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by holmium
1064 days ago
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But, it's the DM that would provide the heat/glow for the star: > If the DM particles are their own antiparticles, then their annihilation provides a heat source that stops the collapse of the clouds and in fact produces a different type of star, a Dark Star, in thermal and hydrostatic equilibrium. > Three key ingredients are required for the formation of DSs: > 1) sufficient DM density > 2) DM annihilation products become trapped inside the star > 3) the DM heating rate beats the cooling rate of the collapsing cloud. |
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How much if this is speculation? Also, do other particles behave like this?
I didn't realise particles could be their own antiparticles, but it transpires that e.g. photons are, because all photons are neutral, not charged somehow.
However, even though a proton is its own antiparticles, two photons do not annihilate, right?