What are the charge options for baryons?

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    Baryon Charge
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Baryons can have charges of -1/3 e, 0 e, 2/3 e, or 4/3 e. The discussion highlights confusion about baryon charges, particularly regarding neutrons and protons, which are examples of baryons. The original poster initially guessed that the charge of a baryon is 0 e. Responses directed them to resources for clarification, emphasizing the importance of understanding baryon properties through examples. Ultimately, the conversation underscores the need for a clearer grasp of baryon charges for academic purposes.
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A baryon may have a charge of:

a) -1/3 e
b) 0 e
c) 2/3 e
d) 4/3 e

I have no idea what a baryon is... and I've spent over 20 minutes online trying to answer this simple question.
 
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Ok... I read that but I still don't get it.
 
My guess would be choice b) 0 e.

Am I correct?
 
<looks at cyby and asks> "Are you stalking me?" :)

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/particles/hadron.html

Read under "Baryon", and look at the two EXAMPLES of baryons that were given. Anything more, I might as well do this problem for you and you would have learned nothing.

Zz.

P.S. Did you miss the "Homework Zone" section when looking for a place to post this?
 
I did read... they're protons and neutrons. So, that's why I asked "Is it 0 e?" for a neutron.
 
And this isn't homework... it's in a review packet for my final exam, but the packet is all the things he didn't teach us that we might need to know.
 
Well, what are the charges of the baryons listed? Since you know that two examples of them are neutrons and protons, you can easily deduce their charge quantities...
 
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