Q
Vanadium 50 said:
T3 is electric charge. (Up to a constant)
The reason this is useful is that everything one learned about spin angular momentum l in eigenstates of m can be applied to isospin, where you have isospin T in eigenstates of T3. Or charge. (If you're in an eigenstate of one, you're not in an eigenstate of another)
As an example, this allows you to calculate the branching fraction rho -> pi0 + pi0. In isospin space, {T,T3} is {1,0} = {1,0} + {1,0}. For spin, the C-G coefficient for this is zero, and so it must be for isospin. So this decay is forbidden. Voila!
T3 is not the electric charge up to a constant:
T_3|p>=\frac{1}{2}|p>
T_3|n>=-\frac{1}{2}|n>
(they are eigenstates of T3 just because we "label" our states with T3).
Moreover, what does the example you have given mean? That in processes mediated by QCD in the limit in which isospin is conserved, isospin is
really conserved ?
To mr. vodka: sorry for having been unclear, I will try to explain better my thoughts here: as far as I know, in scattering processes one usually takes mass eigenstates as incident and outgoing free particles; with mass eigenstates I mean eigenstates of the operator P^2 (à la Weinberg, as far as I have understood) (sorry for my confusing notation; I often use energy and mass eigenstates as synonimous, since usually one takes as "base states" the state parametrized by P^{\mu}); for example, if we do not take mass eigenstates as final product, how can we define the phase space? As far as I know, I think it's not possible. Notice that I am talking about scattering processes (it's the only way in which I know particles can be produced). If you ask how the state p+n can be seen or if it can be produced in other methods or simply how it looks, actually I don't know how to answer this question, since this is not a mass eigenstate and I don't know how to produce this kind of particles (I'm sorry for that :). If, however, we restrict to scattering theory in which in the end of a process we would like to see only definite particles (in the sense meant by Weinberg: "mass,energy, momentum,spin and spin along z"-eigenstates, if I remember correctly ), I am quite sure that we ought to see only mass eigenstates.
What I am quite safe to say is the following: in the limit in which we consider only QCD with exact isospin, I think that labelling the states is just a matter of convention (at least in scattering processess) : this is the same kind of thoughts I have exposed in the first post I have sent in this thread.
I basically agree with tom.stoer (maybe with a slightly different motivation, if I have understood what he has said), in the sense that electromagnetism can be one of the keys: even if I don't take into account the superselection rules (which I don't know and so I don't want to talk about), what is sure is that the proton and the neutron have different charges and so they interact differently with the photon (so, this can make us distinguish the neutron from the proton, measurable thing); moreover electromagnetism is the (or one of the) responsible for the neutron and the proton to have different mass and so make them distinguishable. Of course, also in this case, I am just talking about production of free particles in a scattering process. Maybe there is something deeper in seeing that these states are actually electric charge eigenstates, but actually I cannot see what; maybe this can be a point of contact with what tom said (still in the hypothesis that I have understood what he has said) ;hope this discussion will clarify my point of view.
Francesco