I have a clone somewhere made of Anti-Matter.
I believe that would be Anti-Lia.
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kimmy123 wrote:
How do you know?
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They found out that every particle has a clone made of anti-matter. That means every particle in my body has an exact duplicate somewhere.
Last edited by somelia (2011-06-21 17:48:12)
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Will64 wrote:
Yes- but not necessarily every compound has a clone
But it would make sense if it did...
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somelia wrote:
Will64 wrote:
Yes- but not necessarily every compound has a clone
But it would make sense if it did...
No, you see, every particle has an exact clone, however these clone particles do not correlate with the original's position, meaning anti-particles to the particles that make up a certain compound can be in wildly different places from each other, instead of close together.
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Kileymeister wrote:
somelia wrote:
Will64 wrote:
Yes- but not necessarily every compound has a clone
But it would make sense if it did...
No, you see, every particle has an exact clone, however these clone particles do not correlate with the original's position, meaning anti-particles to the particles that make up a certain compound can be in wildly different places from each other, instead of close together.
Okay. I understand. But I like to think that I have an anti-matter clone. Yes, that would be Anti-Lia.
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kimmy123 wrote:
How do you know?
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Sheer probability. If the universe is infinite (or close enough), then by sheer chance, everything that obeys the laws of physics (and maybe even bends them a little) MUST exist. Including and antimatter Somelia.
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I have a clone named L. And one named Na. And Lan (yes, I know that LAN stands for Local Area Network).
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Anti-Av...... he'd probably be nerdy if he's anti me
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somelia wrote:
kimmy123 wrote:
How do you know?
![]()
They found out that every particle has a clone made of anti-matter. That means every particle in my body has an exact duplicate somewhere.
You're saying this as if it's like breaking news.
The existance of antimatter and (some) of it's nature was known over 50 years ago. Furthemore and however, speaking in such definite and bold ways about antimatter isn't very fitting, because anti-matter is still very mysterious - we don't know what's the balance between matter and antimatter or is there an entirely different world in the universe which is solely composed of antimatter.
Also, this isn't a weird fact or trivia; it's an extremely difficult question in the field of physics.
Last edited by Vurb (2011-06-23 09:55:43)
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