Re: Is It Possible To Have Entire Planets Composed of Antima
I really don’t think anyone can answer this question with certainty without simulating it with a super computer since if certain large amount of AM was caught during formation of a proto-galaxy then gravity will also plays a part in the confinement process.
Do you know the game of Go where you try to dominate space by constantly trying to contain the opponent by enveloping their move?
If AM and M were to be caught within a gigantic gravity well then I think it will start playing a game of Go and the borders will be void of space while matter and anti-matter will start clumping up together into groups. When a group of same polarity meets they merge when an opposite polarity meets they either cancel each other out or become more condensed due to edge repulsion. Through this process an interstellar cloud could collapse to form a planetary system.
Intriguing idea I would say.
Christopher said:
On second thought, though, I'm skeptical about the edge repulsion. That novel was correct about the basics -- if an unconfined M/AM reaction begins, the energy of the initial annihilation would heat the gases enough to blow them apart and halt the reaction before it progresses. But there we're talking about concentrations dense enough for a fair number of annihilations to occur in the first place. Here, we're talking about interstellar gas and dust, where you might have one particle per cubic centimeter. The odds of any one particle hitting an antiparticle would be so low that the particles and antiparticles could intermingle significantly with very little interaction/annihilation. In fact, we know for certain that this happens, because as I said above, there are already plenty of antiparticles up in orbit of Earth, Saturn, and other worlds, held there by their magnetic fields. There are plenty of particles there too, but annihilations are rare because the particles are so tiny and the spaces between them so comparatively huge.
So if you started out with a proto-galaxy containing a mix of matter and antimatter, I think they'd pretty much intermingle rather than being in separate clumps with clear repulsive boundaries between them. If a region of mixed matter/antimatter gas then began to condense -- the first step of forming a star system -- then as it got denser, annihilations would become more frequent, and the proto-system would get blown apart before it could form.
I really don’t think anyone can answer this question with certainty without simulating it with a super computer since if certain large amount of AM was caught during formation of a proto-galaxy then gravity will also plays a part in the confinement process.
Do you know the game of Go where you try to dominate space by constantly trying to contain the opponent by enveloping their move?
If AM and M were to be caught within a gigantic gravity well then I think it will start playing a game of Go and the borders will be void of space while matter and anti-matter will start clumping up together into groups. When a group of same polarity meets they merge when an opposite polarity meets they either cancel each other out or become more condensed due to edge repulsion. Through this process an interstellar cloud could collapse to form a planetary system.
Intriguing idea I would say.