Wednesday, 28 December 2016

Anti-life and antimatter. " Physics predicts that matter and antimatter must be created in almost equal quantities,"



Ok, so as there is Anti-life and life where Anti-life is just waiting to have breathed into it, conscious spirit.

There is too, antimatter and matter, where anti-matter is the reverse/opposite of matter, which is the element particles with which solid matter and its affects and effects are created.

Where we choose anti-life we unconsciously create the opposite of 'life'. Antimatter is just waiting to be used to create life. It and it's effects and affects, have no higher intent and as such is used to create the polar opposite, the shadow creations that we all are so familiar with in our shared arenas today.

It is therefore reasonable to extrapolate that the intention one uses in order to create decides which, matter or antimatter is used in creation, where creation comes from the building block of thoughts and desires, emotions and needs.

Creating ones 'life' is about breathing higher spirit into those creations that fill your arena.

This is done individually and collectively. Mostly we continue to create anti-life whereby there is no higher spirit called into the creation of those things that fill the arena of our lives. But as we evolve into conscious beings of higher intention, our individual and collective arenas will change by the upgrading of our creations.

Antimatter, the opposite of matter, is just matter waiting to be re-called into creation with higher intent. It is filling our world and is the building blocks of in creation of anti-life.

Anti-life is just waiting to have higher intention and higher spirit breathed into it.

Michaela.





Antimatter is the opposite of normal matter. More specifically, the sub-atomic particles of antimatter have properties opposite those of normal matter. The electrical charge of those particles is reversed. Antimatter was created along with matter after the Big Bang, but antimatter is rare in today's universe, and scientists aren't sure why.

http://www.livescience.com/32387-what-is-antimatter.html



Antimatter was one of the most exciting physics discoveries of the 20th century. Picked up by fiction writers such as Dan Brown, many people think of it as an "out there" theoretical idea – unaware that it is actually being produced every day. What's more, research on antimatter is actually helping us to understand 
http://phys.org/news/2016-01-antimatter.html
how the universe works.
Such  were first predicted by British physicist Paul Dirac when he was trying to combine the two great ideas of early modern physics: relativity and quantum mechanics. Previously, scientists were stumped by the fact that it seemed to predict that particles could have energies lower than when they were at "rest" (ie pretty much doing nothing). This seemed impossible at the time, as it meant that energies could be negative.Antimatter is a material composed of so-called antiparticles. It is believed that every particle we know of has an antimatter companion that is virtually identical to itself, but with the opposite charge. For example, an electron has a negative charge. But its antiparticle, called a positron, has the same mass but a positive charge. When a particle and its antiparticle meet, they annihilate each other – disappearing in a burst of light.
Dirac, however, accepted that the equations were telling him that particles are really filling a whole "sea" of these lower energies – a sea that had so far been invisible to physicists as they were only looking "above the surface". He envisioned that all of the "normal" energy levels that exist are accounted for by "normal" particles. However, when a particle jumps up from a lower energy state, it appears as a normal particle but leaves a "hole", which appears to us as a strange, mirror-image particle – antimatter.
Despite initial scepticism, examples of these particle-antiparticle pairs were soon found. For example, they are produced when cosmic rays hit the Earth's atmosphere. There is even evidence that the energy in thunderstorms produces anti-electrons, called positrons. These are also produced in some radioactive decays, a process used in many hospitals in Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scanners, which allow precise imaging within human bodies. Nowadays, experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) can produce matter and antimatter, too.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-01-antimatter.html#jCp



Physics predicts that matter and antimatter must be created in almost equal quantities, and that this would have been the case during the Big Bang. What's more, it is predicted that the laws of physics should be the same if a particle is interchanged with its antiparticle – a relationship known as CP symmetry. However, the universe we see doesn't seem to obey these rules. It is almost entirely made of matter, so where did all the antimatter go? It is one of the biggest mysteries in physics to date.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-01-antimatter.html#jCp

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