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30'9 Conservation Laws

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Title: 30'9 Conservation Laws


1
30.9 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

2
Conservation 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

3
Conservation 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

4
Conservation 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

5
Which 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
7
30.10 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)

8
Strangeness
  • 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

9
Bubble ChamberExample
  • The dashed lines represent neutral particles
  • At the bottom,
  • ? - p ? ?0 K0
  • Then ?0 ? ? - p and
  • K0 ? ? µ - ?µ

10
30.11 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

11
An 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

12
An 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

13
30.12 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

14
Original 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

15
Original 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

16
Additions 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

17
More 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

18
Numbers of Particles
  • At the present, physicists believe the building
    blocks of matter are complete
  • Six quarks with their antiparticles
  • Six leptons with their antiparticles

19
30.13 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

20
Colored 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

21
Quark 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

22
Quark Structure of a Baryon
  • Quarks of different colors attract each other
  • The quark triplet forms a baryon
  • The baryon is colorless

23
Quantum 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

24
More 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

25
QCD 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

26
30.14 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

27
Weak 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

28
Electroweak 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

29
The 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

30
The Standard Model Chart
31
Mediator 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

32
Grand 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

33
30.15 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

34
A Brief History of the Universe
35
Cosmic 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

36
30.16 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

37
Some 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?
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