kurious said:
What I meant to say was that is there something like a conservation law so that
if superpositions change after two particles (which are not neutrinos) have interacted, should there have been some changing superpositions before the particles interacted.
For example could there be oscillating W particles which oscillate like neutrinos do?
You seem to think that because there is "superposition" after the interaction, that there should be "superposition" before the interaction ; whether there's a law of "conservation of superposition" ; coming down to a linear time evolution operator. In a certain sense, yes. The needed superpositions BEFORE interaction are energy superpositions. So you need quarks and electrons with a certain energy spread which covers the mass difference of the different neutrino mass states. But the mass difference is tiny !
The thing that is special with neutrinos is the following:
|electron neutrino> = 1/sqrt(2) (|mass A neutrino> + |mass B neutrino>)
|muon neutrino> = 1/sqrt(2) (|mass A neutrino> - |mass B neutrino>)
So the "electron neutrino mass" is not defined ! It is a mixture of something that has mass A and something that has mass B.
For electrons, this is not the case: the mass eigenstate of an electron is also the "electroweak interaction eigenstate" (the one that enters into the feynman diagrams).
In electroweak interactions, it are "electron neutrinos" that interact in the first family (up and down quarks) and "muon neutrinos" that interact in the second family. Because in the sun, there are predominantly only quarks of the first family, only pure electron neutrinos are produced there.
But once they are produced, and allowed to freely evolve, they obey the schrodinger evolution equation, and we have that:
|electron neutrino after time t> = 1/sqrt(2) (exp(-i A t) |mass A neutrino> + exp(- i B t) | mass B neutrino> )
You can clearly see that, apart from a global phase factor which doesn't matter, for long enough t, |electron neutrino after time t> = |muon neutrino>. And still twice as long later, it is back an electron neutrino.
One thing is sure: just after the interaction, only a pure electron neutrino can be produced. Whether you consider this a "superposition" or not is your business, it depends on what basis you use. But if you use the mass basis, which is also the energy eigenstates, then you see that it is indeed a superposition ; this basis is helpfull to calculate the time evolution. Most particles don't have this: because the "interaction eigenstate" is equal to the mass eigenstate, the time evolution only adds an insignificant phase factor, and the particle remains itself in the interaction basis.
To come back to your question: if energy eigenstates are truly stationary states, and we end up with a superposition of stationary states, what gives ?
Well, this can in principle be described by a superposition of incoming particles with slightly different energies ; alternatively, you can absorb the energy uncertainty (mass difference) into the other product particle. But in practice this is ridiculous: the elementary particle interaction takes place on time scales which are SO small, that anyway the time-energy uncertainty gives us uncertainties much larger than this tiny mass difference.
cheers,
patrick.