Heavy Hydrogen: Proton, Muon/Tauon - Stability?

In summary, there are no known heavier hydrogen atoms with different combinations of quarks in their nucleus. Muons and tauons have been used in experiments to form "muonic hydrogen" and "tauonic hydrogen" respectively, but they are not stable and decay quickly. Muons can also be captured by nuclei, resulting in atomic transitions and providing information about the charge distribution of the nucleus. The energy of these transitions does not come from the nucleus or the muon itself.
  • #1
scupydog
101
0
A hydrogen atom is consists of a proton (uud quarks) and an electron.

Is there a heavier atom of hydrogen that consists of a type of proton (ccs or ttb quarks) and a muon or tauon respectively?

Are these
 
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  • #2
To my knowledge, no nucleons based on combinations (ccs or ttb quarks) have been produced in this part of the universe. Muons don't exist long enough to produce an atom that could be investigated.
 
  • #3
Astronuc said:
To my knowledge, no nucleons based on combinations (ccs or ttb quarks) have been produced in this part of the universe. Muons don't exist long enough to produce an atom that could be investigated.

ccs has never been observed, and it would be extremely short lived. ttb does not exist, because top quark is too unstable to form composite particles.

It is possible to form an "atom" out of a proton and a muon. It would only last a couple of microseconds before muon decays.
 
  • #4
Astronuc said:
To my knowledge, no nucleons based on combinations (ccs or ttb quarks) have been produced in this part of the universe.

True, although there are "hypernuclei", where one of the nucleons has been replaced by a hyperon, most often a [itex]\Lambda^0[/itex], but a[itex]\Sigma[/itex] hypernuclei have also been produced and studied. There are people who dedicate their entire careers to the study of hypernuclei.

This field has some surprises: [itex]{\rm ^5_{\Lambda}He}[/itex] should look a lot like [itex]{\rm ^4He}[/itex], but in fact, unlike the alpha particle, is not very tightly bound at all.

The problem with (css) is that it's pretty much at our limit of abilities to produce a hypernucleus with one strange quark, let alone two, let alone charm. But this is a practical problem, not a fundamental one.

Astronuc said:
Muons don't exist long enough to produce an atom that could be investigated.

That's not the case. A negative muon can be captured by a nucleus, and it can live long enough to undergo atomic transitions, giving off x-rays as it de-excites. These mu-mesic x-rays (as they were called when they were discovered by Val Fitch and Jim Rainwater in the early 1950's) provide a lot of information on the charge distribution of the nucleus - because a muon is 200x heavier than an electron, it's Bohr radius is 200 times smaller, so the effect of the nuclear charge distribution (e.g. quadrupole deformations) is orders of magnitude larger.

Indeed, the lifetime of the muon is about 20 trillion times longer than the classical orbit period. Microseconds seems like a short time to us, but compared to typical atomic transition times, it's huge.
 
  • #5
scupydog said:
A hydrogen atom is consists of a proton (uud quarks) and an electron.

Is there a heavier atom of hydrogen that consists of a type of proton (ccs or ttb quarks) and a muon or tauon respectively?
Muonic hydrogen (proton plus negative muon) has been made in the laboratory, and its atomic transition energies have been measured. The binding energy of the muon is about (105.658/0.511) times 13.6 eV*. The bound muon does not interact with the proton**, and decays while in the ground state of the muonic hydrogen atom.
Bob S
* does not include significant reduced mass correction.
** protons do absorb muons in high-Z atoms.
 
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  • #6
Bob S said:
Muonic hydrogen (proton plus negative muon) has been made in the laboratory, and its atomic transition energies have been measured. The binding energy of the muon is about (105.658/0.511) times 13.6 eV*. The bound muon does not interact with the proton**, and decays while in the ground state of the muonic hydrogen atom.
Bob S
* does not include significant reduced mass correction.
** protons do absorb muons in high-Z atoms.

Hi bob, If the muon decays whilst in the ground state where does the energy come from to keep the atom in the ground state
 
  • #7
Vanadium 50 said:
That's not the case. A negative muon can be captured by a nucleus, and it can live long enough to undergo atomic transitions, giving off x-rays as it de-excites.

Is the energy of the x-ray equal to the transition from muon to electron or is there some energy taken from the nucleus..as in ccs to uud
 
  • #8
scupydog said:
Is the energy of the x-ray equal to the transition from muon to electron or is there some energy taken from the nucleus..as in ccs to uud

Neither. It's an ordinary atomic transition.
 
  • #9
scupydog said:
Hi bob, If the muon decays whilst in the ground state where does the energy come from to keep the atom in the ground state
In muonic hydrogen, the muon cascades down to the 1S state in a few picoseconds, and usually decays into a muon neutrino, an electron anti-neutrino, and a high energy electron (up to 52 MeV), leaving a free proton to find a free electron. The muon absorption rate in nuclei varies as Z4, and in high Z nuclei the muon spends most of its time in nuclear matter, and is captured by a proton in 60-80 nanoseconds, decaying to a neutron and a muon neutrino.
Bob S

[added] muon lifetime is about 2.2 microseconds.
 
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1. What is heavy hydrogen?

Heavy hydrogen, also known as deuterium, is an isotope of hydrogen that has an extra neutron in its nucleus. This makes it twice as heavy as normal hydrogen, which has only one proton and no neutrons.

2. How is heavy hydrogen different from normal hydrogen?

Heavy hydrogen has an extra neutron in its nucleus, while normal hydrogen does not have any neutrons. This difference in atomic structure leads to differences in physical and chemical properties, such as a higher boiling point and a stronger chemical bond.

3. What is the stability of heavy hydrogen compared to normal hydrogen?

Heavy hydrogen is more stable than normal hydrogen because of the extra neutron in its nucleus. This extra neutron helps to hold the nucleus together, making it less likely to undergo nuclear reactions or decay.

4. What are the different types of heavy hydrogen?

There are two types of heavy hydrogen: deuterium and tritium. Deuterium has one neutron in its nucleus, while tritium has two neutrons. Deuterium is the most common and stable form of heavy hydrogen, while tritium is less common and radioactive.

5. How is heavy hydrogen used in scientific research?

Heavy hydrogen, specifically deuterium, is used in a variety of scientific research applications. It is used as a tracer in chemical reactions, a fuel source for nuclear fusion, and a contrast agent in nuclear magnetic resonance imaging. It is also used in the production of heavy water, which is used in nuclear reactors.

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