Just like normal matter, you can expect it to appear in different temperatures. However, note that so far, no large amounts of antimatter have been created; only individual particles and atoms. The reason for this is that when it comes in contact with "normal" matter, they destroy each other.
It isn't a matter of temperature. It is created in high-speed collisions like those observed in the hadron particle collider. Antimatter is naturally occurring. It has only been created in minute amounts and costs a fortune. One kilogram of antimatter would create an explosion with the power of a 20 megaton nuclear bomb.
No, antimatter does not possess negative mass. Antimatter has the same mass as regular matter, but opposite charge.
hypothetically it can. According to thermodynamics if temperature is dropped below -273 C (0 K) the volume becomes negative, which is not possible in our universe. But (hypothetically) there are infinite parallel universes consiqutively positive and negative. The positive one consists of matter and the negative of antimatter(proved practically at CERN) . volume of matter is positive and that of antimatter is negative. So by the time the temperature is dropped below 0 K all the matter is converted into antimatter and it eventually goes in another universe.
The antimatter equivalent of a proton is an antiproton. It has the same mass as a proton but opposite charge.
Yes, antimatter has been observed in laboratory experiments and high-energy particle collisions. The existence of antimatter is supported by the theoretical framework of quantum field theory, which predicts the existence of antimatter as a counterpart to ordinary matter. Additionally, antimatter has practical applications in medical imaging and research.
It isn't a matter of temperature. It is created in high-speed collisions like those observed in the hadron particle collider. Antimatter is naturally occurring. It has only been created in minute amounts and costs a fortune. One kilogram of antimatter would create an explosion with the power of a 20 megaton nuclear bomb.
They can DEFINITELY breathe antimatter
Antimatter - band - was created in 1998.
Antimatter - album - was created in 1993.
No, antimatter does not possess negative mass. Antimatter has the same mass as regular matter, but opposite charge.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by Paul Dirac.
Antimatter was discovered in 1928 by 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
Antimatter is real. Liking or disliking it is irrelevant.
antimatter has always been here but nobody knew about it until recently
An antihydrogen is an atom of the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen, or the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen as a collective.