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An international team of physicists working in the bottom of an old iron mine in Minnesota said Thursday that they might have registered the first faint hints of a ghostly sea of subatomic particles known as dark matter long thought to permeate the cosmos.
Originally posted by Cygnis
Just goes to show how much we really do not know about our world, inward, and outward.. and especially what lies beneath us.
Originally posted by BlackPoison94
I didn't think that we could find dark matter on our planet.
Wow, this is a sensational discovery.
Originally posted by BlackPoison94
I have very background knowledge on this topic, I've forgotten most of it, but what is the antiparticle of dark matter?
If WIMPs are majorana particles (the particle and antiparticle are the same) then two WIMPs colliding would annihilate to produce gamma rays, and particle-antiparticle pairs.
Originally posted by BlackPoison94
Ah, that's rather ununusual.
So if dark matter is its own antiparticle, surely there would be some activity in the mine?
Although particles and their antiparticles have opposite charges, electrically neutral particles need not be identical to their antiparticles. The neutron, for example, is made out of quarks, the antineutron from antiquarks, and they are distinguishable from one another because neutrons and antineutrons annihilate each other upon contact. However, other neutral particles are their own antiparticles, such as photons, the hypothetical gravitons, and WIMPs. These are called Majorana particles and can annihilate with themselves.