<< A "virtual particle" is a particle which is created by the universe at random from the noise. They are always produced in pairs, a particle and an anti-particle.
However, there is no easy way to say that anti-matter is traveling in time in reverse. We have produced anti-matter, and it still existed after production (for short periods of time, I'll give you, but not on the scale of a planck second). What it would have to do is live it's existance in reverse, which requires a rigid time maping. IE: Everything has been set in stone even before it happened. >>
That was the whole point of my previous spiel. EVERYthing, all matter, all energy, follows a set course. A large number of simple rules eventually result in complex interaction we see today. If you had powerful enough computers and violated heisenberg's and knew the position and velocity of everything that ever was at the moment of creation, you would technically be able to predict the future. But, your act of prediction would also have been forseen and accounted for, so whatever you do after seeing the future is meant to happen and whether you truly did see the future or saw something that is meant to make you create the future is up for debate.
The main reason I believe anti-matter is matter going backwards is the matter-anti-matter reactions. A positron and an electron combine to form pure energy. I think that if anti-matter is matter traveling backwards, then the annihilation of matter and anti-matter into energy is merely the result of the same matter meeting itself, except one is going backwards. The formation of matter in an energy field out in deep space results in anti-matter and matter of the same types. i.e. one proton, one anti-proton. Basically, if all matter was formed with an anti-matter pair, then matter lives in a loop time-wise. It's formed, goes along its merry way, finds its other self, meets up, goes back in time, meets itself (or, rather, becomes itself going the other way) and so on. The cost for the whole operation is the energy before and after.
<< During the formation of the universe, matter and anti-matter were produced. They should have been produced in equal quantities (50/50), but entropy messed up
That's why we ended up with a universe with far more matter than anti-matter. >>
I agree that as the universe cooled (according to big-bang) matter and most likely anti-matter formed from the plasma. I believe that the universe as a whole exhibits a wave-like property. There is a wave form associated with the universe much like basically every fundamental particle from photons to gravitons. Electrons, protons, quarks, all have a wave form as well, but I'm sure they're made up of the waveforms of their fundamental components.
Anyway, since the universe has a waveform associated with it, that would mean it oscillates in at least one dimension. If time oscillates, that would mean that the universe expands, contracts, ad infinitum. Or, it would mean that it only does so in terms of time, in which case anti-matter would be the other half of the waveform.