Can protons and neutrons be converted into electrons and vice versa?

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The discussion centers on the conversion of protons and neutrons into electrons, specifically addressing the decay processes involved. A free neutron decays into a proton, an electron, and an antineutrino through beta decay, which occurs in approximately 15 minutes. In certain nuclei, this decay can happen at an accelerated rate due to higher energy release. Additionally, protons can decay into neutrons, positrons, and neutrinos under specific conditions, highlighting the intricate balance of particle interactions and conservation laws in particle physics.

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  • Knowledge of conservation laws in particle physics
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Is it possible to cause a neutron to become an electron? I know that a free neutron decays into a proton and an electron, but is it possible to cause this change to occur, so that it can happen at a faster rate? Also, is it possible to change a proton into and electron (obviously something else must be made along with the electron to conserve charge, lepton number etc)?

Thank you
 
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Neutrons are made of 3 quarks as are protons, but different quarks. The neutron is udd and the proton uud (u = up quark, d = down quark). Via a quantum process a down quark turns into an up quark and a [tex]W^{-}[/tex] vector boson. Therefore udd -> uud, a proton. The [tex]W^{-}[/tex] then decays into an electron and an antineutrino (thus conserving lepton number).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_decay
 
ppyadof said:
Is it possible to cause a neutron to become an electron? I know that a free neutron decays into a proton and an electron, but is it possible to cause this change to occur, so that it can happen at a faster rate? Also, is it possible to change a proton into and electron (obviously something else must be made along with the electron to conserve charge, lepton number etc)?

Thank you
The free neutron decays into a proton, electron and antineutrino in about 15 minutes. Inside some nuclei, the neutron can decay faster because more energy is released. Inside other nuclei (that have too many protons for stability), a proton can decay into a neutron, positron, and neutrino, with the nucleus providing the necessary energy.
 

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