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    Home»Physics»A Possible Solution to the Mystery of the Origin of Matter in the Universe
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    A Possible Solution to the Mystery of the Origin of Matter in the Universe

    By Stuart Wolpert, University of California - Los AngelesFebruary 26, 20152 Comments3 Mins Read
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    A Solution to the Puzzle of the Origin of Matter in the Universe
    New NASA photo of the “Pillars of Creation” from the Hubble Telescope. Credit: NASA

    A new study from UCLA physicists offers a possible solution to the mystery of the origin of matter in the universe.

    Most of the laws of nature treat particles and antiparticles equally, but stars and planets are made of particles, or matter, and not antiparticles, or antimatter. That asymmetry, which favors matter to a very small degree, has puzzled scientists for many years.

    New research by University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) physicists, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, offers a possible solution to the mystery of the origin of matter in the universe.

    Alexander Kusenko, a professor of physics and astronomy at UCLA College, and colleagues propose that the matter-antimatter asymmetry could be related to the Higgs boson particle, which was the subject of prominent news coverage when it was discovered at Switzerland’s Large Hadron Collider in 2012.

    Specifically, the UCLA researchers write, the asymmetry may have been produced as a result of the motion of the Higgs field, which is associated with the Higgs boson, and which could have made the masses of particles and antiparticles in the universe temporarily unequal, allowing for a small excess of matter particles over antiparticles.

    If a particle and an antiparticle meet, they disappear by emitting two photons or a pair of some other particles. In the “primordial soup” that existed after the Big Bang, there were almost equal amounts of particles of antiparticles, except for a tiny asymmetry: one particle per 10 billion. As the universe cooled, the particles and antiparticles annihilated each other in equal numbers, and only a tiny number of particles remained; this tiny amount is all the stars and planets, and gas in today’s universe, said Kusenko, who is also a senior scientist with the Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe.

    The 2012 discovery of the Higgs boson particle was hailed as one of the great scientific accomplishments of recent decades. The Higgs boson was first postulated some 50 years ago as a crucial element of the modern theory of the forces of nature, and is, physicists say, what gives everything in the universe mass. Physicists at the LHC measured the particle’s mass and found its value to be peculiar; it is consistent with the possibility that the Higgs field in the first moments of the Big Bang was much larger than its “equilibrium value” observed today.

    The Higgs field “had to descend to the equilibrium, in a process of ‘Higgs relaxation,’” said Kusenko, the lead author of the UCLA research.

    Two of Kusenko’s graduate students, Louis Yang of UCLA and Lauren Pearce of the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, were co-authors of the study. The research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-SC0009937), the World Premier International Research Center Initiative in Japan, and the National Science Foundation (PHYS-1066293).

    Reference: “Postinflationary Higgs Relaxation and the Origin of Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry” by Alexander Kusenko, Lauren Pearce, and Louis Yang, 11 February 2015, Physics Review Letters.
    DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.061302
    arXiv: 1410.0722

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    2 Comments

    1. Steve on February 26, 2015 3:42 pm

      What would an antimatter star look like? If a matter star emits light an antimatter star would??? Not. So, Perhaps there is more antimatter hanging around than we realize. Its all gathering together in large lumps we call black holes. Eh?

      Reply
    2. George on February 26, 2015 7:45 pm

      Is it possible that some aspect of the Higgs field collapse in the early moments of the Big Bang also created or caused creation of dark matter and dark energy. I’m not a physicist so the following thought is based on severe ignorance but could dark energy be the result of annihilation of dark matter particles and anti-particles analogous to electron-positron annihilation?

      Reply
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