Re: Science Mag's top 125 unanswered questions
Brucebo wrote:
Is antimatter really rare? Observationally yes, but actually????
There are known asymmetries between matter and antimatter, see:
http://www-news.uchicago.edu/releases/99/990301.ktev.shtml
What if, due to these asymmetries, antimatter nucleons will not fuse
into higher order nuclei? Has either anti-deuterium or an anti-alpha
particle ever been observed? If antimatter is unable to fuse there
would be no antimatter stars (stellar mass objects yes), no antimatter
"metals" (astro-definition), no antimatter planets. All that would
exist would be antimatter stellar massed objects, antineutron stars,
black holes formed from antimater and diffuse anti-hydrogen.
Since there are no fusion reactions to support them, stellar massed
objects would quickly collapse, after exhausting their residual thermal
energy, into massive brown dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes.
There would be no anti-planets because hydrogen, by itself, will not
congeal into substellar masses. Heavier less volatile elements are
needed to serve as planetary nuclei.
Due to it's rapid proclivity toward gravitational collapse perhaps
most of the central galactic black holes were formed by the leftover
antimatter.
Asside from energetic cosmic rays one would not expect to see much
interstellar anti-hydrogen locally because the solar wind would blow it
away. Beyond the heliopause it may be a different matter.
Given the above scenario, there still needs to be a segregation
mechanism to separate matter from anti-matter so that sizable
accumulations of one or the other could exist.
Fun speculations.
What is the difference between "Observationally yes, but actually"?
We don't see the signatures of large aggregates of antimatter or
aggregate antimatter matter interactions.
.
Relevant Pages
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