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Lionel marr asked the Naked Scientists: I understand there are two big probems: dark matter - what is it and where does it all come from? And anti-matter - what happened to it after the big bang?As they both seem to make up large parts of the universe is there any way that darkmatter is what happened to anti-matter after the big bang?Many thanks,Lionel.What do you think?
Most interestingIf the antiparticle has the opposite charge to the particle touch they will annihilate. But what if we magnetize[spin] them in opposite directions so their north poles face each other and push apart. As the electromagnetic force is 10^36G but the weak electrostatic force is only 10^25G this would stop them annihilating, not so?CliveS
Antimatter is easy to detect. Dark matter has (so far) eluded all attempts to detect it. So they are not the same thing.There is a hypothesis mentioned by Nobel laureate Richard Feynman that a positron may be an electron going backwards in time. This seems to fit the mathematical equations, but of course, we can't reverse time at will, so we can't actually test this. The same theory applies to other antiparticles too.Some have speculated that all the antimatter went back in time, but of course, we can't test this either... See: http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/391/is-anti-matter-matter-going-backwards-in-time
There is a hypothesis mentioned by Nobel laureate Richard Feynman that a positron may be an electron going backwards in time. This seems to fit the mathematical equations, but of course, we can't reverse time at will, so we can't actually test this. The same theory applies to other antiparticles too.
Anit-matter pseudo molecules have been created and they don't appear to go back in time. The creation process was a time positive event.
Quote from: jeffreyHAnit-matter pseudo molecules have been created and they don't appear to go back in time. The creation process was a time positive event.Why do you refer to them as "pseudo" molecules? I see no reason to refer to them as such, they're just "molecules," plain and simple. That concept can only be applied to sinlge particles, not systems of particles like atoms or molecules.
Pmb, you speak of wave function. Have you ever thought of what shape the molecules that are interacting have?
So why would you think that a molecule would be a sphere? It could be any shape and more importantly the electron shells that surround it need to fit together without gaps, particularly if it is a liquid. CliveS
Quote from: acsinuk on 08/10/2013 10:04:27So why would you think that a molecule would be a sphere? It could be any shape and more importantly the electron shells that surround it need to fit together without gaps, particularly if it is a liquid. CliveSA picture tells a thousand words.http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn11272-microscope-discerns-atoms-of-different-elements.html#.UlPO_9K-pmM
Quote from: jeffreyH on 08/10/2013 10:26:03Quote from: acsinuk on 08/10/2013 10:04:27So why would you think that a molecule would be a sphere? It could be any shape and more importantly the electron shells that surround it need to fit together without gaps, particularly if it is a liquid. CliveSA picture tells a thousand words.http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn11272-microscope-discerns-atoms-of-different-elements.html#.UlPO_9K-pmMThat is merely a repesentation of an atom, nothing more. And in physical reality they're not sphere's by any sense of the term.That photo appears to be from a tunneling electron microscope which works on the principle of quantum tunneling. The representation is that of the tunnel current which reflects a probability distribution. What you're seeing is a spherical symmetric probability distribution.
There are other images showing the wave properties.