Jacques Posted March 13, 2015 Posted March 13, 2015 Particle collider mostly use electron-electron or nucleus-nucleus for there experiment. There is a conservation law about the electric charge. Does these experiments are biased by using particle with the same electric charge ? For example if you collide proton with proton the result should be mostly positive charged particle. Just a thought...
Sensei Posted March 13, 2015 Posted March 13, 2015 (edited) There are experiments in which electrons are colliding with positrons. Can create heavy mesons at relativistic velocities. In other experiments protons are colliding with antiprotons with relativistic velocities. For example if you collide proton with proton the result should be mostly positive charged particle. At pretty small velocities (it's called "pion production threshold" if you want to search google): [math]p^+ + p^+ \rightarrow p^+ + p^+ + \pi^0[/math] neutral pion produced [math]p^+ + p^+ \rightarrow p^+ + n^0 + \pi^+[/math] neutron and charged pion produced Edited March 13, 2015 by Sensei
derek w Posted March 15, 2015 Posted March 15, 2015 It's not just proton + proton collision. It's proton + proton + kinetic energy.
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