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Matter and anti-matter. Does this extend to Light. ...is there such a thing as "Dark-Light"?
It seems that most things have an opposite either in existence or in theory
It seems that most things have an opposite either in existence or in theory such as Matter and anti-matter. Does this extend to Light. Rather than just dark or the absence of light is there such a thing as "Dark-Light"?
Quote from: grant2171Matter and anti-matter. Does this extend to Light. ...is there such a thing as "Dark-Light"?Light is its own anti-particle. When a gamma-ray photon strikes another gamma-ray photon, both can disappear, and the energy is released as matter (eg an electron and positron).This process plays a major role in the Big Bang theory.See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matter_creationFor a particle to be its own antiparticle, the particle must be electrically neutral (like a photon), or it would have the opposite charge to its antiparticle.For some particles like the ghostly neutrino, it is still not established if its antiparticle is the same or different.See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majorana_fermion
Quote from: grant2171 on 27/01/2016 11:29:20It seems that most things have an opposite either in existence or in theoryMany things don't have an opposite, just an absence. We can have a sound or no sound, water in the sink or no water, rain or no rain.I suspect that because in early history people did not understand the nature of light and absence of light a specific name, darkness, was coined.
Symmetry is not universal. There is no antigravity, so why should there be antilight?
the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation has been found to be, simply, heat from dust.
Light is its own anti-particle. When a gamma-ray photon strikes another gamma-ray photon, both can disappear, and the energy is released as matter (eg an electron and positron).This process plays a major role in the Big Bang theory.See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matter_creation
For some particles like the ghostly neutrino, it is still not established if its antiparticle is the same or different.See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majorana_fermion
Many things don't have an opposite, just an absence. We can have a sound or no sound, water in the sink or no water, rain or no rain.I suspect that because in early history people did not understand the nature of light and absence of light a specific name, darkness, was coined.
Accountants disagree with you.