Chaste
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I'm studying particle physics now and am confused with all these terminologies.
The discussion revolves around the classification of particles, specifically whether an electron is a boson or a fermion, and extends to the nature of hydrogen ions and their constituents. The scope includes conceptual clarifications and explorations of particle physics terminology.
Participants express differing views on the classification of hydrogen ions and their components, with no consensus reached on whether a hydrogen ion with an electron is a boson.
There are unresolved aspects regarding the definitions of bosons and fermions, particularly in the context of combinations of particles and their spins.
tom.stoer said:I hydrogen ion can be the nucleus (w/o electron) consisting of
a) a proton
b) a deuteron = proton + oen neutron
c) a triton = proton + two neutrons
a) and c) are fermions whereas b) is a boson
Yes. The combination of two spin 1/2 particles is either a spin 0 or spin 1 "particle." Either way, it's an integral spin, and thus a boson.Chaste said:Thanks. That's was what I'm looking for. Just wondering would (a) with an electron be a boson?