or does it have to be produced purposely, and it exists naturally in outer space ?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi there,

You are asking too many questions at once. So I'll try to give an explanation that should answer most of the questions you asked.

Anti-matter is formed, just like matter, out of thin air, not really but very close to it. To be perfectly clear, photons carry energy. This energy can be transformed to create matter, following Einstein E = mc^2 where m stand for matter. But in the process of creating matter, anti-matter is also created, following many conservation principles related to quantum mechanics. OK anti-matter is produced at the same time as matter.

So as you said, matter and anti-matter is produced in accelarators, in outer space, but also inside your body and mine. That's right, when a photon (it has to have more than 1022keV) interacts with the matter in your body, pair-production (the term for creation of electron and positron) can happen. Therefore, anti-matter is continously created on Earth, and not just in special labs.

Now to make the little story complete, once anti-matter is created inside your body, it will very quickly interact with the matter around it, anhilating back into energy.

Hope this helps you a bit. Cheers
 
Some radioactive isotopes decay by positive beta decay. This is where a proton in the nucleus of an unstable isotope turns into a neutron, and emits a positron (anti-matter electron).

This is used for a special type of medical imaging called Positron Emission Tomography. A radionuclide which decays by positive beta decay is injected into the body. When a decay occurs, the positron that is emitted quickly runs into and annihilates an electron in the body. This creates a pair of gamma rays which pass through you and are detected by the machine. Because two gamma rays going in opposite directions are created when the positron annihilates, you can make a 3-d image of the inside of the body by carefully timing when the two gamma rays arrive at the detector.
 
fatra2 said:
Hi there,

You are asking too many questions at once. So I'll try to give an explanation that should answer most of the questions you asked.

Anti-matter is formed, just like matter, out of thin air, not really but very close to it. To be perfectly clear, photons carry energy. This energy can be transformed to create matter, following Einstein E = mc^2 where m stand for matter. But in the process of creating matter, anti-matter is also created, following many conservation principles related to quantum mechanics. OK anti-matter is produced at the same time as matter.

So as you said, matter and anti-matter is produced in accelarators, in outer space, but also inside your body and mine. That's right, when a photon (it has to have more than 1022keV) interacts with the matter in your body, pair-production (the term for creation of electron and positron) can happen. Therefore, anti-matter is continously created on Earth, and not just in special labs.

Now to make the little story complete, once anti-matter is created inside your body, it will very quickly interact with the matter around it, anhilating back into energy.

Hope this helps you a bit. Cheers

AWESOME, just wondering if my line of reasoning was in the right direction , yeah thanks
 
Scientists at Fermilab ususlly have ~1 or 2 x 1012 anti-protons circulating in the Tevatron at 980 GeV, and up to 50 milliamps (circulating current) of anti-protons in the "stack" at 8 GeV. Check status at
http://www-bd.fnal.gov/notifyservlet/www?project=outside
CERN has produced anti-hydrogen (anti-proton plus positron) in very small quantities.
Bob S
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
I am attempting to use a Raman TruScan with a 785 nm laser to read a material for identification purposes. The material causes too much fluorescence and doesn’t not produce a good signal. However another lab is able to produce a good signal consistently using the same Raman model and sample material. What would be the reason for the different results between instruments?
Back
Top