Scientists explain universe's missing antimatter
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Scientists at the world's biggest atom smasher have found further reasons for the apparent lack of antimatter in the universe.
A team working with data from CERN's Large Hadron Collider says it has discovered a particle that decays unevenly into matter and antimatter.
The lab near Geneva said Wednesday that the particle called `B0s' is the fourth sub-atomic particle known to prefer matter over antimatter.
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Theory posits that the Big Bang produced equal amounts of each, and scientists have puzzled over why matter now dominates.
The discovery of the first matter-antimatter asymmetry earned two scientists at Brookhaven Laboratory in New York a Nobel Prize in 1980.
Team spokesman Pierluigi Campana said the find was predicted by the standard model of physics but "some interesting discrepancies demand more detailed studies."