I'm sure your question relates to "anti-matter" (I suppose it could be called negative matter).
Scientists of all persuasions (Mathmaticians, Physicists and Astrophysicists) propose that within 0.001 seconds following the initiation of the Big Bang Creation Event equal amounts of matter and anti-matter existed, but (roughly) for every billion particles (much smaller than atoms) of anti-matter that existed, a billion + 1 (one) particles of matter had been produced. Each collision of matter/anti-matter resulted in the cataclysmic destruction of both, save the one additional particle of matter. Over time, this additional particle came to dominate our known universe.
Additionally, some elements today decay and produce anti-matter particles... one of these is the lepton. Physicists believe that this decay process supports a fundamental law of physics - that for each new lepton that is produced there is a corresponding new antilepton.
Finally, physicists are now searching for very small differences between the properties of matter atoms and antimatter atoms by colliding atoms at near-light-speed aceleration. "This will help confirm or confound our understanding of the symmetry between matter and anti-matter" (Source: Antimatter Blog).
You may find this site understandable and interesting:
http://press.web.cern...demy/AM-travel00.html
Today, we (the scientists) see a universe made almost entirely of matter