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Scientists show antimatter falls downward due to gravity
As the name suggest, antimatter is the exact opposite of ordinary matter, as it is made of antiparticles instead of ordinary particles.
The scientists at CERN have shown that antimatter falls downward due to gravity, just like regular matter.
A research paper published in the journal ‘Nature’ said that the result was not surprising at all. The opposite would certainly have been surprising, it added.
As the name suggest, antimatter is the exact opposite of ordinary matter, as it is made of antiparticles instead of ordinary particles.
These antiparticles are identical in mass to their regular counterparts. But just like looking in a mirror reverses left and right, the electrical charges of antiparticles are reversed. So, an anti-electron would have a positive instead of a negative charge while an antiproton would have a negative instead of a positive charge. When antimatter meets matter, both particles are annihilated, and their combined masses are converted into pure energy.
As far as we know, antimatter doesn’t exist naturally in the known universe, although we can now create small amounts at the laboratories.
But scientists believe that 10 billionths of a second after the Big Bang, there was an abundance of antimatter. The nascent universe was incredibly hot and infinitely dense, so much so that energy and mass were virtually interchangeable. New particles and antiparticles were constantly being created and hurling themselves, kamikaze-like, at their nearest polar opposites, thereby annihilating both matter and antimatter back into energy in a great cosmic war of attrition.
Matter won. At some point in those first few fractions of a second, for reasons that continue to puzzle scientists, a small surplus of matter appeared. Even that tiny imbalance was sufficient to wipe out all of the antimatter in the universe in about one second.
As the universe expanded, the temperature began dropping rapidly until it was too low to create new particle and antiparticle pairs. Only a small amount of “leftover” particles of matter remained; everything else had been annihilated, and their masses were emitted as radiation. Those bits and pieces make up the stars, planets, asteroids, and just about every other observable object in the universe.