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Matter vs. Antimatter- particle destruction


MolecularMan14

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But wouldn't it have to be opposite in value to be anti, like spin up vs. spin down? Isn't that how protons and neutrons couple? I am really just looking at how electrons act, but they only are described to have spin because they have magnetic moment and that is described as a charge that is in motion. Or am I way off?

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But wouldn't it have to be opposite in value to be anti, like spin up vs. spin down? Isn't that how protons and neutrons couple? I am really just looking at how electrons act, but they only are described to have spin because they have magnetic moment and that is described as a charge that is in motion. Or am I way off?

 

Protons and neutrons couple by the strong nuclear force. There is an energy dependence of nucleons on spin, but that is at least in part a consequence of the Pauli exclusion principle (e.g. in Tritium, the neutrons would have to have anti-aligned spins to be in the same energy level)

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"spin isn't really the rotation of the particle just like quarks colors aren't red, blue, ect."

 

Well, we don't really know 100% sure that the particles don't rotate around. Actually, doesn't the spin actually suggest that they are rotating?

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"spin isn't really the rotation of the particle just like quarks colors aren't red' date=' blue, ect."

 

Well, we don't really know 100% sure that the particles don't rotate around. Actually, doesn't the spin actually suggest that they are rotating?[/quote']

 

No. I think the value for the angular momentum (Planck's constant) suggests superluminal speeds for some particles if there was physical rotation involved. Spin is just intrinsic angular momentum.

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