apeiron said:
So this means that the uncertain part of the baryogenesis story remains the strong CP problem?
According to Sakharov, you need to violate CP to get matter/anti-matter asymmetry, and you need to violate CP by just the right amount.
t is not that neutrons have been observed to have the necessary CP violation as yet (ie: no recent discovery of the neutron electric dipole moment).
Right. Neutrons and protons have never been observed to violate CP. There is only one known process that violates CP and that is the decay of the neutron Kaon. The belief is that if you increase the temperature high enough so that neutrons and protons start changing into other types of particles that something will happen then that will give you an matter imbalance.
If this sounds vague and unclear, that's because it is, we haven't worked out the details, and that's partly because we can't practically get particle accelerators up to those energies.
It seems to be saying that up and down quarks ought to be generated in equal numbers out of the Big Bang (due to pair production).
Nope. Pair production will produce equal amounts of up and anti-up or down and anti-down. Up and down quarks are different types of quarks and you won't get equal amounts.
You have to have equal numbers of neutrons and protons (a neutron/proton pair giving you three up quarks to match every three down quarks).
Actually you don't. Down quarks and neutrons are slightly heavier than up quarks and protons. Also all of the reactions preserve charge so that the number of protons and electrons are the same.
So what happens is that, you produce slightly fewer neutrons than protons. You can take the mass difference, and calculate how many fewer neutrons get made.
The really cool part is that the neutrons that exist get paired up with protons to become helium. The protons that are left end up making hydrogen. You then being able to show that given that difference in proton/neutron masses, that about 25% of the universe should be helium, and voila, it is...
Here is a sketch of the argument
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1991ApJ...376...51W
Also the first section is interesting to read, because you see the process of "figuring this out"
So the origin of the electron would seem to sheet back to this further grand coincidence of nature - one that is not a CP violation issue, a matter/antimatter asymmetry, but just a matter asymmetry (due to the differing masses of up and down quarks)?
If the charge is conserved and you have protons, then you have to have electrons. Now why protons are heavy and electrons are light is a mystery of the universe that we don't currently understand.