Prime meridian (hope this helps)
When the antimatter is atomic antihydrogen, a small amount of it is mixed with excess atomic hydrogen (gathered from interstellar space during flight).
<h3>What is antimatter ?</h3>
According to contemporary physics, antimatter is described as being made up of the opposite particles from "ordinary" matter, or their "partners." Only a few nanograms of antiparticles have been created artificially, but tiny quantities of antiparticles are produced every day at particle accelerators and in natural processes like cosmic ray collisions and some types of radioactive decay. However, only a small portion of these antiparticles have been successfully bound together in experiments to form antiatoms. Antimatter has never been built in a macroscopic amount due to its extremely high cost, complexity in synthesis, and handling.
A particle and its antiparticle, such as a proton and an antiproton, theoretically have the same mass but the opposite electric charge and other variations in quantum numbers.
To learn more about antimatter from the given link:
brainly.com/question/518346
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The only answer you can be given is a gas. It's size is entirely dependent on the container it is in. No matter what the container, a liquid has a definite side. A solid is definitely not the answer.
Answer: A Gas.
This is an example of Charles’ Law problems, the basic equation is: V1/T1 = V2/T2. One vital thing to recall for all gas law problems is that the temperature must be in Kelvin (not Celsius).
So our given is 10.0 C = 283 K. So
V1/T1 = V2/T2
733/283 = 950/T2
T2 = 367 K