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Cosmic Antimatter Excess Confirmed

sciencehabit writes "In 2008, the Italian satellite PAMELA picked up an unusual signal: a spike in antimatter particles whizzing through space. The discovery, controversial at the time, hinted that physicists might be coming close to detecting dark matter, an enigmatic substance thought to account for 85% of the matter in the universe. Now, new data from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope confirm the spike (abstract)."

8 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. Why are we discussing this? by gringer · · Score: 5, Funny

    It doesn't matter

    --
    Ask me about repetitive DNA
    1. Re:Why are we discussing this? by migla · · Score: 5, Funny

      >It doesn't matter

      What's the matter with you? As a matter of fact, it does. One semantically related question is which of the two mats is more mat than the other - which one is matter? Probably the person who lays mats for a living, the matter, could answer that.

      --
      Some of my favourite people are from th US; Vonnegut, Chomsky, Bill Hicks.
  2. Re:Dark matter or antimatter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The answer is in the second paragraph of the article.

    Well, don't keep us hanging in suspense here! What does the second paragraph of the article say?!?

  3. Re:Dark matter or antimatter? by justin12345 · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Theorists generally believe that when two dark matter particles collide, they should annihilate each other to produce ordinary particles, such as an electron and its antimatter twin, a positron. Thanks to Einstein's iconic equivalence between energy and mass, E=mc2, each of those particles should emerge with an energy essentially equal to the mass of the original dark matter particle."

    I suspect that the author doesn't know that "dark matter" isn't a synonym for "antimatter". The above paragraph, if true, would make the universe a very explode-y place.

    --
    Cool art gallery, if you're into that sort of thing.
  4. Re:Dark matter or antimatter? by mattie_p · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Theorists generally believe that when two dark matter particles collide, they should annihilate each other to produce ordinary particles, such as an electron and its antimatter twin, a positron. I suspect that the author doesn't know that "dark matter" isn't a synonym for "antimatter". The above paragraph, if true, would make the universe a very explode-y place.

    Some dark matter candidates are, according to theory, their own anti-particle. The only reason it is not a more explode-y space is that dark matter interacts very weakly with other matter, including itself, and therefore has not been identified yet.

  5. Re:Anti-matter vs. dark matter by sheepe2004 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm guessing you didn't RTFA? They are not saying that antimatter is dark matter.

    They have detected a large and unexpected amount of antimatter.
    Dark matter collisions (theoretically) can create large amounts of antimatter.
    So one possible explanation for the antimatter is that two dark matter particles collided.

    --
    http://compsoc.man.ac.uk/~shep/
  6. Re:Dark matter or antimatter? by rossdee · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Some dark matter candidates are, according to theory, their own anti-particle"

    In related news, Herman Cain is his own worst enemy.

  7. Re:Dark matter or antimatter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Anything which can produce photons also can produce electron-positron pairs, just with lower probability. However dark matter particles should not produce photons directly because they don't interact electromagnetically (the defining property of dark matter!), and annihilating (directly) into photons would be an electromagnetic interaction (photons are not "pure energy", no matter how often you read that). Rather as weakly interacting particles, I'd expect them to produce virtual Z0s which then could decay into (real) electron-positron pairs, assuming sufficient energy (I'd expect the dominant decay channel to be into neutrinos, though).