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I've read that Pauli first proposed the neutrino to explain energy and momentum conservation in this equation:

$$n \to p^+ + e^- + \overline\nu_e$$

But it is also written differently here:

$$\nu_e + n \to p^+ + e^-$$

Is there a difference between the two equations? If not, does it mean we ascribe a negative energy to one of $\overline\nu_e$ or $\nu_e$?

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Moving a particle from one side of a reaction to the other while flipping to it matterness keeps all the necessary particle quantum numbers in balance, but it changes the kinematics.

For instance, in your example the top equation necessarily has a broad energy spectrum (one of the main reasons for Pauli's proposal), which the lower one can have a discrete spectrum (must have a discrete spectrum if the initial particles are prepared in well defined momentum states).

Nor can you even guarantee that this kind of reversal preserve the possibility of the reaction. For instance $$ p^- \to \bar{n} + e^- + \bar{\nu}_e $$ has the same isospin and lepton quantum numbers quantum numbers as your top reaction but it is strictly forbidden by energy considerations (the final state is heavier than the initial state).

Also things like $$ \bar{p} + n \to e^- + \bar{\nu}_e $$ are allowed by quantum numbers but are vanishingly unlikely in practice. It would take some cleverness just to exhibit a Feynmann diagram at the quark-gluon-lepton level that totals up to the process exhibited here are the hadron-lepton level.

The neutrino moving case that you exhibit is unusually clear-cut because it involves a fundamental particle and a very small fraction of the mass in the system.

  • Thanks! So which neutrino equation is correct? And can you provide references for your statements about continuous/discrete energy spectra? – Metamorphic Mar 19 '19 at 03:13
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    Why do you think that they can't both be correct? The top equation is the correct expression for neutron beta decay. The bottom expression is a correct expression for quasi-elastic, charged-current scattering of a neutrino on a neutron. I'm not going to bother digging up scholarly references for something treated in dozens of textbooks, but here are a couple of on-site links to get you started: https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/21814/520, https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/123823/520. – dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten Mar 19 '19 at 03:23