K.J.Healey said:
And would the potential be equal in magnitude yet opposite in sign?
If you were to approximate a yukawa potential for some baryon and had it "near" its antiparticle, what would the potential look like. The same for a baryon and another baryon but opposite?
I also thought about this question. I found a couple of references that might be useful:
[1] M.-L. Yan, S. Li, B. Wu, B.-Q. Ma, Baryonium with a phenomenological
skyrmion-type potential.
http://www.arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0405087v4
[2] J.M. Richard, Historical Survey of the Quasi-Nuclear Baryonium,
http://arxiv.org/abs/nucl-th/9906006v1
For example, if you change the sign of the nucleon-antinucleon potential shown in fig 1. of [1] you'll get something similar to the nucleon-nucleon potential as usually drawn in textbooks. Experimental studies of baryon-antibaryon potentials are difficult, because they tend to annihilate.
Another evidence for the opposite character of baryon-baryon and baryon-antibaryon potentials may come from the Sakata model, in which mesons are represented as nucleon-antinucleon bound states and baryons are composites of two nucleons and one antinucleon. This model was quite popular in the end of 1950's. Then it was replaced by the quark model and (almost) forgotten. In the paper
K. Matumoto, S. Sawada, Y. Sumi, M. Yonezawa, "Mass formula in the
Sakata model" Progr. Theor. Phys. Suppl. 19 (1961), 66
masses of (then known) mesons and baryons were fitted in the Sakata model, and the conclusion was that interaction energy nucleon-antinucleon has equal magnitude but opposite sign wrt the interaction energy nucleon-nucleon.
Eugene.