- #1
BiGyElLoWhAt
Gold Member
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So this doesn't so much explain baryonic asymmetry, as say that it isn't a thing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rishon_model
This leads to the question, how do we determine what is antimatter and what isn't? The electron is antimatter in this theory ##e^- = \bar{T}\bar{T}\bar{T}##
One big problem I see with this is annihilation, but then it would be matter + matter and antimatter + antimatter annihilation, which would make more sense, to me anyway, since opposites attract in nature. Then matter - antimatter nuclei would be stable and what we observe.
Any thoughts?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rishon_model
This leads to the question, how do we determine what is antimatter and what isn't? The electron is antimatter in this theory ##e^- = \bar{T}\bar{T}\bar{T}##
One big problem I see with this is annihilation, but then it would be matter + matter and antimatter + antimatter annihilation, which would make more sense, to me anyway, since opposites attract in nature. Then matter - antimatter nuclei would be stable and what we observe.
Any thoughts?