For one thing, the universe has been around forever.
This means if any antimattter out there hasn't collided with matter yet, it's probably not going to collide with it tomorrow either.
Some of it got away, it was no big thing, same ole same ole.
It doesn't all come at once in one universal energy decay event, the universe is too big for that, there's no limit to the universe, it's infinite with infinite energy. Energy is always conserved that way.
This means if any antimattter out there hasn't collided with matter yet, it's probably not going to collide with it tomorrow either.
How long has the universe existed? How long, to the best of your knowledge, has plutonium existed? See a pattern here? Of course not, that was a leading question. I seen on TV show some of top nucular science wizards in manhattan were worried that a a u-bomb might actually set fire to the atmosphere. Boy that would suck, eh?
How long has the universe existed? How long, to the best of your knowledge, has plutonium existed? See a pattern here? Of course not, that was a leading question.
LOL.
I 'figured' all this out once I decided gravity has a static or standing wavelength relative to its source and the waves have both negative (antigravity) and positive phases. I'll call it 'bipolar' quantum gravity. Seems there could be different wavelengths of gravity too. The basic bipolar gravity wave idea could explain at least some dark energy and dark matter, I suppose.
Anti-matter has much to do with the Dirac sea, where the surface is empty space. If the sea is regular I suppose the probed surface must have some of the event qualities of a space lattice made of particles and their anti-particle twins. Maybe space is like a matter-antimatter checkerboard, and matter is like a white-square bishop. If so, maybe dark matter and energy come from anti- matter. This further suggests that maybe gravity from antimatter starts out in opposite phase relative to matter's gravity, which for example would cause gravitational repulsion between matter and antimatter when both gravities predominate and are positioned within the relevant gravitational wavelengths, as with sufficiently large paired masses of the two forms.
I've always thought of matter/antimatter as almost godlike magnets, fiercely quarrelsome and unwilling to meet. It's no wonder most people prefer to worship the relatively weak magnet.
"The aim of science is to make difficult things understandable in a simpler way; the aim of poetry is to state simple things in an incomprehensible way. The two are incompatible."