Neutron Anti-Neutron Anihilation

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SUMMARY

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.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of particle physics concepts, specifically neutrons and anti-neutrons.
  • Familiarity with the strong interaction and its role in particle annihilation.
  • Knowledge of pion production and its significance in particle interactions.
  • Basic grasp of virtual particles and weak interactions in quantum physics.
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  • Research the mechanisms of strong interaction in particle physics.
  • Learn about pion production and its implications in high-energy physics experiments.
  • Study the differences between weak and strong interactions in particle annihilation.
  • Explore the concept of virtual particles and their role in quantum field theory.
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Physicists, students of particle physics, and anyone interested in the interactions between matter and antimatter, particularly in the context of neutron and anti-neutron behavior.

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.
 
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Yes.
 
Why do you think they wouldn't annihilate?
 
jtbell said:
Why do you think they wouldn't annihilate?

My logic was: a neurton is it's own anti-particle, and seeing as atomic nuclei can exist the neutrons in the atomic nucleus aren't anihilating each other, hence neutrons shouldn't anihilate anti-neutrons. This logic worked for me because I figured particles only annihilated anti-particles because the electric attraction caused them to collide, and seeing as they have equal mass ever single part of the particle collided with another anti-part, which is they there is no mass left, only energy.
 
Neutron is not its own anti-particle. In atomic nuclei there are only neutrons and protons.
 
Fair enough, thanks for all the help :)
 
ScienceNerd36 said:
I figured particles only annihilated anti-particles because the electric attraction caused them to collide

The molecules in a gas are electrically neutral, and therefore have no electrical attraction to each other (except for the small van der Waals force when they get really close to each other), but they still collide with each other a lot. :smile:
 
So, what is the force that acts on particles and anti-particles which causes them to annihilate? In other words, what is the force that attracts them to one another?
 
If the particle and its antiparticle are charged, there is an electrostatic interaction (attraction). Normally they annihilate when they are close enough to each other, like an electron and positron in positronium atom. If they are neutral like neutrons, there is still a short-range strong (nuclear) interaction that makes it possible to annihilate and transform into another neutral system.
 
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  • #10
So it's still a fundamental force acting on the particles, drawing them close together which then allows them to annihlate.

Now I'm off to find out how annihilation works. Any help from you fellas would be much appreciated.
 
  • #11
If a thermalized anti-neutron were in a tank of liquid hydrogen, would it annihilate with a proton? Protons can exist in a virtual state of a neutron, a positron, and an antineutrino for short times (hbar ~ 6 x 10-22 sec). Anti-neutrons can also exist in both real and virtual states of an antiproton, a positron, and an antineutrino.
Bob S
 
  • #12
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?).
 
  • #13
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?).
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 S
 
  • #14
Three pions for sure - the number of quarks is six. The rest depends on excess of energy.
 
  • #15
Bob S said:
If a thermalized anti-neutron were in a tank of liquid hydrogen, would it annihilate with a proton?
An anti-neutron and a proton would annihilate to pions via the strong interaction. You don't need a neutron.
 

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