YT2095 Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 I`v had an idea but 1`st I`d like to know a few things before I formulate any further. it involves Anti-matter, and I`d like to have a few Simple answers. do Antimatter particles Only react with an identical counter particle IE/ Positron meets Electron? or will it interact with ANY matter? IE/ Anti-proton meets an electron or neutron, or Positron meets a proton or neutron?
swansont Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 It'll only annihilate with the partner. It will have "normal" interactions with everything else — a proton and positron will electrostatically repel each other, and an antiproton and positron will attract and can form antihydrogen.
YT2095 Posted January 15, 2008 Author Posted January 15, 2008 damn! that was Not the answer I was hoping for at all oh well, there goes That brain-fart ok, maybe it`s not a Complete loss! how far down the Tinyness scale does this work? does it apply to Sub-atomic particles also?
Royston Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 does it apply to Sub-atomic particles also? An antineutron consists of antiquarks, so yes.
thedarkshade Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 Hmmm, you're planning something fancy YT aren't you! Tell us the rest!
Gilded Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 YT and antimatter? Something awesome and perhaps destruction on a planetary scale is bound to ensue.
Fuzzwood Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 /me just noticed that the rain outside is going sidewards again
thedarkshade Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 No matter what you are thinking of, you are dealing with matter-antimatter annihilation and I see that as RED ALERT. There is quite a lot energy coming out, so watch it! Think of electron + positron = 938MeV released!
YT2095 Posted January 15, 2008 Author Posted January 15, 2008 Chill! it`s only and Idea for an experiment so far, and from what Swansont said, it hardly seems even worth looking at, I can`t argue with Facts! HAD the answer have been Different then we might be cookin` with gas, but they`re not, so End of chat really for now anyway....
Mr Skeptic Posted January 15, 2008 Posted January 15, 2008 I think the reason antimatter cannot annihilate with particles other than its own pair because of conservation rules. A positron and quark would violate conservation of charge, for example.
swansont Posted January 16, 2008 Posted January 16, 2008 No matter what you are thinking of, you are dealing with matter-antimatter annihilation and I see that as RED ALERT. There is quite a lot energy coming out, so watch it! Think of electron + positron = 938MeV released! And then breathe a sigh of relief when you realize that shade meant proton/antiproton, since an electron/positron annihilation releases 511 keV.
thedarkshade Posted January 16, 2008 Posted January 16, 2008 :( Didn't I write that? Ah crap... Looks like lack of sleep except puffy eyes it also produces a chaos in nervous system...
YT2095 Posted January 16, 2008 Author Posted January 16, 2008 it`s that Massive amount of energy that I was thinking of exploiting, if an electron and a positron can give that amount of energy, then it seamed reasonable that things even smaller would give discernible and easily detectable energy levels too. making it the Front end of a really sensitive particle detector in particular I was wondering if this could be used to detect Gravitons, as a way to find out for sure if it`s a direct property of Mass OR gravitons are Every where and mass simply "blocks" some of them so that we`re being Pushed down onto earth, a bit like the casimir effect. I was thinking that setting up such a detector on earth, would you get more "Flashes" detected on the side facing Space, or would you get more on the side facing the earth? as I said at the beginning, it was only an idea
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