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Why don't Proton and Anti-proton collisions produce 3 Neutral Pions.


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Original Thread being hijacked, why isn't the color field conserved in QCD on P+ , P- collisions, which I brushed on in this topic of why it should be 3 neutral pions. that decay into 6 Photons.

 

The Color field has symmetry so why isn't this used at low energies, pp− → π0 π0 π Then π→ γ γ

QCD-colour-field.jpg

https://webific.ific.uv.es/web/en/content/lattice-qcd-numerical-approach-strong-force

 

Figure_34_05_01.jpg

https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-physics/chapter/33-5-quarks-is-that-all-there-is/

 

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1 hour ago, Strange said:

Both protons and pions are colour-neutral, so it is conserved, isn't it?

(p.s. thanks for providing links; very helpful.)

Well, my Issue is with (-/+) Charged pions being (DU , UD) The Proton is UUD while the Antiproton is UUD  when they bind it should not have more than three pairs of pions and they should all be neutral for everything to be conserved as neutral pions are (DD . UU) making   

                                                                                                                                                                                    Quarks (Flavor field)

                                                                                                                                                                                   UUD +  UUD ------> UU + UU + DD

                                                                                                                                                                                         Color Field

                                                                                                                                                                                    RBG + RBG -------> RR +BB +GG

                                                                                                                                                                                             Charge Field 

                                                                                                                                                                                                  pp− → π0 π0 π0

but for some reason Sensei said it was otherwise.

Edited by Vmedvil
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A proton or antiproton contains gluons and virtual quarks as well. The assumption that the quarks will automatically match up with their counterpart in the other particle is too simplistic. Additional quark-antiquark pairs can be created, by conversion of kinetic energy into mass energy.

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13 hours ago, swansont said:

A proton or antiproton contains gluons and virtual quarks as well. The assumption that the quarks will automatically match up with their counterpart in the other particle is too simplistic. Additional quark-antiquark pairs can be created, by conversion of kinetic energy into mass energy.

Well, this is based on the idea that they are at low energies where kinetic energy is near zero @ higher kinetic energy that would be true.

if  (P+,P-) + KE  ≥  (P+,P-) + UD + DU

Which doesn't explain why there is missing Green Color Charge symmetry in.

RBG + RBG + KE =  RR + BB + GG + RR + BB

Or in 

(P+,P-) + KE  ≥ DU + UD +UD + DU + DD

Which is missing  Green in sensei's model.

RBG + RBG  + KE = RR + BB + GG + RR + BB

 

All the ones Sensei posted is missing a Green Component being 5 and not 3,6,9,12,15 ..... N + 3)

Untitled.png.eeba27b6473e1da218519ba3a2a57b1c.png

 

The Strong nuclear force disagrees with that statement and tells you it will not bind this without a green component. 

Like (P+,P-) + KE --> π0 π0 + π-  + π+  + π-  + π would be fine 

(P+,P-) + KE ----->  DD + UU + DU + UD + DU + UD

Then  RBG + RBG  + KE = RR +BB + GG + RR + BB + GG

Which is not missing a Green component. 

Edited by Vmedvil
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Check table that I gave in other thread..

There can be created 3 pions as well.

[math]p^+ + p^- \rightarrow \pi^+ + \pi^- + \pi^0[/math] This branch has ratio 6.9%

[math]p^+ + p^- \rightarrow \pi^+ + \pi^- + \pi^+ + \pi^- + \pi^0[/math] This branch has ratio 19.6%

[math]p^+ + p^- \rightarrow \pi^+ + \pi^- + n \pi^0[/math] This branch has ratio 35.8%, n>1 (so at least two neutral pions)

 

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8 minutes ago, Sensei said:

Check table that I gave in other thread..

There can be created 3 pions as well.

p++pπ++π+π0 This branch has ratio 6.9%

p++pπ++π+π++π+π0 This branch has ratio 19.6%

p++pπ++π+nπ0 This branch has ratio 35.8%, n>1 (so at least two neutral pions)

 

The first is fine but the middle one is impossible via color charge symmetry, that last one may or may not be depends on whether you mean a n0 or π0 , if it is both then that is impossible.

Edited by Vmedvil
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3 minutes ago, Vmedvil said:

The first is fine but the middle one is impossible via color charge symmetry, that last one may or may not be depends on whether you mean a n0 or π0 , if it is both then that is impossible.

n is number of pions produced..

[math]p^+ + p^- \rightarrow \pi^+ + \pi^-[/math] This branch has ratio 0.37%

 

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14 minutes ago, Sensei said:

n is number of pions produced..

p++pπ++π This branch has ratio 0.37%

 

That is color charge impossible missing green again.

The most likely from looking at this form QCD is p++pππ− π0 

 (P+,P-) + KE --> π0 π0 + π-  + π+  + π-  + π would be fine 

Even pp− → π0 π0 π 

Even pp− ππ− n

But not anything that isn't (N + 3), (N+1) is missing Blue and Green, (N+2) is missing Green

Edited by Vmedvil
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27 minutes ago, Sensei said:

I dunno maybe the SNF symmetry is broken too in such exchanges, which is odd because Electric charge has conserved symmetry in them.

imageproxy.gif.fc8e6f9166f72aeec5e2236f3cf0c453.gif

 

QCD says all those non 3,6,9,12,15,.... N + 3 are impossible.

imageproxy.gif.31314742d59f8230ab67f5f6202f50ef.gif

 

Edited by Vmedvil
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8 hours ago, Vmedvil said:

Which doesn't explain why there is missing Green Color Charge symmetry in.

As long as the resulting combination is colour neutral (colour + anti-colour in the case of pions) it doesn't mater. You are also ignoring the role (and colour) of gluons and the fact that quarks can change colour. 

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5 minutes ago, Strange said:

As long as the resulting combination is colour neutral (colour + anti-colour in the case of pions) it doesn't mater. You are also ignoring the role (and colour) of gluons and the fact that quarks can change colour. 

It must not Strange for the Symmetry breaks, I realize that now. It must not be conserved on those breaks.

Edited by Vmedvil
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11 hours ago, Vmedvil said:

Well, this is based on the idea that they are at low energies where kinetic energy is near zero @ higher kinetic energy that would be true.

if  (P+,P-) + KE  ≥  (P+,P-) + UD + DU

Which doesn't explain why there is missing Green Color Charge symmetry in.

RBG + RBG + KE =  RR + BB + GG + RR + BB

 

You have a green and antigreen. How is it "missing"?

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3 hours ago, Strange said:

Gosh. CERN vs some random guy who posts nonsense on the Internet. Tough call.

After some thought, I think I will go with CERN.

It is really sad Strange that you do not understand the higher level physics I am speaking about, This is about QCD not my personal views. The Gauge of the Strong Nuclear force or Color Charge and its symmetry not my personal views.

 

https://www.physi.uni-heidelberg.de/~uwer/lectures/ParticlePhysics/Vorlesung/Lect-5a.pdf

http://www.t39.ph.tum.de/T39_files/Lectures_files/StrongInteraction2011/QCDkap2.pdf

Edited by Vmedvil
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A proton/antiproton annihilation is rather complex. The 3 quark/antiquark constituents only account for 1 % the total mass. Upon annihilation of the two particles all mass of both are released. They can form any number of other particles provided those particles has less than the total energy of the previous two. 

In point of detail the 3 quarks is simply the inbalance of the proton. There is literally thousands of quarks/gluons that comprise the proton

Mostly this will be pions and kaons however the number can theoretically be as high as 13 pions.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annihilation

 

Edited by Mordred
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6 hours ago, Mordred said:

A proton/antiproton annihilation is rather complex. The 3 quark/antiquark constituents only account for 1 % the total mass. Upon annihilation of the two particles all mass of both are released. They can form any number of other particles provided those particles has less than the total energy of the previous two. 

In point of detail the 3 quarks is simply the inbalance of the proton. There is literally thousands of quarks/gluons that comprise the proton

Mostly this will be pions and kaons however the number can theoretically be as high as 13 pions.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annihilation

 

I realize that part, that was not the issue, the question is does it hold to color symmetry producing them in sets of 3,6,9,12 and so on as sets of singlets from the two triplets.

Edited by Vmedvil
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