Antimatter: The Universe's Hidden Balance and Future Potential
Matter and antimatter coexisted when the Universe first began to form. It's perplexing that the two counterparts didn't annihilate each other; if they had, we wouldn't have existed. In fact, we live in a world where matter outnumbers its formation. Scientists believe that an unknown cause occurred in a very, very short time (in a second divided by 10 with 35 zeros in front of it) and resulted in an increase in the production of matter at the expense of antimatter, which is one of the reasons for our existence today.
Scientists were even more perplexed in 2018 when they performed the most precise measurement of antimatter to date and confirmed that antimatter and matter behave nearly identically. The discovery implies that particles and their inverses should have been created in equal quantities at the beginning of the Universe. However, if true, the fact that matter successes over antimatter becomes increasingly challenging to understand.
Researchers are still looking for the criterion that explains matter's dominance over antimatter in our Universe. Calculations indicate that there was a slight imbalance in particle and antiparticle numbers just after the Big Bang, when particles and antiparticles annihilated one another. Less than one out of every billion ordinary particles survived the collision and went on to form all of the matter we see around us today. Our very existence hinges on the slight prevalence of matter over antimatter in the early universe. Yet, as we gaze into the future, it is evident that antimatter holds a wealth of promising potential uses.
The next step in antiparticle applications is
to manufacture and store anti-hydrogen in positrons and antiprotons. Storing
antimatter is difficult due to its lack of electric charge and magnetically
opposing properties, but scientists have proposed several suggestions for
preserving and storing it, including using an ultraviolet laser beam and
magnetic fields to push it away. Magnetic field can be used to trap
anti-hydrogen in snowballs, similar to hydrogen.
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