University Physics Volume 3
17th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168185
Author: William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
Publisher: OpenStax
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Textbook Question
Chapter 11, Problem 5CQ
What are six particle conservation laws? Briefly describe them.
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Chapter 11 Solutions
University Physics Volume 3
Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding What is the baryon number...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding What is the lepton number...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding What is the strangeness...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding What is the baryon number...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding How much energy does an...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding A charged particle of a...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding Why is a symmetric...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding The light of a galaxy...Ch. 11 - Check Your Understanding Compare the abundance of...Ch. 11 - What are the four fundamental forces? Briefly...
Ch. 11 - Distinguish fermions and bosons using the concepts...Ch. 11 - List the quark and lepton families.Ch. 11 - Distinguish between elementary particles...Ch. 11 - What are six particle conservation laws? Briefly...Ch. 11 - In general, how do we determine if a particle...Ch. 11 - Why might the detection of panicle interaction...Ch. 11 - What are the six known quarks? Summarize their...Ch. 11 - What is the general quark composition of a baryon?...Ch. 11 - What evidence exists for the existence of quarks?Ch. 11 - Why do baryons with the same quark composition...Ch. 11 - Briefly compare the Van de Graaff accelerator,...Ch. 11 - Describe the basic components and function of...Ch. 11 - What are the subdetectors of the Compact Muon...Ch. 11 - What is the advantage of a colliding-beam...Ch. 11 - An electron appeals in the muon detectors of the...Ch. 11 - What is the Standard Model? Express your answer in...Ch. 11 - Draw a Feynman diagram to represents annihilation...Ch. 11 - What is the motivation behind grand unification...Ch. 11 - If a theory is developed that unifies all four...Ch. 11 - If the Higgs boson is discovered and found to have...Ch. 11 - One of the common decay modes of the is 0 is 0+p ....Ch. 11 - What is meant by cosmological expansion? Express...Ch. 11 - Describe the balloon analogy for cosmological...Ch. 11 - Distances to local galaxies are determined by...Ch. 11 - What is meant by a “cosmological model of the...Ch. 11 - Describe two pieces of evidence that support the...Ch. 11 - In what sense are we, as Newton once said, "a boy...Ch. 11 - If some unknown cause of redshift—such as light...Ch. 11 - In the past, many scientists believed the universe...Ch. 11 - How much energy is released when ail electron and...Ch. 11 - If 1.01030MeV of energy is released in the...Ch. 11 - When both an electron and a positron are at rest,...Ch. 11 - What is the total kinetic energy carried away by...Ch. 11 - Which of the following decays cannot occur because...Ch. 11 - Which of the following reactions cannot because...Ch. 11 - Identify one possible decay for each of the...Ch. 11 - Each of die following strong nuclear reactions is...Ch. 11 - Based on quark composition of a proton, show that...Ch. 11 - Based on the quark composition of a neutron, show...Ch. 11 - Argue that the quark composition given in Table...Ch. 11 - Mesons are fanned from the following combinations...Ch. 11 - Why can’t either set of quarks shown below form...Ch. 11 - Experimental results indicate an isolate particle...Ch. 11 - Express the decays np+e+vand pn+e++vin terms of...Ch. 11 - A charged particle in a 2.0-T magnetic field is...Ch. 11 - A proton track passes through a magnetic field...Ch. 11 - Derive the equation p = 0.3Br using the concepts...Ch. 11 - Assume that beam energy of an electron-positron...Ch. 11 - At full energy, protons in the 2.00-km-diameter...Ch. 11 - Suppose a Wcreated in a particle detector lives...Ch. 11 - What length track does a +traveling at 0.100c...Ch. 11 - The 3.20-km-lfmg SLAC produces a beam of 50.0-GcV...Ch. 11 - Using the Heisenberg uncertainly principle,...Ch. 11 - Use the Heisenberg uncertainly principle to...Ch. 11 - (a) The following decay is mediated by the...Ch. 11 - Assuming conservation of momentum, what is the...Ch. 11 - What is the wavelength of a 50-GeV electron, which...Ch. 11 - The primary decay mode for the negative pion is +v...Ch. 11 - Suppose you are designing a proton decay...Ch. 11 - If the speed of a distant galaxy is 0.99c, what is...Ch. 11 - The distance of a galaxy from our solar system is...Ch. 11 - If a galaxy is 153 Mpc away flora us, how fast do...Ch. 11 - On average, how far away are galaxies that are...Ch. 11 - Our solar system orbits the center of the Milky...Ch. 11 - (a) Wliat is the approximate velocity relative to...Ch. 11 - (a) Calculate the approximate age of the universe...Ch. 11 - The Andromeda Galaxy is the closest large galaxy...Ch. 11 - Show that the velocity of a star orbiting its...Ch. 11 - Experimental results suggest that a muon decays to...Ch. 11 - Each of the following reactions is missing a...Ch. 11 - Because of energy loss due to synchrotron...Ch. 11 - A proton and an antiproton collide head-on, with...Ch. 11 - When an electron and positron collide at the SLAC...Ch. 11 - The core of a star collapses during a supernova,...Ch. 11 - Using the solution from the previous problem, find...Ch. 11 - (a) What Hubble constant corresponds to an...Ch. 11 - Electrons and positions are collided in a circular...Ch. 11 - The intensity of cosmic ray radiation decreases...Ch. 11 - (a) Calculate the relativistic quantity...Ch. 11 - Plans for ail accelerator that produces a...Ch. 11 - In supei novae, neutrinos are produced in huge...Ch. 11 - Assuming a circular orbit for the Sun about the...Ch. 11 - (a) What is the approximate force of gravity on a...Ch. 11 - (a) A panicle and its antiparticle are at rest...Ch. 11 - The peak intensity of the CMBR occurs at a...Ch. 11 - (a) Use the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to...
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- Explain with reasons and showing working whether the following reactions and decays would be possible. For those that are possible state with reasons which of the fundamental forces is responsible. et +er+ + V₂ + µ¯¯ + ¯ μ B+ →+K+ ++ + ¯ p+nt →Σ+ + K+ [Quark structures are Bub, : cc, K+: us, E+ : uus] Write down a reaction that would provide a clean method of measuring the struc- ture of the neutron. Explain your answer. Sketch on separate graphs the d and d quark distributions of the neutron as a function of x, the fraction of the neutron's momentum carried by the struck quark. Include in each graph a comparison with the d and d quark distributions of the proton.arrow_forwardMore than 60 years ago, future Nobel laureate Sheldon Glashow predicted that if an antineutrino — the antimatter answer to the nearly massless neutrino — collided with an electron, it could produce a cascade of other particles. The Glashow resonance phenomenon is hard to detect, in large part because the antineutrino needs about 1,000 times more energy than what's produced in the most powerful colliders on Earth. 1. What is the threshold antineutrino energy for the Glashow resonance in peta electronvolts (PeV)? 2. What is this threshold energy in units of joules? 3.Now consider a baseball with the same kinetic energy as that of the Glashow resonance. What speed in m/s would correspond to this energy? 4.What is this rate in units of inches/second?arrow_forwardIs it possible that some parts of the universe contain antimatter whose atoms have nuclei made of antiprotons and antineutrons, surrounded by positrons? How could we detect this condition without actually going there? Can we detect these antiatoms by identifying the light they emit as composed of antiphotons? Explain. What problems might arise if we actually did go there?arrow_forward
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