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Threshold energy

In particle physics, the threshold energy for production of a particle is the minimum kinetic energy a pair of traveling particles must have when they collide. The threshold energy is always greater than or equal to the rest energy of the desired particle. In most cases, since momentum is also conserved, the threshold energy is significantly greater than the rest energy of the desired particle - and thus there will still be considerable kinetic energy in the final particles. In particle physics, the threshold energy for production of a particle is the minimum kinetic energy a pair of traveling particles must have when they collide. The threshold energy is always greater than or equal to the rest energy of the desired particle. In most cases, since momentum is also conserved, the threshold energy is significantly greater than the rest energy of the desired particle - and thus there will still be considerable kinetic energy in the final particles. Consider the collision of a mobile proton with a stationary proton so that a π 0 {displaystyle {pi }^{0}} meson is produced: p + + p + → p + + p + + π 0 {displaystyle p^{+}+p^{+} o p^{+}+p^{+}+pi ^{0}}

[ "Molecular physics", "Quantum mechanics", "Classical mechanics", "Analytical chemistry", "Atomic physics" ]
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