No, all five types of anti-matter obey chronological progression.
They are mirror images of the other: protons have a certain weight and are positively charged, anti-protons have the same weight but are negatively charged. Antimatter is just matter with an opposite charge.
Photons do not travel through time. This is due to the fact that the faster you travel through space, the slower you travel through time. In other words, if an object is standing still, it is traveling at the speed of light through time, and since a photon travels at the speed of light through space, it is not traveling through time. -- Asker here, I hope no one minds me editing in to expand on the question/answer given. Surely the answer must be more complex. If a photon does not travel through time, then that could potentially violate/invalidate causality.
Theoretically and mathematically... yes. According to Newton's law every time there is an action, an equal and opposite reaction will occur as well. Meaning every time there is an even in space that creates matter, the same amount of anti-matter will also be created.
Indeed, time travel, and travelling faster than the speed of light, are intimately related in the Special Theory of Relativity. Looking at the situation from the other side, if it were possible to travel faster than light, then from some point of view, you would be travelling backwards in time. For more details, read about the definition of "simultaneity" in the Special Theory of Relativity.Probably none of the two is possible - travelling backwards in time, and travelling faster than light.Indeed, time travel, and travelling faster than the speed of light, are intimately related in the Special Theory of Relativity. Looking at the situation from the other side, if it were possible to travel faster than light, then from some point of view, you would be travelling backwards in time. For more details, read about the definition of "simultaneity" in the Special Theory of Relativity.Probably none of the two is possible - travelling backwards in time, and travelling faster than light.Indeed, time travel, and travelling faster than the speed of light, are intimately related in the Special Theory of Relativity. Looking at the situation from the other side, if it were possible to travel faster than light, then from some point of view, you would be travelling backwards in time. For more details, read about the definition of "simultaneity" in the Special Theory of Relativity.Probably none of the two is possible - travelling backwards in time, and travelling faster than light.Indeed, time travel, and travelling faster than the speed of light, are intimately related in the Special Theory of Relativity. Looking at the situation from the other side, if it were possible to travel faster than light, then from some point of view, you would be travelling backwards in time. For more details, read about the definition of "simultaneity" in the Special Theory of Relativity.Probably none of the two is possible - travelling backwards in time, and travelling faster than light.
Lightning is the most powerful source of energy in the world. Therefore it could very easily overload a flying delorean by supercharging the flux capacitor with 1.21 Gigawatts thus sending it backwards or forwards in time.
You cannot travel backwards in time
As soon as anti-matter comes in contact with matter, the two annihilate. As such, placing anti-matter into any container made of matter would result in both being annihilated. The only way to maintain anti-matter for any length of time is to keep it isolated from matter. Magnetic fields can do this for a short time, but invevitably the anti-matter and the matter meet each other.
It's possible, theory suggests that you can time travel by entering a blackhole effecting the space time continuem. Also another theory suggest if you travel at the speed of light you will time travel, but other than that it is meerly impossible. there is another way. scientists suggest that getting dark matter or anti-matter you could rip a hole into another universe of the past. but that way since you are in a parellel universe you cannot change anything. Anti-matter can get you faster than the speed of light by far. you can travel into the future if you travel at 99.99999% the speed of light. because the laws of physics actually slow you down. so 2 weeks inside the machine passes on as 100 years outside.
A vacuum consist of anti-matter; the opposite of matter...matter is something and anti-matter is nothing. When something is added to the vacuum the anti-matter is displaced and only matter will now remains. If you were made out of anti-matter then your observable results would be the opposite. Matter and anti-matter cannot exist in the same space; only one of the two can exist in any place at any one time. When you remove matter from a space the only thing that can exisist in that space is anti-matter!
According to current scientific understanding, antimatter does not move backwards in time. Time travel is a complex concept that has not been proven to be possible with antimatter or any other known particles.
Time travel is not practically possible no matter what your start point or destination.
They are mirror images of the other: protons have a certain weight and are positively charged, anti-protons have the same weight but are negatively charged. Antimatter is just matter with an opposite charge.
No. First of all you could not. But if you could, then time would stand still, not backwards.
Space time travel, also anti-matter production. Space ship fuel, unstable decays into element 115 Ununpentium. Gravity altering properties.
Photons do not travel through time. This is due to the fact that the faster you travel through space, the slower you travel through time. In other words, if an object is standing still, it is traveling at the speed of light through time, and since a photon travels at the speed of light through space, it is not traveling through time. -- Asker here, I hope no one minds me editing in to expand on the question/answer given. Surely the answer must be more complex. If a photon does not travel through time, then that could potentially violate/invalidate causality.
Theoretically and mathematically... yes. According to Newton's law every time there is an action, an equal and opposite reaction will occur as well. Meaning every time there is an even in space that creates matter, the same amount of anti-matter will also be created.
You can't, unless you have a time machine lying around or something. Although some scientists have a theory that if you could travel faster than the speed of light you could travel backwards in time. You wouldn't be able to get back again though!