Particles Destroy Each other on Contact

The seemingly inescapable fact that matter and antimatter particles destroy each other on contact has long puzzled physicists wondering how life, the universe or anything else can exist at all. But new results from a particle accelerator experiment suggest that matter does seem to win in the end.

The experiment has shown a small — but significant — 1 percent difference between the amount of matter and antimatter produced, which could hint at how our matter-dominated existence came about.

The current theory, known as the Standard Model of particle physics, has predicted some violation of matter-antimatter symmetry, but not enough to explain how our universe arose consisting mostly of matter with barely a trace of antimatter.

14 Fabulous DIY Castles

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Don’t you hate it when someone tells you that you don’t know diddly squat, don’t know jack? Does it make you more determined than ever to succeed? Do you not tell anyone and continue building your dream in secret? Are those dreams ever as big as building a castle? Each of these 14 castles were constructed primarily as the DIY work of one man, except for perhaps a few family members or friends who also didn’t know jack but pitched in.

Top 15 Amazing Movie Endings

These are films where the last moments of the film are simply astounding. If you think there has been an omission, please be sure to mention it in the comments – and link to youtube if you can. WARNING: This is essentially a list of spoilers – continue at your own risk.

Awaken ‘sleeping’ eggs to boost fertility

Let sleeping dogs lie, but not sleeping eggs. Dormant eggs in mouse ovaries have been awoken and used to create healthy pups.

If the approach works in women it could be used to boost fertility or help those who froze ovarian tissue prior to chemotherapy.

Mysterious ball lightning may be a hallucination

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Seen something pale and round floating in the midst of a thunderstorm? If it lasted for a few seconds or less, it might be all in your head. Fluctuating magnetic fields, created by a nearby lightning bolt, could trick the brain into “seeing” round glowing objects, explaining at least some observations of mysterious ‘ball lightning’.