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| 27 Oct 2012 11:32 AM |
We all have quite a bit of antimatter inside of us, which is interesting. Because preons do not behave the same way that matter on a larger scale (atoms) does, then this does not result in a devastating nuclear explosion.
That's nice, isn't it? |
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Jamocha
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| Joined: 15 Feb 2012 |
| Total Posts: 7117 |
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| 27 Oct 2012 11:34 AM |
| There is a growing number of people in the scientific community who know longer believe that antimatter exists. |
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Tdc88
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| Joined: 16 Feb 2009 |
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| 27 Oct 2012 11:34 AM |
| i cant hear you over the sound of SCIENCE |
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Jamocha
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| Joined: 15 Feb 2012 |
| Total Posts: 7117 |
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| 27 Oct 2012 11:34 AM |
| Oh, oops, I knew something looked off about that sentence. I meant to say "no" instead of "no". |
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| 27 Oct 2012 12:36 PM |
>There is a growing number of people in the scientific community who know longer believe that antimatter exists.
The LHC has actually created antimatter. Granted it only existed for a fraction of a second, it was still observable. Almost every scientist has no doubt that antimatter exists. |
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