Is There a Rule for Antiparticle Production in Reactions?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the rules governing the production of antiparticles in reactions, specifically whether the creation of an antiparticle necessitates the simultaneous creation of a corresponding non-antiparticle. The scope includes theoretical considerations and basic principles of particle physics.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that the total charge of a system must remain unchanged, indicating that if an electron is produced, a positively charged particle must also be created to balance the charge.
  • Others argue that the total lepton number of a system cannot change, explaining that leptons have a lepton number of +1 and their antiparticles have -1, which is why certain reactions, like beta decay, involve neutrinos to conserve lepton number.
  • A further point raised is that the flavors of particles cannot change unless a weak interaction occurs, with examples provided regarding the flavor conservation in particle decays.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree on the basic principles governing particle reactions, but the discussion does not resolve whether these rules constitute a definitive requirement for all reactions involving antiparticle production.

Contextual Notes

The discussion does not address potential limitations or exceptions to the proposed rules, nor does it explore the implications of weak interactions in detail.

BobP
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If I produce an anti-particle (e.g: positron) in a reaction MUST I produce a non-anti particle too (e.g: neutrino)...is this a rule?
thanks
 
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BobP said:
If I produce an anti-particle (e.g: positron) in a reaction MUST I produce a non-anti particle too (e.g: neutrino)...is this a rule?
thanks
There are some basic rules to see if a reaction is allowed or not.
1] The total charge of a system cannot change, that means (for example) if you are creating an electron (from a neutral particle), you must also create a plus charged particle to equal their charges to zero.
A0 -> B+ + C- [0=1+(-1)]

2] The total lepton number of a system cannot change. Only leptons carry a lepton number other than zero. Electrons, electron neutrinos, muons, muon neutrinos, taus and tau neutrinos have a lepton number of +1, whereas their corresponding antiparticles have -1.
That is the reason why beta decays have neutrinos in them. In beta minus, a neutron (lepton number or in short L =0) is converted into a proton (L=0) and an electron (L=1) that means we need to have a particle that has a -1 lepton number, which is in this case an electron antineutrino.

3] The flavours cannot change, unless it is a weak reaction. Quarks and leptons carry their own flavours (like electronness, muonness (muons), strangeness (strange quarks) etc.) and their corresponding anti particles have also their own flavours, but negative. For example, electrons have electron flavour =+1 and positrons have electron flavour=-1.
This is the reason why the muon decay looks like this;
μ− → e− + anti electron neutrino + muon neutrino
This conserves both charge, lepton number and flavour of each particles.

So, to sum it up, two sides of the reaction equation must be equal in those aspects.
 
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Garlic said:
There are some basic rules to see if a reaction is allowed or not.
1] The total charge of a system cannot change, that means (for example) if you are creating an electron (from a neutral particle), you must also create a plus charged particle to equal their charges to zero.
A0 -> B+ + C- [0=1+(-1)]

2] The total lepton number of a system cannot change. Only leptons carry a lepton number other than zero. Electrons, electron neutrinos, muons, muon neutrinos, taus and tau neutrinos have a lepton number of +1, whereas their corresponding antiparticles have -1.
That is the reason why beta decays have neutrinos in them. In beta minus, a neutron (lepton number or in short L =0) is converted into a proton (L=0) and an electron (L=1) that means we need to have a particle that has a -1 lepton number, which is in this case an electron antineutrino.

3] The flavours cannot change, unless it is a weak reaction. Quarks and leptons carry their own flavours (like electronness, muonness (muons), strangeness (strange quarks) etc.) and their corresponding anti particles have also their own flavours, but negative. For example, electrons have electron flavour =+1 and positrons have electron flavour=-1.
This is the reason why the muon decay looks like this;
μ− → e− + anti electron neutrino + muon neutrino
This conserves both charge, lepton number and flavour of each particles.

So, to sum it up, two sides of the reaction equation must be equal in those aspects.
Thank you. very detailed answer. very grateful
 
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BobP said:
Thank you. very detailed answer. very grateful
I'm glad to help you :)
 

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