Decay of tauon into pion and neutrino

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the decay of a tauon into a charged pion and a neutrino, focusing on the conditions that maximize the energy of the pion post-decay. The subject area includes particle physics and weak interactions.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the implications of treating the neutrino as massless and question the feasibility of it being stationary. There is an attempt to analyze the decay in different frames of reference, specifically the lab frame and the center-of-mass frame.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants raising questions about the nature of massless particles and their implications for maximizing pion energy. Some guidance has been offered regarding frame analysis, but no consensus has been reached.

Contextual Notes

Participants are navigating the complexities of relativistic physics and the specific conditions of the decay process, including the assumptions about the neutrino's mass and motion.

shroom
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Decay of tauon into pion and neutrino...

Hello all.

I have a question.

One of the weak decays of a tauon(energy 20GeV) is to a charged pion(rest mass 139.6Mev/c^2) and a neutrino(take the neutrino to be massless).

What condition results in the maximum energy of the pion after the decay?

Sketch how the decay appears in this case, and calculate the energy.

Attempt at solution.

Ok so I got that in the lab frame, the energy of the pion would be maximised if the neutrino remained stationary. Is this correct? The reason I am questioning is that if I am taking the neutrino as massless, can a massless particle be stationary? Because then by the relativistic relation

E^2=p^2 +m^2 since m is zero and p is zero as it's stationary then it has...well nothing.

Is there something obvious I am missing?

Thanks in advance,

Shroom
 
Physics news on Phys.org


If the neutrino is massless, it moves at the speed of light.
 


So the neutrino can never be stationary? I thought that would be the case. If this is so, then how do you go about maximising the energy of the pion?
 


Try analyzing the decay in the center-of-mass frame first.
 

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