Quantum mechanical transmutation of neutral particles
In particle physics, neutral particle oscillation is the transmutation of a particle with zero electric charge into another neutral particle due to a change of a non-zero internal quantum number, via an interaction that does not conserve that quantum number. Neutral particle oscillations were first investigated in 1954 by Murray Gell-mann and Abraham Pais.[1]
For example, a neutron cannot transmute into an antineutron as that would violate the conservation of baryon number. But in those hypothetical extensions of the Standard Model which include interactions that do not strictly conserve baryon number, neutron–antineutron oscillations are predicted to occur.[2][3][4]
Such oscillations can be classified into two types:
In those cases where the particles decay to some final product, then the system is not purely oscillatory, and an interference between oscillation and decay is observed.
^Kamyshkov, Y.A. (16 January 2002). Neutron → antineutron oscillations(PDF). Large Detectors for Proton Decay, Supernovae, and Atmospheric Neutrinos and Low Energy Neutrinos from High Intensity Beams. NNN 2002 Workshop. CERN, Switzerland. Retrieved 19 August 2010.