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InertialObservr's profile
〈 Berger | Dillon 〉
〈 Berger | Dillon 〉
〈 Berger | Dillon 〉
@InertialObservr

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〈 Berger | Dillon 〉

@InertialObservr

PhD student of Theoretical Particle Physics @UCIrvine l @NSF Fellow l Physics & Math Animations l Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/inertialobserver …

DC → CA
youtube.com/c/InertialObse…
Joined August 2015

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    1. Sophia Gad-Nasr‏Verified account @Astropartigirl 13 Jan 2019
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      In the early Universe, there was a battle b/w matter/antimatter, and matter won. Next time you pet your cat, or walk your dog, remember: it took ONE extra quark for every 30 MILLION antiquarks to create the Universe you live in. & we still don't know why matter won. Happy Sunday!

      37 replies 197 retweets 753 likes
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    2. Eddy Bruel‏ @ejpbruel 13 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @Astropartigirl

      Question: I always read that baryogenesis is why we have matter but not antimatter in our universe, we just don't understand why it happened. But how do we know *that* it happened?

      2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    3. Sophia Gad-Nasr‏Verified account @Astropartigirl 13 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @ejpbruel

      If matter and antimatter were created in equal amounts, then they'd all have annihilated and we'd be left with nothing but a photon Universe! The very fact that we exist tells us that there had to be more of one type of stuff than the other.

      1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes
    4. Eddy Bruel‏ @ejpbruel 13 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @Astropartigirl

      Thank you for taking the time to explain! You say there *had* to be more matter than antimatter to begin with. But that's only true if both matter and antimatter are equally stable, right? So how do we know *that* has to be true?

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    5. Sophia Gad-Nasr‏Verified account @Astropartigirl 13 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @ejpbruel

      As we understand it, antimatter is exactly like matter, just opposite charge. So there had to be more matter for there to be matter left over. Of course, figuring out why this happened is part of why physics exists! Which means looking into differences b/w them + other things.

      1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes
    6. Eddy Bruel‏ @ejpbruel 13 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @Astropartigirl

      So it's possible that there are other differences between matter and antimatter (other than charge) that account for why there is more of one than the other, but we simply haven't discovered them yet?

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    7. Sophia Gad-Nasr‏Verified account @Astropartigirl 13 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @ejpbruel

      We have no idea. That's why we do this. 🙂

      1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes
      〈 Berger | Dillon 〉‏ @InertialObservr 14 Jan 2019
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      Replying to @Astropartigirl @ejpbruel

      It’s possible that there could exist other quantum numbers (charge, color, etc) that are conserved at a higher energy scales.. but given the success of the standard model at ~10TeV it is unlikely that antimatter possesses additional properties

      3:14 AM - 14 Jan 2019
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      • Lady Love Sophia Gad-Nasr
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        2. Eddy Bruel‏ @ejpbruel 14 Jan 2019
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          Replying to @InertialObservr @Astropartigirl

          I really wish I understood all this stuff better. I have a high level understanding of what you folks do, but its hard to find any resources that go in more detail that dont require a degree in physics :-D

          2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
        3. 〈 Berger | Dillon 〉‏ @InertialObservr 14 Jan 2019
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          Replying to @ejpbruel @Astropartigirl

          I agree it can get a bit jargony sometimes.. the main thing is that there are only a few properties that (anti) matter can have.. why? We measure (anti)matter all the time in the LHC.. as far as we can see, there are 3 fundamental forces (and hence 3 measurable properties)

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
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