ScienceNerd36
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Do Neutrons and anti-Neutrons annihilate? I can't imagine any reason why they would, I just thought I'd check.
Neutrons and anti-neutrons do annihilate, contrary to the misconception that they do not due to their neutral charge. The annihilation occurs through the strong interaction, resulting in the production of pions. When an anti-neutron interacts with a proton, the annihilation process leads to the creation of multiple pions, typically around three, depending on the energy involved. This discussion clarifies the fundamental forces at play in particle-antiparticle interactions and corrects the misunderstanding that neutrons are their own anti-particles.
PREREQUISITESPhysicists, students of particle physics, and anyone interested in the interactions between matter and antimatter, particularly in the context of neutron and anti-neutron behavior.
jtbell said:Why do you think they wouldn't annihilate?
ScienceNerd36 said:I figured particles only annihilated anti-particles because the electric attraction caused them to collide
I agree. As soon as the anti-neutron annihilates, there will be "pionization", with an average of ~ 7 pions (as I recall) in the pion cloud for antiproton annihilation. There will not be two back-to-back 939 MeV gammas (maybe rarely), like in positron annihilation.Bob_for_short said:I do not think so. These virtual transitions are due to the weak interaction. I think some strong-interaction transformations will dominate - the reaction products will be different (mesons?).
An anti-neutron and a proton would annihilate to pions via the strong interaction. You don't need a neutron.Bob S said:If a thermalized anti-neutron were in a tank of liquid hydrogen, would it annihilate with a proton?