No it is not. Fire is a chemical reaction involving matter (molecules). You could have and anti-matter fire however. It would be hot just like regular fire but not as hot if you mixed the anti-matter and matter fuel. The mutual annihilation would release a lot of energy in accordance with E=MC².
The person who discovered antimatter was Paul Dirac. Paul Dirac.
Its is formed when two atoms bang into eachother. Scientists are trying to trap antimatter to study it and learn more about it.
Anywhere with elementary particles having the mass and electric charge of ordinary matter. Which basically all antimatter is.
Sir Issac Newton proposed theory of gravity. He formulated the relation between the force of gravity and the mass and the distance between the masses. This theory failed to explain as to why there is attraction between the masses and not repulsion. With every attraction you have to have corresponding repulsion. That problem is resolved with the discovery of antimatter. So like attracts like. So matter attracts matter and antimatter attracts antimatter. This fallows that matter repel antimatter. So force of gravity between the two masses of matter or two masses of antimatter is directly proportional to the product of masses or anti-masses (Antimatter). The force of repulsion will be directly proportional to the product of mass and anti-mass (Antimatter). It fallows that the force of repulsion is inversely proportional to square of distance between the two.
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
That is not currently known. There is a slight assymetry between matter and antimatter, but so far, it seems that this assymetry is not enough to explain why there is only matter, and hardly any antimatter, in the Universe. Without such an assymetry, there wouldn't be either matter or antimatter in the Universe - just radiation. For more information about what is known, and what isn't, check the Wikipedia article on "Baryon asymmetry".
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.
antimatter has always been here but nobody knew about it until recently