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Analogous to matter, but with charge of the particles opposite to their ordinary matter counterparts.
1
vote
2
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179
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Is it possible for larger antimatter atoms to decay to matter and visa versa?
Following on from previous questions:
If you have antimatter-matter interactions where there is a larger antimatter particle (say carbon or Silicon), is there any reason to believe that the antimatter …
3
votes
1
answer
400
views
Have there been attempts to create heavier antimatter particles?
This is a follow-on from previous question:
It seems as though all experiments concerning antimatter have only been conducted with antimatter protons - as they are obtainable through decay. …
0
votes
1
answer
112
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What underlying structure/framework defines the charge of an antiparticle or regular particl... [duplicate]
I'm trying to understand what structural differences define a particle as being either matter or antimatter.
Can anyone help with this? …
2
votes
2
answers
2k
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What happens when Antimatter interacts with a photon?
So what about antimatter - since charges are opposite, perhaps it also clumps together to form anti-gravity superpositions.
Is there such a thing as an anti-photon? …