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Judi Lynn

(162,495 posts)
Sat Jun 17, 2023, 08:17 AM Jun 2023

Large Hadron Collider may be closing in on the universe's missing antimatter

By Keith Cooper published about 18 hours ago

'Through more precise measurements, large improvements have been made in our knowledge.'



a technician stands near a set of tubes and wires at the large hadron collider
The LHCb experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. (Image credit: CERN)

Physicists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) are closing in on an explanation for why we live in a universe of matter and not antimatter.

Matter and antimatter are two sides of the same coin. Every type of particle has an anti-particle, which is its equal and opposite. For instance, the antimatter equivalent of a negatively charged electron is a positively charged positron.

The Standard Model of physics tells us that if we substitute a particle for its antiparticle, it should still operate within the laws of physics in the same way. As such, the Big Bang should not have had a preference for creating one type over another — this symmetry at the heart of nature means that matter and antimatter should have formed in equal amounts in the Big Bang.

Lucky for us, this does not seem to have been the case, because when you put matter and antimatter together, the outcome is explosive to say the least. Had matter and antimatter been crafted in equal amounts, then they would have annihilated each other, creating a cosmos filled with a sea of radiation, no atoms and no life. Today, the only antimatter is that which is produced in particle decays and interactions.

More:
https://www.space.com/large-hadron-collider-matter-antimatter-mystery?utm_source=notification

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Large Hadron Collider may be closing in on the universe's missing antimatter (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jun 2023 OP
It's not about the size of your hardon collider Effete Snob Jun 2023 #1
Don't scoff! This research is theoretical, but there will be practical applications soon. Beakybird Jun 2023 #2
I wonder if it could be what formed the blackholes that formed the galaxies? After all cstanleytech Jun 2023 #3
 

Effete Snob

(8,387 posts)
1. It's not about the size of your hardon collider
Sat Jun 17, 2023, 08:26 AM
Jun 2023

Last edited Sat Jun 17, 2023, 09:55 AM - Edit history (1)

But it is odd that we almost never hear about the small hardon collider.

For all that money, can they focus on something like finding the universe’s missing socks?

Beakybird

(3,395 posts)
2. Don't scoff! This research is theoretical, but there will be practical applications soon.
Sat Jun 17, 2023, 09:59 AM
Jun 2023

Better smoothies.

cstanleytech

(27,129 posts)
3. I wonder if it could be what formed the blackholes that formed the galaxies? After all
Sat Jun 17, 2023, 07:59 PM
Jun 2023

it stands to reason that a massive star composed of antimatter would react in a similar manner.
Then throw in the theory that antimatter is repelled by matter it could be that the antimatter ended up clumping together soon after the universe formed and created giant stars which then blew and formed the giant blackholes which we see stars orbit around.

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