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Why does the universe exist?

(Dan Tri) - Is there any reason to explain why the universe exists, or in other words, why everything exists and is not just nothingness?

Báo Dân tríBáo Dân trí16/09/2025

Vì sao vũ trụ tồn tại? - 1
The cosmic web exists because the initial amounts of matter and antimatter were not equal (Photo: Getty Images).

Scientists have discovered that the universe exists because it began with a slight imbalance of matter and antimatter. Matter particles—that is, all the electrons, protons, and neutrons in the atoms and molecules of ordinary matter—are different from antimatter particles, which have opposite charges but are similar in many ways.

Matter and antimatter don't mix. When their particles collide, they annihilate each other in a violent gamma-ray burst. Fortunately, antimatter is extremely rare today. Although antimatter played a fundamental role in the formation of the universe, the fact that there is so little of it remains one of the great mysteries of cosmology.

Antimatter was predicted by British physicist Paul Dirac nearly 100 years ago in his pioneering work on quantum mechanics, and it was confirmed experimentally as early as the 1930s. Today, scientists can create antimatter in particle colliders such as the Large Hadron Collider.

But according to Professor of Physics and Astronomy Pasquale Di Bari of the University of Southampton, UK, Dirac predicted that there should be equal amounts of matter and antimatter. However, the fact that there is now so little antimatter and so much matter – including all the stars in all the galaxies in the universe, although some scientists have suggested there might be “antigalaxies” or “antistars” – is a major scientific problem.

“We think the universe started with a 50-50 matter-antimatter ratio in the Big Bang, but very quickly became dominated by matter,” says nuclear physicist Tara Shears of the University of Liverpool, UK. “For this to happen, there would have to be a very small difference, or asymmetry, in the behaviour of matter and antimatter that would eventually allow one to dominate the other.”

But “this discrepancy was not predicted, not understood, and certainly not explained,” Shears continued. “Understanding this discrepancy is the problem we want to solve; this is the problem of matter-antimatter asymmetry.”

According to Dirac, the terms “matter” and “antimatter” were largely arbitrary. “Matter” referred to ordinary particles, and “antimatter” referred to antiparticles—but it could also have been the other way around. Had they not largely annihilated, the antimatter particles might have formed a universe of antiatoms and antimolecules. Ultimately, whatever predominated was called matter, and its opposite was called antimatter.

Vì sao vũ trụ tồn tại? - 2
In this image, an antimatter explosion released by a thunderstorm in Earth's atmosphere was detected by a NASA spacecraft (Photo: NASA).

What's left of the universe

From observations of particle accelerators, traces of antimatter decay in astronomical spectra, and gravitational waves, physicists are trying to better understand why there is this large, unexplained difference in the universe that gave rise to everything it contains.

Di Bari estimates that there may have been billions of times more matter and antimatter particles than there are now, before they nearly annihilated each other in the first fractions of a second after the Big Bang. “What we are made of is what was left over,” he said.

The reason for this asymmetry was outlined by Soviet physicist Andrei Sakharov in 1967, adds Raymond Volkas, a theoretical particle physicist at the University of Melbourne, Australia.

Sakharov proposed that the asymmetry exists because matter and antimatter particles are not exact opposites, but instead respond differently to some fundamental forces under certain circumstances—a phenomenon known as "C and CP violation".

Volkas says the general principles of “C and CP violations” are known, but the specifics are not. “There are a lot of possibilities being explored. The challenge is to distinguish them experimentally.”

Source: https://dantri.com.vn/khoa-hoc/vi-sao-vu-tru-ton-tai-20250916014924438.htm


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