In physics and chemistry, a nucleon is either a proton or a neutron, considered in its role as a component of an atomic nucleus. The number of nucleons in a nucleus defines the atom's mass number.
Until the 1960s, nucleons were thought to be elementary particles, not made up of smaller parts. Now they are understood as composite particles, made of three bound together by the strong interaction. The interaction between two or more nucleons is called internucleon interaction or nuclear force, which is also ultimately caused by the strong interaction. (Before the discovery of quarks, the term "strong interaction" referred to just internucleon interactions.)
Nucleons sit at the boundary where particle physics and nuclear physics overlap. Particle physics, particularly quantum chromodynamics, provides the fundamental equations that describe the properties of quarks and of the strong interaction. These equations describe quantitatively how quarks can bind together into protons and neutrons (and all the other ). However, when multiple nucleons are assembled into an atomic nucleus (nuclide), these fundamental equations become too difficult to solve directly (see lattice QCD). Instead, nuclides are studied within nuclear physics, which studies nucleons and their interactions by approximations and models, such as the nuclear shell model. These models can successfully describe nuclide properties, as for example, whether or not a particular nuclide undergoes radioactive decay.
The proton and neutron are in a scheme of categories being at once , and . The proton carries a positive net electric charge, and the neutron carries a zero net charge; the proton's mass is only about 0.13% less than the neutron's. Thus, they can be viewed as two states of the same nucleon, and together form an isospin doublet (). In isospin space, neutrons can be transformed into protons and conversely by SU(2) symmetries. These nucleons are acted upon equally by the strong interaction, which is invariant under rotation in isospin space. According to Noether's theorem, isospin is conserved with respect to the strong interaction.
Both the proton and the neutron are composite particles, meaning that each is composed of smaller parts, namely three quarks each; although once thought to be so, neither is an elementary particle. A proton is composed of two and one down quark, while the neutron has one up quark and two down quarks. Quarks are held together by the strong force, or equivalently, by , which mediate the strong force at the quark level.
An up quark has electric charge e, and a down quark has charge e, so the summed electric charges of proton and neutron are + e and 0, respectively. Thus, the neutron has a charge of 0 (zero), and therefore is electrically neutral; indeed, the term "neutron" comes from the fact that a neutron is electrically neutral.
The masses of the proton and neutron are similar: for the proton it is (), while for the neutron it is (); the neutron is roughly 0.13% heavier. The similarity in mass can be explained roughly by the slight difference in masses of up quarks and down quarks composing the nucleons. However, a detailed description remains an unsolved problem in particle physics.
The spin of the nucleon is , which means that they are and, like , are subject to the Pauli exclusion principle: no more than one nucleon, e.g. in an atomic nucleus, may occupy the same quantum state.
The isospin and spin quantum numbers of the nucleon have two states each, resulting in four combinations in total. An alpha particle is composed of four nucleons occupying all four combinations, namely, it has two protons (having singlet state) and two neutrons (also having opposite spin), and its net nuclear spin is zero. In larger nuclei constituent nucleons, by Pauli exclusion, are compelled to have relative motion, which may also contribute to nuclear spin via the orbital quantum number. They spread out into analogous to known from chemistry.
Both the proton and neutron have , though the nucleon magnetic moments are anomalous and were unexpected when they were discovered in the 1930s. The proton's magnetic moment, symbol μ, is , whereas, if the proton were an elementary Dirac particle, it should have a magnetic moment of . Here the unit for the magnetic moments is the nuclear magneton, symbol μ, an atomic-scale unit of measure. The neutron's magnetic moment is μ = , whereas, since the neutron lacks an electric charge, it should have no magnetic moment. The value of the neutron's magnetic moment is negative because the direction of the moment is opposite to the neutron's spin. The nucleon magnetic moments arise from the quark substructure of the nucleons. The proton magnetic moment is exploited for NMR / MRI scanning.
Inside a nucleus, on the other hand, combined protons and neutrons (nucleons) can be stable or unstable depending on the nuclide, or nuclear species. Inside some nuclides, a neutron can turn into a proton (producing other particles) as described above; the reverse can happen inside other nuclides, where a proton turns into a neutron (producing other particles) through beta decay or electron capture. And inside still other nuclides, both protons and neutrons are stable and do not change form.
The masses of their antiparticles are assumed to be identical, and no experiments have refuted this to date. Current experiments show any relative difference between the masses of the proton and antiproton must be less than and the difference between the neutron and antineutron masses is on the order of .
The symbol format is given as N() , where is the particle's approximate mass, is the orbital angular momentum (in the spectroscopic notation) of the nucleon–meson pair, produced when it decays, and and are the particle's isospin and total angular momentum respectively. Since nucleons are defined as having isospin, the first number will always be 1, and the second number will always be odd. When discussing nucleon resonances, sometimes the N is omitted and the order is reversed, in the form (); for example, a proton can be denoted as "N(939) S11" or "S11 (939)".
The table below lists only the base resonance; each individual entry represents 4 : 2 nucleon resonances particles and their 2 antiparticles. Each resonance exists in a form with a positive electric charge (), with a quark composition of like the proton, and a neutral form, with a quark composition of like the neutron, as well as the corresponding antiparticles with antiquark compositions of and respectively. Since they contain no strange quark, charm quark, bottom quark, or top quark quarks, these particles do not possess strangeness, etc.
The table only lists the resonances with an isospin = . For resonances with isospin = , see the Delta baryon.
The article on isospin provides an explicit expression for the nucleon wave functions in terms of the quark flavour eigenstates.
Mathematically, the model vaguely resembles that of a radar cavity, with solutions to the Dirac equation standing in for solutions to the Maxwell equations, and the vanishing vector current boundary condition standing for the conducting metal walls of the radar cavity. If the radius of the bag is set to the radius of the nucleon, the bag model predicts a nucleon mass that is within 30% of the actual mass.
Although the basic bag model does not provide a pion-mediated interaction, it describes excellently the nucleon–nucleon forces through the 6 quark bag s-channel mechanism using the P-matrix.
Very curiously, the missing part of the topological winding number (the baryon number) of the hole punched into the skyrmion is exactly made up by the non-zero vacuum expectation value (or spectral asymmetry) of the quark fields inside the bag. , this remarkable trade-off between topology and the spectrum of an operator does not have any grounding or explanation in the mathematical theory of and their relationship to geometry.
Several other properties of the chiral bag are notable: It provides a better fit to the low-energy nucleon properties, to within 5–10%, and these are almost completely independent of the chiral-bag radius, as long as the radius is less than the nucleon radius. This independence of radius is referred to as the Cheshire Cat principle, after the fading of Lewis Carroll's Cheshire Cat to just its smile. It is expected that a first-principles solution of the equations of QCD will demonstrate a similar duality of quark–meson descriptions.
Stability
Antinucleons
Tables of detailed properties
Nucleons
+ Nucleons ( Isospin = ; strangeness = C = bottomness = 0) proton Particle listings – . / / + unobserved neutron Particle listings – . / / + antiproton / / + unobserved antineutron / / + ? The masses of the proton and neutron are known with far greater precision in daltons (Da) than in MeV/''c''2 due to the way in which these are defined. The conversion factor used is 1 Da = .
At least 1035 years. See [[proton decay]].
For [[free neutron]]s; in most common nuclei, neutrons are stable.
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Nucleon resonances
Quark model classification
Models
Skyrmion models
MIT bag model
Chiral bag model
See also
Footnotes
Particle listings
Further reading
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