No More Antimatter Enigma

Alexandre Kassiantchouk Ph.D.
Time Matters
Published in
2 min readOct 9, 2023

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From “Time Matters” free eBook, also available on Google and Amazon.

from Antimatter Explained

Prior to chapter 51 of the book above, where galaxies were identified as the birthplace and containers of matter (and antimatter), we explored two possible explanations on antimatter whereabouts:

Macro-idea in Chapter 5. Antimatter and Matter Universes are huge blobs/containers of slow time (and of matter or antimatter), and we are in one of an infinite number of Matter Universes.
Micro-idea in Chapter 50. Particles and antiparticles are symmetrical and stable in a static time environment, but can react differently to our time acceleration (since time loses its energy to matter/antimatter, and time becomes less energetic, thus, faster).

However, in chapter 51, we understood that the origin of matter/antimatter is not the Big Bang or Big Universe, but galaxies, or to be more precise, matter/antimatter originates in collisions of originally matterless blobs of slow time. Abundance of such objects and such collision events gives a statistical explanation of antimatter whereabouts. With an infinite number of such blob collisions, it is probable that a projectile blob (blob A in chapter 51) leaves the collision site with some excess of, let’s say, antimatter, while the blob (blob C in chapter 51), through which the projectile blob went through, keeps excess matter. The elliptical galaxy, which blob A becomes (3.3 in chapter 51), is an antimatter galaxy. And blob C (3.2 in chapter 51) becomes a spiral matter galaxy.

It is a predictable outcome of big-numbers game, when something improbable becomes certain with big numbers, popularly explained in chapter 21 example:

Having $10K and 1 hour, find a person who gets all heads in row on 10 tosses of a coin. Result should be reproducible: within another hour and with $10K you should find another person getting all heads in row on 10 tosses.

Antimatter/matter annihilation problem solved: imbalance between them is local to a galaxy, but is in perfect balance in the Universe.

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