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Re: pion decay modes
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mkirkpatrick
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Smile Re: pion decay modes - 03-28-2007, 03:29 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by AntonioLao View Post
The three species of pions are p+, p-, and p°. Each of these is involved in at the least one mode of particle creation and annihilation. Neglecting their probabilities the following symmetrical reactions are all theoretically possible: (1) p- + p « n, (2) p+ + n « p, and (3) p° + e+ « p. The question to be asked is why the proton (p) appears in all reactions? The neutron (n) appears twice, while all species of pions and the positron only appear once?

It seems plain as a pikes staff,there is an arrow of reducing dimensions leading to one,
you have just drawn the line Antonio,proton3,neutron2,pion1,there you have it laid out
for you,3-2-1?Reduce all this to one power that is where the arrow points,when you arrive
at the primal one point,there is the POWER.



regards michael.


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