What is the Threshold Energy of a Neutrino in the Centre of Mass Frame?

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the threshold energy of a neutrino in the center of mass (CM) frame, involving concepts from particle physics and relativistic energy-momentum relations. The original poster presents a scenario with neutrinos, protons, and tau particles, focusing on energy conservation in the CM frame.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the conservation of energy and momentum in the CM frame, questioning the original poster's calculations and assumptions regarding the momentum of particles. There are discussions on the correct expressions for energy and momentum, and the implications of the threshold condition.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active, with participants providing insights and corrections regarding the energy expressions and momentum conservation. Some participants suggest reconsidering the definitions and relationships used in the calculations, while others highlight the importance of using invariants in relativistic problems.

Contextual Notes

There are indications of confusion regarding the definitions of momentum and energy in different frames, as well as the implications of the threshold condition for the neutrino's energy. The original poster acknowledges a mistake but does not clarify the resolution, leaving the discussion open-ended.

avkr
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Capture.PNG

Homework Statement


Mass of neutrino = 0
Mass of proton/neutron = 1 GeV
Mass of tau = 2 GeV

Homework Equations


Energy of neutrino in lab = e
Energy of neutrino in CM = e0

The Attempt at a Solution


In the centre of mass frame, we will take the momentum of the neutron to be e0/c, c = speed of light.
CoE in CM: e0 + sqrt(m_n^2*c^4 + e0^2) = (m_p + m_tau)c^2
this gives e0 =1.33 GeV

therefore the velocity of CM in lab frame = (e0/c)/(m_v + m_n) = e0/(c*m_n) = 1.33c > c.

Cannot find where I'm doing the mistake!
 

Attachments

  • Capture.PNG
    Capture.PNG
    17.5 KB · Views: 972
Physics news on Phys.org
avkr said:
Cannot find where I'm doing the mistake!
In the energy expression on the right you omitted the ##p^2c^2## term for the two particles. The fact that the sum of the momenta is zero in the CM frame does not necessarily mean that each momentum is zero.
 
I have included e0 as energy of neutrino whereas sqrt(m_n^2 c^4 + e0^2) contains the terms rest mass of neutron (m_n^2 c^4) and e0^2 is the (pc)^2 term ( p = e0/c, therefore (pc)^2 = e0^2).
 
avkr said:
View attachment 214254In the centre of mass frame, we will take the momentum of the neutron to be e0/c, c = speed of light.
CoE in CM: e0 + sqrt(m_n^2*c^4 + e0^2) = (m_p + m_tau)c^2

This is what I get.

avkr said:
therefore the velocity of CM in lab frame = (e0/c)/(m_v + m_n) = e0/(c*m_n) = 1.33c > c.

In the CoM frame, the spatial momentum of the neutron is not ##m_N v##. What is it?

For the relative speed between the two frames, I get
$$\frac{v}{c} = \tanh \left( \sinh^{-1} \left( \frac{e_0}{m_N} \right) \right) ,$$

but I don't think that you are expected to express it like this.
 
avkr said:
I have included e0 as energy of neutrino whereas sqrt(m_n^2 c^4 + e0^2) contains the terms rest mass of neutron (m_n^2 c^4) and e0^2 is the (pc)^2 term ( p = e0/c, therefore (pc)^2 = e0^2).
That's the left side of the equation and it is correct. In post #2 I am questioning the right side which should be ##\sqrt{m_p^2c^4 +p_{p}^2c^2}+\sqrt{m_{\tau}^2c^4 +p_{\tau}^2c^2}##. You have not conserved momentum in the CM frame.

On Edit: Sorry I missed the word "minimum" for the energy. I withdraw my objections.
 
Last edited:
kuruman said:
In the energy expression on the right you omitted the ##p^2c^2## term for the two particles. The fact that the sum of the momenta is zero in the CM frame does not necessarily mean that each momentum is zero.

In relativistic collision problems, "threshold" usually means that the product particles are all at rest in the zero momentum frame.
 
kuruman said:
That's the left side of the equation and it is correct. In post #2 I am questioning the right side which should be ##\sqrt{m_p^2c^4 +p_{p}^2c^2}+\sqrt{m_{\tau}^2c^4 +p_{\tau}^2c^2}##. You have not conserved momentum in the CM frame.
In the CM frame, the total momentum is zero by definition. You therefore have the total 4-momentum ##P = p_p + p_\tau = (E_{cm},0,0,0)##. It follows that
$$
s = P^2 = E_{cm}^2 = m_p^2 + m_\tau^2 + 2p_p \cdot p_\tau \geq m_p^2 + m_\tau^2 + 2m_p m_\tau = (m_p+m_\tau)^2.
$$
The threshold CM energy is given by the equality and corresponds to the proton and tau being at relative rest.
 
George Jones said:
In the CoM frame, the spatial momentum of the neutron is not ##m_N v##. What is it?

For the relative speed between the two frames, I get
$$\frac{v}{c} = \tanh \left( \sinh^{-1} \left( \frac{e_0}{m_N} \right) \right) ,$$

but I don't think that you are expected to express it like this.
You cannot express the relative velocity using only quantities from the CoM frame (and invariants like ##m_N##).

To OP: You do not need to compute the relative speed between the CM and lab frames to solve this problem. Are you familiar with the 4-vector formalism? I would then suggest working in terms of invariants. You can compute the invariants in whatever frame as they will take the same value in all frames.

avkr said:
therefore the velocity of CM in lab frame = (e0/c)/(m_v + m_n) = e0/(c*m_n) = 1.33c > c.

You seem to be using ##v/c = p/mc##. This is not correct. The correct expression is ##v/c = pc/E##.
 
Orodruin said:
You cannot express the relative velocity using only quantities from the CoM frame (and invariants like ##m_N##).

The neutron is at rest in the lab frame, so its speed ##v## in the zero-momentum frame is the relative speed between the two frames. In the zero-momentum frame (with ##c = 1##), zero total spatial momentum (with zero mass for the neutrino) gives
$$e_0 = m_N \gamma v = m_N \sinh w$$
with ##v = \tanh w##.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: avkr
  • #10
Ok, fine. But not the easiest way to express the relative velocity between the CM and lab frames with the information given in the problem (note that ##E_0## is not given, ##E_\nu## in the lab frame is the relevant quantity).

Edit: Also, there is no need to compute the relative speed of the CM frame and the lab frame.

Edit 2: I guess you can do it by computing ##E_0## at threshold and using the relative velocity between the frames to find ##E_\nu##, but this seems like the long way around when the computation using invariants is literally one line.

Edit 3: As expected, the two approaches give the same result. The big difference is the amount of algebra you have to do ...
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: avkr
  • #11
George Jones said:
The neutron is at rest in the lab frame, so its speed ##v## in the zero-momentum frame is the relative speed between the two frames. In the zero-momentum frame (with ##c = 1##), zero total spatial momentum (with zero mass for the neutrino) gives
$$e_0 = m_N \gamma v = m_N \sinh w$$
with ##v = \tanh w##.
Thanks for this!
Got my mistake.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
11K
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
4K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K