Where is the anti-matter?

David777

Well-known Member
Location
Silicon Valley
I'm a fan of Sabine Hossenfelder's logical thinking mind even though I don't agree with some ideas she leans towards that I've read. Her knowledge in physics is far beyond mine. On this subject I have left a comment per below on her youtube page that I tend to lean towards. Although I have Youtube and gmail Google accounts, youtube has paid accounts and paid features I had not used that I in any case needed to set up a profile for. So used this as a inexpensive $2.99 reason to do so as I have ambitions to expand my own youtube public presence. Can end the monthly auto fee at any time.

12:07 minutes
Where is the anti-matter?


Current theory relates our Big Bang universe with a flat form is about 13.6 billion years old and 93 billion light years in diameter that takes into account cosmological effects. Most think there is nothing beyond that diameter as in such does not exist. I tend to lean towards infinite 3 dimensional space in all directions. I also lean towards the idea that matter/energy/spacetime (MES) has always existed though not necessarily with phenomenon as we find it here. One might argue our universe was in fact possibly created in a lab because it is so fine tuned for organic life.

Some will complain about how MES may have been created as though everything that is needs to start some how. That has never bothered this thinker by simply accepting that MES always existed thus never needed to be created. There was either always MES or nothing. Since we intelligent entities exist, by our self awareness it is real, thus always existed.

If so, considering the obvious logic of infinite 3 dimensional space being more likely than limited space, then see our universe despite its immense size at our scale, is infinitely small versus the unlimited space. Accordingly, it seems illogical that it is just where we entities are herein that MES exists. And if so there may be MES beyond including antimatter MES universes. Thus the reason our universe is just normal matter as we find, could have balanced symmetry if one includes what is beyond our space.
 

Last edited:

Back
Top