0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I am wondering why there is an excess of positive matter in the universe?I've thumb sucked my own unsupported ideas but i am interested in any other theories as to why this is.Much appreciated.
Quote from: ...lets split up... on 20/11/2009 07:38:02I am wondering why there is an excess of positive matter in the universe?I've thumb sucked my own unsupported ideas but i am interested in any other theories as to why this is.Much appreciated.The official answer is: we don't know.A more detailed answer is that there is some physical principle at work in high energy physics such that at some point, more positive matter was created than anti-matter.
You already know a theory of mine, so yeh this should be an intetesting discussion.
I am wondering why there is an excess of positive matter in the universe? I've thumb sucked my own unsupported ideas but I am interested in any other theories as to why this is. Much appreciated.
And if the positron is antimatter, that means the positron is antimatter too,
Quote from: ...lets split up... on 20/11/2009 07:38:02I am wondering why there is an excess of positive matter in the universe? I've thumb sucked my own unsupported ideas but I am interested in any other theories as to why this is. Much appreciated.There isn't! Leaving out photons and neutrinos, all the stable matter of the universe consists of electrons and protons. There are of course neutrons too, but outside a nucleus they suffer beta-minus decay in about ten minutes and turn into a proton, an electron, and an antineutrino. There's also positrons and antiprotons, but they soon encounter their antiparticle and annihilate, leaving our world full of electrons and protons. As far as we can tell, there's the same number of each.You might say the protons are much heavier than the electrons, and in this respect there is more positively charged matter than negatively charged matter. But I suspect what you're really angling at is this:"Electrons and protons are matter, whilst positrons and antiprotons are antimatter. Why is there an excess of matter in the universe?"When you ask this question, you're missing a trick, and it's obvious when you think about it. Here's the $64,000 dollar question:"Given a choice between the electron and the positron, which does the proton more closely resemble?"The answer is the positron. And if the positron is antimatter, that means the proton is antimatter too, and that changes everything. Think of the early universe as a game of tennis, with matter fighting antimatter in an orgy of creation and destruction. People normally think of this as a game where the matter is on one side playing against the antimatter on the other side, like two men playing doubles against two women. It isn't like that. It was a game of mixed doubles. It was matter+antimatter v antimatter+matter. The quartet obviously isn't stable, but all you need is a chance excess of one over the other, and this excess will grow and grow via what's called a "stability tip". This viewpoint puts the mockers on the much-touted "mystery of the missing antimatter". A proton is 1837 times as massive as the electron, so we're mostly made of the stuff.
Farsight, could you try and be a bit more... I don't know what the word is that i am looking for..... serious - that's it, serious.
...And if the positron is antimatter, that means the proton is antimatter too...
And if the positron is antimatter, that means the proton is antimatter too.