Have Scientist ever seen Anti Matter?
  Home FAQ Contact Sign in
alt.philosophy only
 
Advanced search
POPULAR GROUPS

more...

alt.philosophy Profile…
 Up
Re: Have Scientist ever seen Anti Matter?         


Author: Tom Roberts
Date: Sep 13, 2008 08:24

PD wrote:
> On Sep 12, 6:24 pm, "Anthony Buckland"
> telus.net> wrote:
>> "Please define 'left'."
>
> This can be done with a drawing.

A drawing is inadequate, this requires a 3-d diagram. But one must be
careful how it is transmitted -- if as a raster image then the receiver
has a 50%% change of getting it inverted....

I think you need to use one of the parity-violating decays, but the
details are not obvious.... And I'm not sure that would work, as I
believe they actually violate CP, not just P (but on earth there's no
way to apply C to a bismuth nucleus).

C = charge conjugation, P = parity inversion.

But no matter
-- just have them send a SMALL object before coming, and
let us observe whether it annihilates or not.

Tom Roberts
no comments
Re: Have Scientist ever seen Anti Matter?         


Author: spudnik
Date: Sep 16, 2008 19:29

this is where the orthodoxy worketh not;
there are no antiwaves, only waves,
whether within matter or antimatter (or
within the plenum of Pascal's vacuum,
in either region .-)

did you mean,
twice the speed of light anhialation
of an outgoing & incoming wave, or
gamma 'rays' produced by matter-antimatter anhialation?
> Positive gammas and negative or antigammas should be the 2x'c'
> collider norm.

thus:
yes, a useful fiction per convergence of a geometrical series, or
an arithmetical one. the whole field (sik) is subsumed
by the study of p-adics,
wherein "minus one" (or -1.0000... or -...00001.) is found
to be ...9999., per Hensel's lemma. (in short,
the integers have the same properties of 'decimal' periodicities,
as do the fractions, or the nth roots).
Show full article (1.37Kb)
no comments
Re: Have Scientist ever seen Anti Matter?         


Author: spudnik
Date: Sep 16, 2008 19:36

antimatter exists in the laboratory,
it is said in _The Big Bang Never Happened_ by Eric Lerner.

Venus could be a Muslim Paradise beneath that veil
of gas, unless it is really high-pressure CO2
per the alleged reconnaisance by US and SU probes;
so?

someone, ask Farakhan ?!?
> Now, would any of you supposedly intelligent folks care to apply your
> deductive formulated logic on behalf of other intelligent life
> existing/coexisting on Venus?

thus:
this is where the orthodoxy worketh not;
there are no antiwaves, only waves,
whether within matter or antimatter (or
within the plenum of Pascal's vacuum,
in either region .-)
Show full article (1.83Kb)
no comments
1 2 3 4 5