Antimatter is a concept. It is also particles composed negatively.
The person who discovered antimatter was Paul Dirac. Paul Dirac.
We have created 20 nanograms of antimatter. To get you on track, one nanogram is a billionth of a gram. Antimatter is very hard to make, so far only a very small quantity has ever been produced; much less than a milligram has ever been produced and yes there is a way to store it. It's called the penning trap. The penning trap is a container in extreme vacuum and magnetic fields. This is to prevent the antimatter from touching air, since air is made of matter.
Its is formed when two atoms bang into eachother. Scientists are trying to trap antimatter to study it and learn more about it.
Anywhere with elementary particles having the mass and electric charge of ordinary matter. Which basically all antimatter is.
$25 billion for a gram of positrons. $67.5 trillion for anti-hydrogen
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As much as 50% of energy produced in reactions between nucleons and antinucleons is carried away by neutrinos in these applications. It is theoretically possible to retain as much as 100% of the energy in an Antimatter reaction.
They can DEFINITELY breathe antimatter
Not much; as soon as the antimatter meets with normal matter, they annihilate (destroy) each other. That doesn't leave you much time to build anything; a few small atoms have been built, though.
Antimatter - band - was created in 1998.
Antimatter - album - was created in 1993.
There are no definite answers with our current level of understanding of antimatter at this point but scientists believe that this is the result of an imbalance in the production of matter and antimatter particles in the early universe. Another explanation for this phenomenon is that Antimatter may exist in relatively large amounts in far away galaxies due to inflation in the primordial time of the universe
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
It may have to do with the way the universe was created. Certainly if there was a lot of antimatter created, much of it may well have come in contact with matter through the billions of years the universe has existed. That would have resulted in the conversion of that antimatter (along with a like amount of matter) into energy. There may not have been much antimatter around to begin with, too. But, since the amount of visible matter represents less matter than has been calculated to exist in the uinverse, it may be that there is a good bit of antimatter out there somewhere. Not likely, but possible.
Antimatter is a concept. It is also particles composed negatively.