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Inexpicable on the basis of one big bang.Evolving wrote:Unexplained, I think, rather than inexplicable.
If the statements in the Astronomy article are correct, there is a further fundamental interaction in addition to the four we know about; and knowing that there is something to discover, is a first step towards discovering it.
Evolving wrote:That is precisely the issue. At any rate in that region of the universe that has in the meantime become the observable universe.
Evolving wrote:What happens when a particle of matter collides with its anti-particle is that they combine to form a particle whose quantum numbers are the addition of the respective quantum numbers of the original particle and anti-particle.
By the definition of an anti-particle, that addition has to give zero for all quantum numbers, and a particle whose quantum numbers are all zero is a massless force carrier - usually a photon.
So there is always something left, but it can't be a particle of matter or anti-matter.
Legal disclaimer: Unless, of course, the standard model is wrong!
Evolving wrote:Not sure what you mean by "transform", Matt.
if an atom or a molecule absorbs a photon, it enters into an excited state, and will usually fall back into a more relaxed state very shortly afterwards, emitting one or more different photons, each with a characteristic wavelength (thus helping us to detect what element this was, if we happen to be watching).
Evolving wrote:Here is a Nature article on the same subject. Doesn't say anything about a new fundamental interaction!
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