Difference between revisions of "Antimatter"
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'''Antimatter''' is much like normal matter, but its constituent particles carry the opposite electrical charge of their normal matter counterparts. | |||
The anti-particle for the electron is the positron. It has the same mass as an electron, but it carries a positive charge instead of a negative charge. | |||
The anti-particle for the proton is the antiproton. It has the same mass as a proton and a negative charge. | |||
The anti-particle for the neutron is the antineutron. It has the same mass as a neutron and carries no charge. | |||
If a particle of matter comes into contact with its anti-particle, both will "annihilate" each other, converting their combined mass into energy. | |||
==See Also== | |||
* [[Matter-antimatter annihilation]] |
Revision as of 14:51, 13 May 2008
Antimatter is much like normal matter, but its constituent particles carry the opposite electrical charge of their normal matter counterparts.
The anti-particle for the electron is the positron. It has the same mass as an electron, but it carries a positive charge instead of a negative charge.
The anti-particle for the proton is the antiproton. It has the same mass as a proton and a negative charge.
The anti-particle for the neutron is the antineutron. It has the same mass as a neutron and carries no charge.
If a particle of matter comes into contact with its anti-particle, both will "annihilate" each other, converting their combined mass into energy.