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antiparticle
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antiparticle

In nuclear physics, a particle corresponding in mass and properties to a given elementary particle but with the opposite electrical charge, magnetic properties, or coupling to other fundamental forces. For example, an electron carries a negative charge whereas its antiparticle, the positron, carries a positive one. When a particle and its antiparticle collide, they destroy each other, in the process called ‘annihilation’, their total energy being converted to lighter particles and/or photons. A substance consisting entirely of antiparticles is known as antimatter.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Researchers explain matter's dominance as a consequence of differences in the way a fundamental force of nature, called the weak force, affects subatomic particles and their antiparticles.
Electrons, for example, have a negative charge while their antiparticles, positrons, are positive; they both have exactly the same mass, however, and -- apart from the difference in sign -- behave the same way in electromagnetic fields.
AS described by quantum theory, the vacuum seethes with the relentless creation and annihilation of subatomic particles and their antiparticles.
 
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