Mass & Charge of Proton, Neutron & Electron: Explained

In summary: in summary, the mass of proton is 938 mev/c2 where as the mass of quarks in proton is 11 mev/c2. much of the reminder is gluon. but gluon does not have any mass. so how can it be gluon? also in neutron decay, one d quark transform itself into u quark by absorbing / emitting w boson. in this case w boson is absorbed or emitted? i am trying to work out the equation udd=uud+-e+-ve in respect of mass and charge. the u quark has mass 2.4 mev/c2 where as d quark has 4.8 mev/c2
  • #1
asim_115
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The mass of proton is 938mev/c2 where as mass of quarks in proton is 11 Mev/c2. Much of the reminder is gluon. But gluon does not have any mass. So how can it be gluon?

Also in neutron decay, one d Quark transform itself into u quark by absorbing / emitting W boson. in this case W boson is absorbed or emitted? i am trying to work out the equation UDD=UUD+-e+-ve in respect of Mass and charge. the U quark has mass 2.4Mev/c2 where as D quark has 4.8Mev/c2. So UDD = 2.4+4.8+4.8=12Mev/c2 where as UUD=2.4+2.4+4.8=9.6. E has mass of 0.511Mev/c2. There is a difference of 1.889 Mev/c2 of mass. What is this?
in term of charge U has +2/3 where as D has -1/3. so UDD has no charge i can understand this. same is the case UUD which has +1 charge. so how come electron have -1 charge. where this charge comes from? the W- boson which as emitted that later on transform into -e+-ve was either already there in UDD formation or absorbed and then emitted. If it was already there, why neutron is said to be composed of UDD? if it was absorbed first and then emitted, where does this W- boson come from?
 
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  • #2
The mass of proton is 938mev/c2 where as mass of quarks in proton is 11 Mev/c2. Much of the reminder is gluon. But gluon does not have any mass. So how can it be gluon?
The mass of a system is not the sum of the masses of its constituents. The proton's mass is m = E/c2 where E is the total energy. E includes rest mass of quarks, but also includes the kinetic energy of both quarks and gluons, plus potential energy due to the strong interaction. Usually potential energy for a bound state is negative, but in this case the quarks are confined within a harmonic oscillator potential, which is positive.
 
  • #3
See this Feynman diagram for the neutron decay (and forget the "space" dimension shown there, this is not very useful): A down-quark emits (or absorbs, does not matter) a virtual W boson and becomes an up-quark. The virtual W-boson decays into (or gets produced from, does not matter) an electron and an anti-electronneutrino.

The W-boson is charged, charge is conserved at both interaction points and both interaction points are valid within the weak interaction.

Concerning mass, you always have to consider the whole hadron, and as Bill_K pointed out this is dominated by QCD effects (for protons and neutrons).
 
  • #4
A major factor in the mass of the proton or neutron is the presence of virtual quark-antiquark pairs that come in out and out of existence.
 
  • #5
thanks for the reply.
 

1. What is the mass of a proton, neutron, and electron?

The mass of a proton is approximately 1.67 x 10^-27 kilograms, the mass of a neutron is also approximately 1.67 x 10^-27 kilograms, and the mass of an electron is approximately 9.11 x 10^-31 kilograms.

2. How does the mass of a proton compare to the mass of a neutron and electron?

The mass of a proton and neutron are about the same, while the mass of an electron is much smaller, about 1836 times less than the mass of a proton or neutron.

3. What is the charge of a proton, neutron, and electron?

A proton has a positive charge of +1, a neutron has no charge or a neutral charge, and an electron has a negative charge of -1.

4. How does the charge of a proton compare to the charge of a neutron and electron?

The charge of a proton and electron are equal in magnitude but opposite in sign. A neutron does not have a charge, so it is neutral.

5. What is the role of protons, neutrons, and electrons in an atom?

Protons and neutrons make up the nucleus of an atom, which contains most of the mass of the atom. Electrons orbit around the nucleus and are responsible for the atom's chemical properties and reactions.

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