EvonNoryoziki
EvonNoryoziki
56 / 3
14th Dec 2022
15th Dec 2022
All quarks decay at some point, and one good example of this is tritium (T), or Hydrogen-3 (H³), decaying into Helium-3 (He³).
physics atoms tritium science educational

Comments

  • EvonNoryoziki
    EvonNoryoziki
    9th February
    @Yim_The_Muon I believe the residual strong nuclear force keeps the nucleons together, so I don't know what you mean.
  • Yim_The_Muon
    Yim_The_Muon
    10th Jun 2023
    seems quite accurate, but can you add the virtual pions that are exchanged between the nucleons that glues them together?
  • jm211
    jm211
    19th Dec 2022
    Tritium is tritium, 2 neutrons 1 proton, symbol T (deuterium, 1 neutron 1 proton is D). There isn't really a tritium 1 or tritium 2. While there *may* be (possible for lots of nuclides, not looking up tritium rn),an excited state after a nuclear interaction, this would be denoted as T*, which would give a de-exitation gamma ray when returning to its ground state, T
  • EvonNoryoziki
    EvonNoryoziki
    19th Dec 2022
    The one with... 2 neutrons?
  • ShadBoi1
    ShadBoi1
    19th Dec 2022
    Is this Tritium 1 or 2?
  • docRoboRobert
    docRoboRobert
    17th Dec 2022
    Good work 1+
  • Chemisst
    Chemisst
    17th Dec 2022
    interesting, i wanna learn more about quantum mechanics
  • EvonNoryoziki
    EvonNoryoziki
    17th Dec 2022
    I kinda reversed the color scheme of the anti-neutrino, instead of white base+black text its black base+white text
  • MightyBlackRock
    MightyBlackRock
    16th Dec 2022
    shouldn't the anti neutrino have a bar above it to indicate that it is an anti neutrino? That should be the notation if I remeber correctly.
  • Invictus_prosaria
    Invictus_prosaria
    16th Dec 2022
    nice im tryna learn quantum physics