Fine tuning my understanding of this has been annoying me lately; I can find few references. Sometime around 1930, Dirac suggested there could be proton-electron annihilations; it was part of his hole theory, if I recall correctly. Oppenheimer and others showed him that it doesn't happen; if it did, there'd be no matter left after a fraction of a second. That ultimately led to the hypothesis, later verified, of a positively charged particle called the proton.
So, we know it doesn't happen. If it did happen, we could calculate the rate at which it happened; but we see that matter is stable, so we know it doesn't happen. But, WHY doesn't it happen? I keep overlooking something, and every source I've read more or less says the same thing - we know it doesn't happen, because we're here.
I'm hoping one of you points out something that I'm just not thinking of at the moment, and I realize I'm just having one of those "oh, duhhh" moments.
So, we know it doesn't happen. If it did happen, we could calculate the rate at which it happened; but we see that matter is stable, so we know it doesn't happen. But, WHY doesn't it happen? I keep overlooking something, and every source I've read more or less says the same thing - we know it doesn't happen, because we're here.
I'm hoping one of you points out something that I'm just not thinking of at the moment, and I realize I'm just having one of those "oh, duhhh" moments.
