Particle Interaction Equations
- All particle interactions must obey a set of conservation laws. These are conservation of:
- Charge, Q
- Baryon number, B
- Lepton Number, L
- Energy (or mass-energy)
- Momentum
- Quantum numbers such as Q, B and L can only take discrete values (ie. 0, +1, –1, 1/2)
- To know whether a particle interaction can occur, check whether each quantum number is equal on both sides of the equation
- If even one of them, apart from strangeness in weak interactions, is not conserved then the interaction cannot occur
Worked example
A reaction that is proposed to create antiprotons in a laboratory is shown below:
Determine whether this reaction is permitted.
Step 1: Determine conservation of charge Q
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- There are two protons on the left hand side
- There are two protons on the right hand side, with a positively charged pion (Q = +1) and an antiproton (Q = –1)
- Therefore charge is conserved, because:
1 + 1 = 1 + 1 + 1 + (– 1)
Step 2: Determine conservation of baryon number, B
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- There are two baryons on the left hand side, each with a baryon number B = +1 (protons are baryons)
- On the right hand side
- Two protons each with baryon number +1
- One pion, with a baryon number 0 (it is a meson)
- One anti-proton with a baryon number –1
- Therefore baryon number is not conserved, because:
1 + 1 = 1 + 1 + 0 + (– 1)
Step 3: Conclude whether this reaction is permitted
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- This reaction is not permitted
- Because baryon number is not conserved
Worked example
The equation for β– decay is
Using the quark model of beta decay, prove that the charge is conserved in this equation.
Examiner Tip
Note:
- Quantum numbers for any exotic particles will be given in the question
- Additional information can always be deduced using the information provided