Radiohannah
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Hello there!
May I ask:
I am learning about the conservation of lepton number. I understand that the lepton number is composed of different sorts of lepton number,
L_{\mu} and L_{\tau} and L_{e}.
And these are conserved in all interactions.
I am confused however about the lepton number for anti-particles. Are the lepton numbers negative for anti-particles?
Because in the muon decay;
\mu^{-} \rightarrow e^{-} + \overline{\nu_{e}} + \nu_{\mu}
I can see that L_{\tau} is conserved (0) and L_{\mu} is conserved, but e^{-} would have L_{e}=1 and then \overline{\nu_{e}} would have L_{e}= -1 which isn't conserved.
:-S
Cheers
May I ask:
I am learning about the conservation of lepton number. I understand that the lepton number is composed of different sorts of lepton number,
L_{\mu} and L_{\tau} and L_{e}.
And these are conserved in all interactions.
I am confused however about the lepton number for anti-particles. Are the lepton numbers negative for anti-particles?
Because in the muon decay;
\mu^{-} \rightarrow e^{-} + \overline{\nu_{e}} + \nu_{\mu}
I can see that L_{\tau} is conserved (0) and L_{\mu} is conserved, but e^{-} would have L_{e}=1 and then \overline{\nu_{e}} would have L_{e}= -1 which isn't conserved.
:-S
Cheers