ANSWERS: 10
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Antimatter is very rare but it does exist. Please see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimatter
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Yup! It totally rocks!
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that spot were rosie o'donalds hoo ha should be. george bushes brain,,,,
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We have found stuff that scientist call anti-matter, But that is not really anti-matter. The material they have found has been measured in the know Universe therefore it is in existence. Science is looking into how it behaves according to the laws of physics. No, real anti-matter is non-matter, this is outside existence. This I supposed is more like the element the scientist describe as dark matter. The part of the Universe that has to be there to make the sums work, but they don't know what it is. There is an implied condition that there must be the opposite of existence "non-existence" to balance and explain existence. This is Anti-matter. and it works like this in Einstein's equation A=//=E=MC^2. You saw it first on AB. 29th June 2009 by Kaetalist. Pass it on and tell them who invented it. Copyright 2009.
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lol! Can it be light?
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Anitmatter is real. It weighs the same as matter, but opposite charge of matter.
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I heard that there is a particle of anti-matter in many atoms.
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Everyone else has pretty much answered the question, so I'll just talk about something interesting i heard. Apparently theres some sort of matter (It may be anti matter, I'm not sure, but I don't think it is) That when it touches other matter, the other matter (Or was it molecules? I'm bad at science) would copy to be identical to that matter. This could turn seas into that matter. It would be crazy. But i don't know that any of it is real.
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Yes. There is. When there is matter there ought to be anti-matter too. That is how things remain balanced.
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Sometimes. Antimatter is matter with an opposite charge. When it comes in contact with normal matter, it annihilates completely, using E=MC^2 to make a FAR bigger boom than a mere hydrogen bomb. Scientists have created small amounts of antimatter, [atoms, not molecules!] but most antimatter was destroyed at the birth of the universe. We live in what was left over. Probably less than 1% of the original mass of the universe.
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