Is the Angle Between Scattered Neutron and Recoiling Proton Always 90 Degrees?

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Homework Statement


Show that when a neutron is scattered from hydrogen, the angle between the laboratory velocities of the scattered neutron and the recoiling proton is always 90°.

Homework Equations


Conservation of momentum
(Conservation of Energy)

The Attempt at a Solution


This isn't a difficult exercise if the collision is assumed to be elastic. In that case straight classical mechanics equations lead to the result. But is this kind of collision always elastic? I mean a neutron hits a proton... It should be elastic after all if you do not go into sub-nuclear physics... If the collision were not to be considered elastic, could I still show the thesis ? I don't think so, but I'm not 100% sure...

Thanks
Ric
 
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If the collision is not elastic it is not true any more - but then you produce new particles or the proton or neutron become something else and asking for the angle becomes meaningless.
 
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As I thought, thanks for confirming.

Anyway I know nothing about "sub"-nuclear physics, but I recall that a neutron and a proton are made of quarks. Is it possible that some of the energy of the collision is lost to "excite" a quark above its ground state? (I don't even know if quarks have energy states so... This is just for fun). If such a thing is possible then I would still have the same two particles, but an inelastic scattering may occur.
 
If you excite one of the particles it is an inelastic process and you get different hadrons. They have different names, although that is just a convention. PDG has a list (not a full list, these are just hadrons with up and down quarks only).
 
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Good to know. Thank you! :)
 
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