Sunday, March 18, 2018

The Nonexistence of Antimatter

The positron, which features prominently in The Velcro Universe is an anti-particle. When combined with an electron, it turns into radiation, in the form of a gamma-ray photon.

PositronDiscovery.jpg

By Carl D. Anderson (1905–1991) - Anderson, Carl D. (1933).
"The Positive Electron".
Physical Review 43 (6): 491–494. DOI:10.1103/PhysRev.43.491.,
Public Domain, Link

The conventional interpretation of this is that matter is converted into energy. However, this requires a bit of magic in which matter can be created or destroyed.

This is not how things work in The Velcro Universe. All that happens is that one type of matter is converted into another type of matter. There is a face shift, but no creation or annihilation. All that happens when an electron and a positron meet is that they combine into forming a photon.

The phase shift involves a dramatic reduction in size and an increase in speed to match the required speed of light. The energy of the electron and positron is exactly equal to the energy of the resulting photon.

This position has support in resent experimental findings in which photons were made to stick onto each other. This indicates that photons are dielectric in nature.

The Velcro Universe does not allow for the creation or destruction of matter. The production of photons are not due to annihilation of matter, but due to a face shift.

Similarly, the annihilation of a neutrino and an anti-neutrino does not magically remove these particles from the universe. When such particles meet, they equal out their charge, which makes them undetectable. The energy released is transferred to a nearby zero-point photon, which becomes sufficiently energized to be detected. Again, energy is conserved.

In the case of anti-protons and anti-atoms, produced in laboratories under extreme conditions, we are dealing with extremely unstable particles. When these interact with normal matter, they disintegrate into radiation. Such particles, being quite large, will generate hundreds of gamma-ray photons when they fall apart.

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