From forming bound states to normal scattering, many possibilities abound for matter-antimatter interactions. So why do they annihilate? There’s a quantum reason we simply can’t avoid.
I don’t see that the article actually answers the question. It mostly talks about what happens if/when particles and antiparticles interact, not why annihilation happens.
Why does it matter?
I’m guessing this is a pun that people are missing?
Jupp.
Understanding things leads to new possibilities.
If we could figure out how to use it to make sustainable reactors, we could probably produce a fuckton of energy? It can help us better understand our universe and advance science?
Why wouldn’t it matter???
Why wouldn’t it matter???
Because it’s … anti … matter
badum-tss
The reasons why it matters and why it doesn’t matter cancel themselves out