How does positron decay work?

1 Answer
Mar 5, 2017

Positron decay is when a proton decays into a neutron, a positron and an electron neutrino.

Explanation:

p -> n + beta^+ + v_e

In nuclear reactions, some fundamental quantities are conserved. One of these is charge.

Before the reaction, the net charge is the charge of the proton which is +1. After the reaction, the neutron and neutrino have no charge, and the positron has a charge of +1, so the charge is conserved.

Another quantity that is conserved is baryon number. Baryons (protons, neutrons) have a baryon number of +1, because they are, unsurprisingly, baryons - particles consisting of three quarks.

Before the reaction, the baryon number of the proton is +1. Afterwards, the baryon number of the neutron is +1, and the electron and electron neutrino are leptons so have no baryon number. Therefore, the baryon number is conserved.

The final quantity conserved is lepton number. The proton isn't a lepton, so has no lepton number. Neither does the neutron. The positron is an antimatter electron so has a -1 lepton number, and the electron neutrino has a +1 lepton number, which cancel to 0. Therefore, the lepton number is also conserved.

For these reasons a proton can decay into a neutron and an electron neutrino.

The overall mass of the nucleus doesn't change, though the atomic number decreases by one, because a proton is lost to become a chargeless neutron.