waterliyl
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Hi, so we are studying quantum physics at college and I just want to understand this concept of decay. Please could someone help me?
waterliyl said:Thanks! That's really helpful :)
But I guess it can happen the other way too right? I don't understand how one particle can change into another particle unless all particles are made of sort of a base of particles, which are quarks I guess but I thought electrons and neutrinos are leptons, and therefore don't have quarks so why do particles change into them?
mathman said:Never ask "why". They just do.
Without trying to address the specific question, these theories are accepted because they very accurately agree with measured information.waterliyl said:But why do we follow these principals ourselves? For instance we think know that an electron neutrino exists but actually, we just know that there is something out there which matches up with these equations and because logically if it has the characteristics of what we think we have found, then we have found it. but aren't we then just finding things because we are looking for it - therefore, creating these "explanations" up for ourselves?
lpetrich said:Most Grand Unified Theories predict that free protons will decay. They also predict that neutrons will decay by essentially the same process, but for free neutrons, that decay channel is teeny teeny teeny tiny compared to the weak-interaction decay channel. These processes will also make protons and neutrons in nuclei decay, so neutron decay might be observed in otherwise-stable nuclei.
There have been lots of searches for proton decay since the 1980's, and the latest experimental lower limit is about 10^(32) years. That's getting close to what some GUT's predict.
lpetrich said:I don't see how they violate baryon number and lepton number, because at first sight, the Standard Model conserves both of them.
Breo said:I am reading a textbook and have just seen a problem which I do not understand what it means, can I ask you?
Breo said:what means that a fermion bilinear cancel for a Majorana fermion