Rob said:

> So if you mix normal matter with mirror anti-matter would the result
> be:
>
> a: Nothing because they are mutually weakly interacting?
>
> or
>
> b: a similar reaction to matter/anti-matter mixing only with a
> different particle emission?
>
> or
>
> c: other?

I'm pretty sure that the answer is (a). Interactions in quantum field  
theory can be written as sums of Feynman diagrams, each of which is  
made up of lines representing particles and vertices at which the  
particles interact. Each type of force has characteristic vertices.  
For example, the electromagnetic force has a vertex with two charged  
particles and a photon. This can either represent a single charged  
particle emitting a photon or a particle and its anti-particle  
annihilating to form a photon. So, for example, an electron and a  
positron can annihilate at a vertex forming a photon. (To conserve  
energy and momentum, you need at least two vertices resulting in two  
photons in the whole diagram.) Thus, no interaction vertices means no  
interaction, and hence no reaction and no particle emission.

Rich
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