Friday, May 13, 2011

ANTIMATER

What is antimatter?

We know that matter comprises what physicists
call particles: electrons, protons and neutrons.
If one sticks an 'anti-' in front of each of these
particles, then one has antimatter. But, does
antimater exist?

In the AV model, our physical universe is a
school, and its purpose is to teach us how
to reason logically. This school cycles from
one Big Bang to the next. So, does it make
sense to include antimatter which will hasten
the cyclic process? It is like building a large
school and setting one part on fire!

In the AV model, there is no electron per se.
However, there are the folloing fields which
no scientist talks about: Space, Kone, Ray,
subNeutron, plus Gravity is going in the wrong
direction. So, since pieces are missing, antimatter
may be just an idea to explain the unexplainable.

For example, assume a set of subNeutrons in a
small verticle circle with a Hydrogen atom on each
side. Gravity pushes the Neutrons in the two atoms
toward the circle's center. Gravity also pushes the
two centers of the atoms toward the circle's center.

While this is happening, the fields of the two atoms
or normal shells keep spinning between the
Neutrons and subNeutrons. Assume they are both
spinning clockwise. This means they are spinning
in opposite directions at the circle's center. If the
pressure is too great and the fields cannot spin,
then they will unSpin and convert the two normal
Shells to Space and other fields.

However, since the scientist is not looking for
a subNeutron, the scientist will not see it, and
antimatter becomes a good guess.

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