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Is it allowed? such as a electron neutrino and an electron anti-neutrino.
And why?
Now, I am confused...
Thanks.
And why?
Now, I am confused...
Thanks.
humanino said:This decay is forbidden by angular momentum conservation if neutrinos are purely massless.
Vanadium 50 said:But they are not. So the decay occurs with some rate. (It's GIM suppressed, though).
I wanted to quote the same values as you just did. You can find the original references for those upper bounds, they describe the various existing predictions.Barmecides said:I have no idea, how much we should expect from SM theory, do you know ?
Barmecides said:what do you mean by GIM suppressed
Vanadium 50 said:Suppressed by the mechanism of Glashow, Illiopoulos and Maiani. This is a cancellation that occurs in flavor changing neutral currents: decays like K0L -> mu+ mu- and pi0 -> nu nubar. If the neutrinos were exactly degenerate the cancellation would be exact and this decay wouldn't occur. Because they have slightly different masses, the decays are suppressed.
humanino said:See the original reference for the value quoted Upper Limit on the Branching Ratio for the Decay \pi^0 \to \nu \bar\nu[/color]
They provide references for :
Br(\pi^0 \to \nu \bar\nu) = 3\times 10^{-8} \left(\frac{m_{\nu}}{m_{\pi^{0}}}\right)^{2} \sqrt{1-4\left(\frac{m_{\nu}}{m_{\pi^{0}}}\right)^{2}}
See also http://pdglive.lbl.gov/Rsummary.brl?nodein=S009&sub=Yr&return=MXXX005 for instance for other informations.
arivero said:But suppose that the up quark were massless. Could the neutral pion decay into a pair of up, anti-up quarks?
Vanadium 50 said:The pi0 carries no weak charge, so it cannot couple directly to a Z
Vanadium 50 said:There is an additional subtlety - a pi0 composed of massless quarks would itself be massless (it becomes a Goldstone) and massless particles do not decay.