There is antimatter (humans can create minute particles of it in accelerators). Whether or not there are large agglomerations of antimatter elsewhere in the universe is a matter of conjecture (guessing). But the chances are good (the universe is very big and there is lots of stuff out there.
No. If ordinary matter touches antimatter both are annihilated and turned into pure energy. The amount of energy released would be enormous. Using Einstein's E=mc2 we find that contact with even a few grams of antimatter would generate an explosion comparable in magnitude to the detonation of an atomic bomb.
The true name of the so called (by non specialists) god particle is the Higgs boson; this particle was predicted but not discovered until now. The Higgs boson is not the equivalent of the antimatter.
They can DEFINITELY breathe antimatter
Antimatter - band - was created in 1998.
Antimatter - album - was created in 1993.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
The person who discovered antimatter was Paul Dirac. Paul Dirac.
Lights Out - Antimatter album - was created in 2003.
Absolutely not - Antimatter is a hypothetical form of matter that is as yet unsubstantiated. Answer It's possible but not probable. And antimatter is not hypothetical
When antimatter comes into contact with matter, they annihilate each other.
An antihydrogen is an atom of the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen, or the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen as a collective.