Title: 30'9 Conservation Laws
130.9 Conservation Laws
- A number of conservation laws are important in
the study of elementary particles - Two new ones are
- Conservation of Baryon Number
- Conservation of Lepton Number
2Conservation of Baryon Number
- Whenever a baryon is created in a reaction or a
decay, an antibaryon is also created - B is the Baryon Number
- B 1 for baryons
- B -1 for antibaryons
- B 0 for all other particles
- The sum of the baryon numbers before a reaction
or a decay must equal the sum of baryon numbers
after the process
3Conservation of Lepton Number
- There are three conservation laws, one for each
variety of lepton - Law of Conservation of Electron-Lepton Number
states that the sum of electron-lepton numbers
before a reaction or a decay must equal the sum
of the electron-lepton number after the process
4Conservation of Lepton Number, cont.
- Assigning electron-lepton numbers
- Le 1 for the electron and the electron neutrino
- Le -1 for the positron and the electron
antineutrino - Le 0 for all other particles
- Similarly, when a process involves muons,
muon-lepton number must be conserved and when a
process involves tau particles, tau-lepton
numbers must be conserved
5Which of the following reactions cannot occur?
QUICK QUIZ 30.2
6(a). This reaction fails to conserve charge and
cannot occur.
QUICK QUIZ 30.2 ANSWER
730.10 Strange Particles
- Some particles discovered in the 1950s were
found to exhibit unusual properties in their
production and decay and were given the name
strange particles - Peculiar features include
- Always produced in pairs
- Although produced by the strong interaction, they
do not decay into particles that interact via the
strong interaction, but instead into particles
that interact via weak interactions - They decay much more slowly (10-10-10-8 s) than
particles decaying via strong interactions (10-23
s)
8Strangeness
- To explain these unusual properties, a new law,
the conservation of strangeness was introduced - Also needed a new quantum number, S
- The Law of Conservation of Strangeness states
that the sum of strangeness numbers before a
reaction or a decay must equal the sum of the
strangeness numbers after the process - Strong and electromagnetic interactions obey the
law of conservation of strangeness, but the weak
interaction does not
9Bubble ChamberExample
- The dashed lines represent neutral particles
- At the bottom,
- ? - p ? ?0 K0
- Then ?0 ? ? - p and
- K0 ? ? µ - ?µ
1030.11 The Eightfold Way
- Many classification schemes have been proposed to
group particles into families - These schemes are based on spin, baryon number,
strangeness, etc. - The eightfold way is a symmetric pattern proposed
by Gell-Mann and Neeman - There are many symmetrical patterns that can be
developed - The patterns of the eightfold way have much in
common with the periodic table - Including predicting missing particles
11An Eightfold Way for Baryons
- A hexagonal pattern for the eight spin ½ baryons
- Strangeness vs. charge is plotted on a sloping
coordinate system - Six of the baryons form a hexagon with the other
two particles at its center
12An Eightfold Way for Mesons
- The mesons with spins of 0 can be plotted
- Strangeness vs. charge on a sloping coordinate
system is plotted - A hexagonal pattern emerges
- The particles and their antiparticles are on
opposite sides on the perimeter of the hexagon - The remaining three mesons are at the center
1330.12 Quarks
- Hadrons are complex particles with size and
structure - Hadrons decay into other hadrons
- There are many different hadrons
- Quarks are proposed as the elementary particles
that constitute the hadrons - Originally proposed independently by Gell-Mann
and Zweig
14Original Quark Model
- Three types
- u up
- d down
- s originally sideways, now strange
- Associated with each quark is an antiquark
- The antiquark has opposite charge, baryon number
and strangeness - Quarks have fractional electrical charges
- 1/3 e and 2/3 e
- All ordinary matter consists of just u and d
quarks
15Original Quark Model Rules
- All the hadrons at the time of the original
proposal were explained by three rules - Mesons consist of one quark and one antiquark
- This gives them a baryon number of 0
- Baryons consist of three quarks
- Antibaryons consist of three antiquarks
16Additions to the Original Quark Model Charm
- Another quark was needed to account for some
discrepancies between predictions of the model
and experimental results - Charm would be conserved in strong and
electromagnetic interactions, but not in weak
interactions - In 1974, a new meson, the J/? was discovered that
was shown to be a charm quark and charm antiquark
pair
17More Additions Top and Bottom
- Discovery led to the need for a more elaborate
quark model - This need led to the proposal of two new quarks
- t top (or truth)
- b bottom (or beauty)
- Added quantum numbers of topness and bottomness
- Verification
- b quark was found in a ? meson in 1977
- t quark was found in 1995 at Fermilab
18Numbers of Particles
- At the present, physicists believe the building
blocks of matter are complete - Six quarks with their antiparticles
- Six leptons with their antiparticles
1930.13 Colored Quarks
- Isolated quarks
- Physicist now believe that quarks are permanently
confined inside ordinary particles - No isolated quarks have been observed
experimentally - The force between quarks is called the color
force - Color force increases with increasing distance
- This prevents the quarks from becoming isolated
particles
20Colored Quarks
- Color charge occurs in red, blue, or green
- Antiquarks have colors of antired, antiblue, or
antigreen - Color obeys the Exclusion Principle
- A combination of quarks of each color produces
white (or colorless) - Baryons and mesons are always colorless
21Quark Structure of a Meson
- A red quark is attracted to an antired quark
- The quark antiquark pair forms a meson
- The resulting meson is colorless
22Quark Structure of a Baryon
- Quarks of different colors attract each other
- The quark triplet forms a baryon
- The baryon is colorless
23Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD)
- QCD gave a new theory of how quarks interact with
each other by means of color charge - The strong force between quarks is often called
the color force - The strong force between quarks is carried by
gluons - Gluons are massless particles
- There are 8 gluons, all with color charge
- When a quark emits or absorbs a gluon, its color
changes
24More About Color Charge
- Like colors repel and unlike colors attract
- Different colors attract, but not as strongly as
a color and its opposite colors of quark and
antiquark - The color force between color-neutral hadrons
(like a proton and a neutron) is negligible at
large separations - The strong color force between the constituent
quarks does not exactly cancel at small
separations - This residual strong force is the nuclear force
that binds the protons and neutrons to form nuclei
25QCD Explanation of a Neutron-Proton Interaction
- Each quark within the proton and neutron is
continually emitting and absorbing virtual gluons - Also creating and annihilating virtual
quark-antiquark pairs - When close enough, these virtual gluons and
quarks can be exchanged, producing the strong
force
2630.14 Weak Interaction
- The weak interaction is an extremely short-ranged
force (10-18 m) - This short range implies the mediating particles
are very massive - The weak interaction is responsible for the decay
of c, s, b, and t quarks into lighter, more
stable u and d quarks - Also responsible for the decay of ? and ? leptons
into electrons
27Weak Interaction, cont.
- The weak interaction is very important because it
governs the stability of the basic matter
particles - The weak interaction is not symmetrical
- Not symmetrical under mirror reflection
- Not symmetrical under charge exchange
28Electroweak Theory
- The electroweak theory unifies electromagnetic
and weak interactions - The theory postulates that the weak and
electromagnetic interactions have the same
strength at very high particle energies - Viewed as two different manifestations of a
single unifying electroweak interaction
29The Standard Model
- Combination of the electroweak theory and QCD
forms the standard model - Essential ingredients of the standard model
- The strong force, mediated by gluons, holds the
quarks together to form composite particles - Leptons participate only in electromagnetic and
weak interactions - The electromagnetic force is mediated by photons
- The weak force is mediated by W and Z bosons
30The Standard Model Chart
31Mediator Masses
- Why does the photon have no mass while the W and
Z bosons do have mass? - Not answered by the Standard Model
- The difference in behavior between low and high
energies is called symmetry breaking - The Higgs boson has been proposed to account for
the masses - Large colliders are necessary to achieve the
energy needed to find the Higgs boson
32Grand Unification Theory (GUT)
- Builds on the success of the electroweak theory
- Attempted to combine electroweak and strong
interactions (QCD) - One version considers leptons and quarks as
members of the same family - They are able to change into each other by
exchanging an appropriate particle
3330.15 The Big Bang
- This theory of cosmology states that during the
first few minutes after the creation of the
universe all four interactions were unified - All matter was contained in a quark soup
- As time increased and temperature decreased, the
forces broke apart - Starting as a radiation dominated universe, as
the universe cooled it changed to a matter
dominated universe
34A Brief History of the Universe
35Cosmic Background Radiation (CBR)
- CBR is represents the cosmic glow left over
from the Big Bang - The radiation had equal strengths in all
directions - The curve fits a blackbody at 3K
- There are small irregularities that allowed for
the formation of galaxies and other objects
3630.16 Connection Between Particle Physics and
Cosmology
- Observations of events that occur when two
particles collide in an accelerator are essential
to understanding the early moments of cosmic
history - There are many common goals between the two fields
37Some Questions
- Why so little antimatter in the Universe?
- Do neutrinos have mass?
- Is it possible to unify electroweak and strong
forces? - Why do quark and leptons form similar but
distinct families? - Why do quarks carry fractional charge?
- What determines the masses of fundamental
particles? - Do leptons and quarks have a substructure?