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  2. Antimatter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimatter

    Antimatter may exist in relatively large amounts in far-away galaxies due to cosmic inflation in the primordial time of the universe. Antimatter galaxies, if they exist, are expected to have the same chemistry and absorption and emission spectra as normal-matter galaxies, and their astronomical objects would be observationally identical, making ...

  3. Exotic matter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exotic_matter

    Antimatter – Material composed of antiparticles of the corresponding particles of ordinary matter; Dark energy – Energy driving the accelerated expansion of the universe; Dark matter – Concept in cosmology; Gravitational interaction of antimatter – Theory of gravity on antimatter; Mirror matter – Hypothetical counterpart to ordinary ...

  4. Baryon asymmetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryon_asymmetry

    In physical cosmology, the baryon asymmetry problem, also known as the matter asymmetry problem or the matter–antimatter asymmetry problem, [1] [2] is the observed imbalance in baryonic matter (the type of matter experienced in everyday life) and antibaryonic matter in the observable universe.

  5. Here’s why the universe has more matter than antimatter - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-universe-more-matter-antimatter...

    All the particles that make up the matter around us, such electrons and protons, have antimatter versions which are nearly identical, but with mirrored properties such as the opposite electric charge.

  6. Anti universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti_universe

    Anti universe may refer to: Antimatter, matter composed of the antiparticles; Multiverse, the hypothetical set of all universes; Anti-gravity, a hypothetical ...

  7. Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_Magnetic_Spectrometer

    The visible matter in the Universe, such as stars, adds up to less than 5 percent of the total mass that is known to exist from many other observations. The other 95 percent is dark, either dark matter, which is estimated at 20 percent of the Universe by weight, or dark energy, which makes up the balance. The exact nature of both still is unknown.

  8. Baryogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryogenesis

    This imbalance has to be exceptionally small, on the order of 1 in every 1 630 000 000 (≈ 2 × 10 9) particles a small fraction of a second after the Big Bang. [6] After most of the matter and antimatter was annihilated, what remained was all the baryonic matter in the current universe, along with a much greater number of bosons.

  9. Vacuum energy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_energy

    Usually about twice as much energy is released in the explosion as would correspond to the initial antimatter matter annihilation. [ 13 ] In the video game Half-Life 2 , the item generally known as the "gravity gun" is referred to as both the "zero point field energy manipulator" and the "zero point energy field manipulator."