Antimatter

Antimatter idea offers scientists clue to cracking cosmic mystery

  • Matter consists of subatomic particles that give it mass and volume.
    • Protons and neutrons (baryons) are made up of quarks and gluons.
    • Electrons and neutrinos (leptons) are other examples of subatomic particles.
  • Antimatter is the counterpart to matter, with particles having reversed charge, parity, and time (CPT Reversal).
    • For every particle in matter, there exists an antiparticle: e.g., antielectrons (positrons), antiprotons, antineutrons, antiquarks, etc.
    • When matter and antimatter collide, they annihilate each other, converting into energy.
  • Antimatter regions of the universe could theoretically exist, with the same physical and chemical properties as matter regions. However, they haven’t been observed in the universe.
  • Antimatter Creation and Observations
    • Antiparticles have been produced in particle accelerators, and anti-elements and anti-atoms have been created.
    • Cosmic rays provide us with antiprotons, antielectrons, and even antinuclei.
    • Potassium-40 decay in human bodies produces one antielectron (positron) every 20 seconds.
  • The Big Bang and the Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry
    • The Big Bang (13.8 billion years ago) is believed to have produced equal quantities of matter and antimatter.
    • Today, antimatter is almost entirely absent in the universe, presenting one of the biggest mysteries in physics: Why is there so much matter and so little antimatter
  • Theoretical Background on Antimatter
    • An antiparticle is a particle with the same mass as its counterpart but an opposite charge (e.g., the positron is the antiparticle of the electron).
    • The existence of antiparticles arises from quantum mechanics and special relativity.
  • Antimatter is detectable in certain cosmic phenomena but is extremely scarce on a large scale.
    • Every proton and neutron in matter is composed of antiquarks.
    • However, matter-dominated galaxies suggest an absence of significant antimatter in the observable universe.
  • Early Universe Asymmetry:
    • In the early universe, a small difference between protons and antiprotons allowed for the formation of matter as we know it.
    • For every 1.7 billion proton-antiproton pairs, there was likely an extra unpaired proton, leading to the dominance of matter.
  • Recent Discovery and Progress
    • A 2024 paper suggested a loophole in the Standard Model to explain the matter-antimatter asymmetry.
    • Quantum field theory allows for the variation of the masses of these new particles over time, which may have helped with the symmetry violation in the early universe.

Source:
TH

Previous Year Question

Consider the following statements:

1. Light is affected by gravity.
2. The Universe is constantly expanding.
3. Matter warps its surrounding space-time.

Which of the above is/are the prediction/predictions of Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity, often discussed in media?

[UPSC Civil Services Exam – 2018 Prelims]

(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (d)

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