What happened to the antimatter?



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: "Mike Jr."
Date: 24 Mar 2006 09:26:44 PM
Object: What happened to the antimatter?
http://www.physorg.com/news12049.html
"Scientists of the DZero collider detector collaboration at the
Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have
announced that their data on the properties of a subatomic particle,
the B_s meson ("B sub s"), suggest that the particle oscillates between
matter and antimatter in one of nature's fastest rapid-fire
processes-more than 17 trillion times per second. Their findings may
affect the current view of matter-antimatter asymmetry, and might also
offer a first glimpse of the contributions of new physics, such as
supersymmetry, to particle physics."
http://www.physorg.com/news12049.html
--Mike Jr.
.

User: "John Schutkeker"

Title: Re: What happened to the antimatter? 25 Mar 2006 09:12:42 AM
"Mike Jr." <n00spam@comcast.net> wrote in news:1143257204.845450.233580
@e56g2000cwe.googlegroups.com:


http://www.physorg.com/news12049.html

"Scientists of the DZero collider detector collaboration at the
Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have
announced that their data on the properties of a subatomic particle,
the B_s meson ("B sub s"), suggest that the particle oscillates between
matter and antimatter in one of nature's fastest rapid-fire
processes-more than 17 trillion times per second. Their findings may
affect the current view of matter-antimatter asymmetry, and might also
offer a first glimpse of the contributions of new physics, such as
supersymmetry, to particle physics."

http://www.physorg.com/news12049.html

Why aren't the B_d and B_s oscillations a confirmation that some sort of
supersymmetry holds?
.

User: "Boris Mohar"

Title: Re: What happened to the antimatter? 25 Mar 2006 09:00:45 AM
On 24 Mar 2006 19:26:44 -0800, "Mike Jr." <n00spam@comcast.net> wrote:


http://www.physorg.com/news12049.html

"Scientists of the DZero collider detector collaboration at the
Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory have
announced that their data on the properties of a subatomic particle,
the B_s meson ("B sub s"), suggest that the particle oscillates between
matter and antimatter in one of nature's fastest rapid-fire
processes-more than 17 trillion times per second. Their findings may
affect the current view of matter-antimatter asymmetry, and might also
offer a first glimpse of the contributions of new physics, such as
supersymmetry, to particle physics."

http://www.physorg.com/news12049.html

--Mike Jr.

I wonder if it stays in same state for exactly the same amount of time.
Regards,
Boris Mohar
Got Knock? - see:
Viatrack Printed Circuit Designs (among other things) http://www.viatrack.ca
void _-void-_ in the obvious place

.


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