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  • Most everyday phenomena happen equivalently in a mirror as they do normally - at least,

  • from a physics perspective.

  • Unlike when you play a video backwards in time (where it’s pretty obvious that something

  • weird is going on), when compared with a normal video, motion in a mirrored video still looks

  • totally physically normal - just mirrored.

  • In fact, without outside context, there’s no way to tell which was the original and

  • which was mirrored!

  • Which is why horizontally flopped shots are used in movies all the time.

  • In fact, as far as we know, everything in the universe governed by electromagnetism

  • and gravity and the strong nuclear force behaves this way - if you set up two experiments that

  • are mirror images of one another, theyll produce results that look like mirror images

  • of each other.

  • Which presents a problem if we ever need to communicate with aliens from afar: if all

  • physics is mirror-symmetric, that would mean left handed and right handed are relative

  • - from a physics perspective theyre interchangeable, just like up and down and forward and back

  • - so if we were simply talking to aliens and didn’t have any shared reference objects,

  • we’d we have no way of explaining what we mean by left-handed and right-handed using

  • physics.

  • . This Left/Right ambiguity is calledthe Ozma Problem.”

  • .

  • And the distinction between left and right IS important, because earth-based life mostly

  • relies on sugars with right-handed symmetry and amino acids with left-handed symmetry.

  • This isn’t a physics constraint - it just as easily could have been the other way around

  • - but the point is, the molecules in our food and our bodies DO have a specific orientation,

  • so not knowing left from right could impair intergalactic culinary relations.

  • However, there is a solution: the weak nuclear force doesn’t always play nicely when mirrored

  • . For example, when uranium nuclei beta decay they emit (mostly?) electrons spinning like

  • left-handed corkscrews, but if you perform the mirror image of the experiment using a

  • mirror-image uranium nucleus, the nucleus still emits electrons spinning like left-handed

  • corkscrews (rather than right-handed, as they would in a mirror) . It turns out that in

  • our universe, the mirror-image of a physical process doesn’t always result in the mirror

  • image of the outcome - uranium always decays more into left-handed electrons, no matter

  • how you look at it.

  • So we’d tell the aliensyou know how electrons spin when uranium decays?

  • That direction is what we callleft’”.

  • Which would solve the Ozma problem - except, there’s a problem with this solution.

  • Because what if the distant aliens were made entirely of antimatter?

  • I mean, in principle they could be and we wouldn’t know.

  • Antimatter interacting with itself behaves exactly like matter interacting with itself:

  • antihydrogen has the same atomic spectrum as hydrogen, and antimatter-you looks and

  • behaves exactly like matter-you (until it interacts with matter).

  • And here’s the problem: while the matter version of a uranium nucleus decays into left-handed

  • electrons whether it's in a mirror or not, the anti-matter version always decays into

  • right-handed anti-electrons whether it's in a mirror or not.

  • So if we told the alienslook at the beta decay of the nucleus with atomic weight 239

  • - that’s always the orientation we call left-handedwe’d be wrong: for aliens

  • made of antimatter, it would in fact be what we call right handed.

  • And you definitely don’t want to shake either hand of an alien made of antimatter.

  • So how can you figure out, from afar, if a distant alien is made of antimatter?

  • This is the Ozma problem, level 2.

  • Essentially, antimatter is another kind of mirror we can hold up to the universe, which

  • combined with the possibility of regular mirroring means we can’t use beta decay to define

  • left vs right.

  • But luckily, there’s a next level solution, again thanks to the weak nuclear force.

  • Enter the Kaon, a fast-decaying subatomic particle.

  • Whether theyre mirrored or not, around 20.3% of the time Kaons decay into right-handed

  • anti-electrons , while around 20.1% of the time - slightly less often - they decay into

  • left-handed electrons.

  • And the key is this : if you instead take antimatter Kaons, whether mirrored or not,

  • they still decay slightly less often into left-handed electrons, rather than right-handed

  • anti-electrons as you might have expected from the way antimatter-uranium decays.

  • That is, normal kaons - whether mirrored or not - and anti-kaons - whether mirrored or

  • not - both decay less often into left-handed electrons.

  • And this is how distant aliens could figure out if theyre made of matter or antimatter

  • and whether or not theyre using the same concept ofleftas us: simply build

  • a particle accelerator and look at the decays of neutral kaon particles; the electron-like

  • thing that they decay into slightly less frequently is made of what we call matter, and itll

  • be moving in what we call a left-handed way.

  • The universe doesn’t distinguish between left and right or antimatter for electromagnetism,

  • for gravity, and for the strong nuclear force.

  • But for some reason, the weak force allows us to tell the difference.

  • This video was made with the generous support of the Heising Simons foundation, which also

  • supports research into the violation of antimatter-mirror symmetry in our universe.

  • Processes that violate antimatter-mirror symmetry (which is calledCP Violation”) are necessary

  • to explain why there’s so much more matter in universe than antimatter, and while the

  • weak nuclear force does violate that symmetry, it doesn’t come anywhere close to accounting

  • for the observed imbalance between matter and antimatter in the universe.

  • So physicists around the world (among them researchers supported by the Heising Simons

  • foundation) are searching for other possible processes that might break antimatter-mirror

  • symmetry to help explain how the universe ended up made mostly of matter, and thus,

  • why it was possible for us to exist.

  • Thanks Heising Simons!

Most everyday phenomena happen equivalently in a mirror as they do normally - at least,

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