It’s been widely accepted that the proton, the positively charged particle that makes up atoms, is composed of quarks and gluons. The high amount of gluons are thought to spontaneously create quark-antiquark pairs within the proton, which quickly disappear. Experiments with the similar processes of muons and antimuons finds that the antiparticles are more commonly made than the regular ones.
Antimatter is rare because it doesn't last long before it encounters matter and turns an amount of matter equal to its own mass into energy.
Okay, so this is awesome. I look forward to stripping the utterly pointless mattery-type stuff out and making some antimatter bullets for.... Uh... Duck hunting.
I always love when nothing comes together! <3
What is the latest developments on transporter technology?
The amazing thing is how it all randomly came together.
This is what M. T. Keshe has been trying to say for the last decade. Unified general and quantum physics see http://keshefoundation.org
The summary is wrong. The abstracts do not say that the antiparticles are more common.
So, it's like a recessive anti-matter. This whole time we could have been using it without even knowing...
Oooh warp drive when?
This sounds very quarky to me.