Death.
Theoretically, anti-matter should look just like normal matter. However, we've never been able to make enough of it to see, which is probably just as well; anti-matter will combine with normal matter to produce phenomenal amounts of energy.
That is to say, a speck of antimatter combining with normal matter would create the most titanic explosion ever seen on Earth.
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∙ 15y agoAntimatter looks identical to regular matter, as both are made up of particles like protons, electrons, and neutrons. The main difference is that antimatter particles have the opposite charge of their corresponding matter particles. When antimatter and matter come into contact, they annihilate each other, releasing energy in the form of gamma rays.
When antimatter comes into contact with matter, they annihilate each other.
antimatter has always been here but nobody knew about it until recently
Yes. Antimatter is only a point of view concept : we can imagine any object made of what we call antimatter. According to his point of view, we would be made of antimatter. Moreover, a number of large areas of the universe, that doesn't have any contact with each other, may be made of antimatter. we wouldn't have any mean to know from where we are.
In an atom of antimatter, the charge of an electron would be positive rather than negative. This is because antimatter particles have the opposite charge of their regular matter counterparts.
Antimatter is a type of matter that has the opposite properties of normal matter. When a particle of matter meets its corresponding antiparticle, they annihilate each other, releasing a large amount of energy in the process. Antimatter is rare in the universe and is mostly created in high-energy environments like particle accelerators.
Antimatter is real. Liking or disliking it is irrelevant.
They can DEFINITELY breathe antimatter
Antimatter - band - was created in 1998.
Antimatter - album - was created in 1993.
A positron is the antimatter counterpart of an electron, with a charge exactly opposite to the electron. Like other antimatter particles if it comes into contact with its matter counterpart the two will mutually annihilate.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
The gravitational force between matter and antimatter follows the same principles as between matter and matter. Gravity attracts all objects with mass toward each other. Matter and antimatter would attract each other gravitationally just like matter attracts matter, following Newton's law of universal gravitation.
Lights Out - Antimatter album - was created in 2003.
Absolutely not - Antimatter is a hypothetical form of matter that is as yet unsubstantiated. Answer It's possible but not probable. And antimatter is not hypothetical
That is not currently known. There is a slight assymetry between matter and antimatter, but so far, it seems that this assymetry is not enough to explain why there is only matter, and hardly any antimatter, in the Universe. Without such an assymetry, there wouldn't be either matter or antimatter in the Universe - just radiation. For more information about what is known, and what isn't, check the Wikipedia article on "Baryon asymmetry".
An antihydrogen is an atom of the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen, or the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen as a collective.