thoms2543
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can anybody explain what is the difference between neutrino flavour state and neutrino mass eigenstate?getting confuse on it again...
Parlyne said:The mass state are the actual physical neutrino states which remain diagonal under evolution by the free Hamiltonian. The flavor states are the superpositions of mass states which have charged current interactions with the respective charged leptons.
Because neutrinos interact so weakly and have such small mass differences, a superposition of neutrino mass states can retain quantum coherence over astrophysics (and even, possibly cosmological) distances. However, the small differences in mass mean that the free evolution of the different mass states will lead to energy and distance dependent phase differences between the eigenstates, changing both the overall phase and relative phases of the coefficients in the superposition. This, then, is how neutrino "flavors" change.
Xia Ligang said:“... The flavor states are the superpositions of mass states which have charged current interactions with the respective charged leptons. ..."
Here I have a question. Which states have charged current interactions, flavor eigenstates or mass eigenstates? If we use the former one, it is OK. But if we use the latter one, we have to multiply by $U_{\alpha i}$ 's at each vertex, which is like dealing with quarks using CKM matrix. (Sorry, I don't know how to insert mathematical symbols here!)
Parlyne said:The flavor states have diagonal charged current interactions with their respective charged leptons. However, it would be more physical to use the mass states and a mixing matrix element (in analogy to the quarks).