cairoliu
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Wikipedia only tells neutrino spin 1/2, but no tell parity sign: positive or negative?
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Because I know protons, neutron, electron all 1/2+ spin with positive sign of parity, but only know neutrino 1/2 spin.PeterDonis said:What do you mean by "parity sign"?
cairoliu said:Because I know protons, neutron, electron all 1/2+ spin with positive sign of parity
Jπ always comes together, if Jπ = 1/2+, it means spin = 1/2, parity = +1.PeterDonis said:Again, what do you mean by "positive sign of parity"? Please give a reference.
I imagine it as left hand ruled direction of angular momentum vector. right or wrong?Orodruin said:Also, in addition to what Peter said, what do you imagine that the parity transformation of a left-handed neutrino is?
Sorry, no idea, please teach me.Orodruin said:No, I asked you what you thought the parity transformation of the left-handed neutrino is. Not what the left-handed neutrino is.
Thanks for your answer.PeterDonis said:Ok, then the answer is that neutrinos do not have a definite parity, since neutrinos only interact via weak interactions and weak interactions do not conserve parity.
cairoliu said:I like to think symbolically and mathematically, and let equation itself tell whether parity conserve.