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Matter vs. Antimatter The Question of Symmetry. Joseph C. Brossett. Origin of Antimatter. In 1928, the Dirac equation is introduced. Equation calls for the existence of negative-energy states. “Holes” in these negative-energy states called for positively charged electrons.
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Matter vs. Antimatter The Question of Symmetry Joseph C. Brossett
Origin of Antimatter • In 1928, the Dirac equation is introduced. • Equation calls for the existence of negative-energy states. • “Holes” in these negative-energy states called for positively charged electrons.
Origin of Antimatter • Dirac suggests that the “holes” could correspond to new particles with opposite charge of known particles. • The positron is observed a year later.
The Question of Symmetry • These developments led to a question that is the focus of this talk. • “Why is our universe dominated by matter particles and not antimatter particles?”
Definitions • Parity invariance – states that the probability of a particle process occurring is exactly the same as the process occurring with the position vectors and the directions of the particles reversed • Baryon – three quarks bound together (proton) • Lepton – particle that has spin ½ and experience no strong forces (electrons)
Defintions • Meson – a particle made up of a quark and a anti-quark
Ideas to Answer the Symmetry Question • Initial conditions idea considered unacceptably by Pauli and many others. • Conservation of matter replaced by conservation of baryon number and lepton number. • CP violation found in weak interactions. • Pauli suggests that CP violation could explain the asymmetry observed today.
Ideas to Answer the Symmetry Question • An experiment in 1964 shows that CP violation does in fact occur. (K0 –meson)
“Baryogenesis and Leptogenesis” • A change in net baryon number is allowed by CP non-conservation and these processes could have occurred at times when the universe was out of equilibrium (high temperature > 100 GeV). • Also, leptogenesis (change in net lepton number) resulting from massive neutrinos could lead to CP violation.
Question Unanswered • The observed asymmetry is as yet not able to be explained. • Some “new physics” and further study of CP violation is needed to understand why the matter and antimatter asymmetry is as it is.