Duda Jarek Posted August 3, 2012 Posted August 3, 2012 Why neutron requires charge to become stable? Why against Coulomb attraction, nucleus require charge? How this charge is distributed inside nucleon (quarks)? Nucleus? Large nuclei are believed to behave like a liquid – are nucleons freely swimming there, or maybe they are somehow clustered, like in neutron-proton(-neutron) parts? I’m thinking of a topological soliton model of particles (concrete field structures for particles, with quantum numbers as topological charges), which doesn’t only restrict to mesons and baryons like the Skyrme model, but is an attempt to a more complete theory: which family of topological soltions would correspond to our whole particle menagerie. Extremely simple model seems to qualitatively fulfill these requirements: just real symmetric tensor field (like stress-energy tensor), but with Higgs-like potential: preferring some set of eigenvalues (different) – it can be imagined as ellipsoid field: eigenvectors are axes, eigenvalues are radii. Now e.g. simplest charges are hedgehog configurations of one of three axes and topology says there is some additional spin-like singularity required (hairy ball theorem) – we get three families of leptons etc. This is all of nothing approach: a single discrepancy and it goes to trash. Instead it seems to bring succeeding simple answers, like for above questions: Basic structures there are vacuum analogues of Abrikosov vortex: curve-like structure around which (“quantum phase”) two axes makes e.g. pi rotation for ½ spin. The axis along the curve can be chosen in three ways – call them electron, muon or taon spin curve correspondingly. Now baryons would be the simplest knotted structures – like in the figure, two spin curves need to be of different type. The loop around enforces some rotation of the main axis of the internal curve – if it would be 180degrees, this axis would create hedgehog-like configuration, what corresponds to +1 charge. Locally however, such fractional rotation/charge may appear, but finally the sum has to be integer. This picture explains why charge is required for baryon stability, that for this purpose proton can share its charge with neutron. Lengthening the charge requires energy, what makes two nucleons attracting in deuteron - by this strong short-ranged force. Here is fresh paper about this model: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/12405967/elfld.pdf To summarize, this simple model suggests that: - neutron has quadrupole moment (!), - nucleons cluster into “-n-p-“ or “-n-p-n-“ parts sharing charge, - pairs of such clusters can couple, especially of the same type (stability of even-even nuclei), - these clusters are parallel to the spin axis of nucleus(?). How would you answer to above questions? Do these suggestions sound reasonably? Can neutron have quadrupole moment? (Shouldn’t it have dipole or quadrupole moment in quark model?)
alpha2cen Posted August 4, 2012 Posted August 4, 2012 (edited) How to calculate that a proton particle is more stable than a neutron particle in the nucleus? Are there any models to calculate it? Edited August 4, 2012 by alpha2cen
Duda Jarek Posted August 4, 2012 Author Posted August 4, 2012 (edited) alpha2cen, while it is obvious from the picture above, it seems far nontrivial using QCD: I've just found 4 year old news about calculating nucleon mass on Blue Gene using lattice QCD: 936MeV for both +-22 or 25MeV: http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2008/nov/21/proton-and-neutron-masses-calculated-from-first-principles ps. please remove unnecessary quotes. Edited August 4, 2012 by Duda Jarek
alpha2cen Posted August 4, 2012 Posted August 4, 2012 (edited) alpha2cen, while it is obvious from the picture above, it seems far nontrivial using QCD: I've just found 4 year old news about calculating nucleon mass on Blue Gene using lattice QCD: 936MeV for both +-22 or 25MeV: http://physicsworld....irst-principles ps. please remove unnecessary quotes. Is the difference of the stability between neutron(n) and neutron-proton(n-p) too big? n-p is very very stable than n alone. How to explain this phenomena theoretically? Time dependent stability problem. Edited August 4, 2012 by alpha2cen
Duda Jarek Posted August 4, 2012 Author Posted August 4, 2012 alpha2cen, again the stability of deuteron is obvious in above picture (neutron requires charge for stability, so proton shares its own with neutron), but since they barely calculate single nucleon using lattice QCD, understanding deuteron stability there might be quite distant.
Duda Jarek Posted August 7, 2012 Author Posted August 7, 2012 (edited) More interesting nuclear physics questions (waiting for more ): - how short-range strong interaction explains halo nuclei ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halo_nucleus )? Like Lithium 11 (8.75ms halftime!), which accordingly to CERN article ( http://cerncourier.com/cws/article/cern/29077 ) comparing to Pb208 should look like that: - mass difference between tritium (3.0160492u) and helium 3 nucleus (3.0160293u) is only 18.6keV - how this decay can be beta decay if the difference between neutron and proton mass is 762keV? Edited August 7, 2012 by Duda Jarek
Enthalpy Posted August 7, 2012 Posted August 7, 2012 ...the difference between neutron and proton mass is 762keV And one electron.
Duda Jarek Posted August 8, 2012 Author Posted August 8, 2012 Thanks, yes indeed - I had this value in my mind and forgot that it included electron production ... The required positive charge inside neutron to make it stable occurs to be known: http://www.terra.es/personal/gsardin/news13.htm
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