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Charge-parity violation is thought to explain why there’s more matter than antimatter in the universe. Scientists just spotted it in a new place.
Particles are known to have identical mass and opposite charges with respect to their antimatter partners. However, when particles transform or decay into other particles, for example as occurs when ...
(via Fermilab) Scientists study antimatter, investigating the ways in which it acts like ordinary matter and the ways in which it differs. Antimatter is the opposite of ordinary matter and, when ...
Things such as, air, water and rocks are all examples of matter. Antimatter is like the opposite of matter, made up of particles that have the opposite electrical charge. For example, matter has ...
Faster decay of antimatter than matter is exactly the sort of thing the search for symmetry violation is looking for. A ...
Our universe is full of matter, and each and every particle of matter, theoretically, has an antimatter counterpart. These elusive particles have fascinated physicists for decades. And now the ...