Basics
Particles
Make + break
E = mc^2
Applications
100

What is the term for material made of antiparticles that have the exact same mass as normal matter but opposite charges?

Antimatter.

100

What is the name of the stable, negatively charged particle that forms the outer shells of regular atoms?

The electron. 

100

What is the name of the process where energy transforms into physical mass, producing an electron-positron pair? (big hint in the wording)


    • Pair production.

100

$E=mc^2$, what does each term mean, and what role do they play

c = speed of light (conversion factor)

E = energy (one of the converts)

m = mass (one of the converts) 

100

What percentage of mass is successfully turned into pure energy during antimatter annihilation?

100%.

200

What is the specific name for the event that happens when a matter particle meets its antimatter counterpart and they destroy each other

Annihilation.

200

What is the name of the electron's antiparticle, which carries a positive charge?

The positron.

200

In pair production, what type of high-energy light photon transforms into the electron-positron pair? MYP students focus!

A gamma ray.

200

Why does a tiny, microscopic amount of mass contain such a staggering, massive amount of energy?

Because the conversion factor ($c^2$) is unimaginably large.

200

Nuclear fusion (the process that powers the sun) only converts about what percentage of its mass into energy?

About 0.7%.

300

According to Einstein's equation $E=mc^2$, mass isn't a separate thing from energy. Instead, mass is what kind of energy? 

Concentrated (or confined / locked) energy.

300

What is the electric charge value, mass and spin of a positron relative to electron?  

Positive one, same spin, same mass 

300

To create an electron and a positron, a photon must have a minimum threshold energy equal to what?

The combined rest mass of both particles (approx. $1.022 MeV$).

300

In ordinary matter, most of the mass doesn't come from the particles themselves, but from what type of energy holding them together?

Binding energy.

300

According to the laws of physics, what massive event at the beginning of time should have created equal amounts of matter and antimatter?

The Big Bang.

400

Name one natural phenomenon mentioned where antimatter is created on Earth or in space.

Cosmic ray collisions (or radioactive decay)

400

What can the distance between electron and nucleus be compared to?

Solar system

400

How does mass and energy get conserved?

Considered one pair of conversions (conservation of mass-energy)
400

What core quantum principle explains how solid, physical particles can seamlessly transform into waves of light energy? (hint: think quantum physics) 

Wave-particle duality.

400

If the Big Bang created equal amounts of matter and antimatter, they should have completely wiped each other out, leaving a universe filled only with what?

Light (or radiation / photons).

500

Humans create antimatter artificially by smashing particles together at near-light speeds using what kind of machines?

Particle accelerators

500

Before they completely destroy each other, an electron and a positron can briefly orbit one another to form an exotic, short-lived "atom" called what?(Good luck!)

Positronium.

500

Because momentum and energy must be saved during a low-energy annihilation, the resulting twin photons must travel in what physical direction relative to each other?

Opposite directions (or 180 degrees apart).

500

Does e = mc2 align with other physics laws? and why?

Yes and no!
if objects going fast, does now align with newtons

if objects at everyday speeds, does align with newton

500

What major unsolved mystery are scientists trying to solve by studying antimatter in labs like CERN?

Why the universe is made almost entirely of regular matter today (or why there is a matter-antimatter imbalance).

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