Explain me what the nuclear isospin is?

In summary, the nuclear isospin is a symmetry property of the nucleons and it says that the proton and neutron have the same strong interaction.
  • #1
ghery
34
0
Hello:
Can you please explain me what the nuclear isospin is?. Is it a new kind of angular momentum?, and how was it detected ?

Regards
 
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  • #2


Nuclear isospin is a symmetry property of the nucleons; proton and neutron. The isospin says that the proton and neutron have same strong interaction. One regards the nucleons as spin-up or spin-down in an abstract space called isospin space. And this space follows the same algebra as the spin-space for spin1/2 particles like the electron.

So the proton is usally assign to be the spin-up state in the isospin space, and the neutron with the spin-down state.

You can also have isospin for the u- and d-quarks, the consituents of the nucleons. Here is a good summary if you don't want to buy a textbook: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isospin
 
  • #3


If you are comfortable with quantum mechanics and spinors then the chapter on Gordon Baym's Lectures on Quantum Mechanics should really set the issue, there is an even more accesible discussion in David Park's book (I think is called Introduction to Quantum Theory). Otherwise the article in wikipedia is rather clear.
 
  • #4


It was right after the discovery of the neutron in 1932, the strong similarity between the proton and the neutron led nuclear physicists to interpret both particles as two states of the same particle! The masses of the proton and the neutron are nearly equal. There is a small difference but this was put down to the different electromagnetic interaction of the two particles. Thus the two particle's masses, to a good approximation, were taken to be equal with respect to the strong interaction.

The variable which distinguishes between the proton and the neutron only takes on two states - just like the spin of certain particles! This led to describing the situation by the same maths as that which describes the quantum mechanics of spin 1/2 particles!

ian
 
  • #5


I think in chapter 10 of the third volume of the Feynman lectures he explains that any two state systme, whatever the original physical situation, it is formally equivalent to a spin-half problem. That's where the spin in isospin comes from - so it doesn't have anything to do with angular momentm

ian
 

1. What is nuclear isospin?

Nuclear isospin is a quantum number that describes the symmetry of protons and neutrons in an atomic nucleus. It is analogous to the concept of electric charge in atoms, where protons have a positive charge and electrons have a negative charge.

2. How does nuclear isospin differ from electric charge?

While electric charge can take on both positive and negative values, nuclear isospin can only take on integer or half-integer values. This means that the isospin of a nucleus must always be a whole number or half of a whole number.

3. What is the significance of nuclear isospin?

Nuclear isospin plays an important role in nuclear structure and reactions. It helps to classify different types of nuclei and can predict the behavior of particles within a nucleus, such as their energy levels and interactions with other particles.

4. How is nuclear isospin measured?

Nuclear isospin is measured using experimental techniques such as scattering experiments, where particles are fired at a nucleus and the resulting interactions can reveal the isospin of the nucleus. It can also be calculated using mathematical models and theories of nuclear structure.

5. Can nuclear isospin change?

Yes, nuclear isospin can change through interactions between particles within a nucleus. For example, a proton can transform into a neutron and vice versa, changing the isospin of the nucleus. This is known as isospin symmetry breaking.

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