ScienceNerd36
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Do Neutrons and anti-Neutrons annihilate? I can't imagine any reason why they would, I just thought I'd check.
jtbell said:Why do you think they wouldn't annihilate?
ScienceNerd36 said:I figured particles only annihilated anti-particles becuase the electric attraction caused them to collide
I agree. As soon as the anti-neutron annihilates, there will be "pionization", with an average of ~ 7 pions (as I recall) in the pion cloud for antiproton annihilation. There will not be two back-to-back 939 MeV gammas (maybe rarely), like in positron annihilation.Bob_for_short said:I do not think so. These virtual transitions are due to the weak interaction. I think some strong-interaction transformations will dominate - the reaction products will be different (mesons?).
An anti-neutron and a proton would annihilate to pions via the strong interaction. You don't need a neutron.Bob S said:If a thermalized anti-neutron were in a tank of liquid hydrogen, would it annihilate with a proton?