Antimatter captured by CERN scientists in dramatic physics breakthrough.
See report in the Telegraph:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/8141780/Antimatter-captured-by-CERN-scientists-in-dramatic-physics-breakthrough.html
Professor Mike Charlton, a British member of the CERN team from the University of Swansea, said: ''Hydrogen is the simplest of all atoms and anti-hydrogen is the easiest type of antimatter to produce in the laboratory.
''Understanding it will hopefully enable us to shed light on why almost everything in the known universe consists of matter rather than antimatter.''
Could it be that this antimatter has been here all the time but because its dimensions are described in terms of 'i' the square root of minus one, it cannot be perceived?
Thursday, 18 November 2010
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