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Basic Ideas for Particle Properties Review of Modern Physics Spin and Angular Momentum There are three angular momenta. Orbital (“normal” angular momentum) Spin (“intrinsic” angular momentum) Total (orbital + spin) Orbital angular momentum: Lrp Lˆ z i x y i x y (Classical) (Quantum) Quantum mechanical properties Eigenvalue equations L2 lm 1 2 lm Lz lm m lm S 2 s , s z 34 2 s , s z J 2 JM j j 1 2 JM J z JM M JM Commutation relations L , L J , J iLk i j ijk i j ijk iJ k The eigenvalues are quantized. The appropriate unit for spin is . The only quantities are: 0, 1/2, 1, 3/2, 2, 5/2, … There are only 2J+1 possible values. Fermions and Bosons Example J Quantum statistics Many body wave function Fermions Nucleons, electron, quarks, etc. Half-integer Only one fermion per state (Pauli’s exclusion principle Antisymmetric Bosons Photon, W, Z, gluon, , etc. Integer Any number of identical particles capable of occupying the same state Symmetric The wave functions for two-body system 1,2 2,1 symmetric 1,2 2,1 anti - symmetric What are the practical wave functions? 1,2 A 1 2 B 2 1 symmetric 1,2 A 1 2 B 2 1 anti - symmetric Magnetic Dipole Moment (Magneton) Particles having spin can get the magnetic energy. The constant is called magnetic dipole moment, . The magnetic moment is dependent on the spin, mass and charge. The intrinsic constant in the is called magneton, 0=e/2mc. Mass Measurements 1 Mass spectroscopy This utilizes the centripetal and Lorentz forces to find out the particle mass. This is useful for nuclei and atoms, but it is impossible for most particles. The initial velocity of particle produced by reaction cannot be known exactly. Neutral charges are not deflected by a magnetic field. Mass Measurements 2 Scintillation counter This utilizes two scintillation counters to measure the velocity of a particle. Magnet selects particles with momentum. Two counters and oscilloscope measure the distance and time to give the velocity. The mass is the above momentum divided by the velocity. This method fails if the particle is neutral and the life time is very short. Mass Measurements 3 Invariant mass plot This utilizes the invariant mass of particles. Let’s suppose you measure the mass of neutral rho, 0 (the life time is 610-24 sec). It decays into + and -. + - E1 p1 E2 p2 E p 0 Mass Measurements 3 (cont.) Invariant mass for the pions 1 2 2 2 12 m12 2 E1 E2 p1 p 2 c c Energy & momentum for rho E E1 E2 , p p1 p 2 Invariant mass for the rho m 1 2 2 2 12 E p c 2 c Namely, m = m12. Mass Measurement 3 (cont.) The invariant mass plot is capable of measuring mass of very-short-life-time particles. Not only elementary particles, but it is used for nuclear physics region. (e.g. 8Be) Particles and the Related Interactions Forces & particle interactions Remember four forces. But those are pure form of interaction. In practice, the interactions between particles are mixed. Particles Type Weak Electromagnetic Hadronic Photon Gauge boson No Yes No W Z0 Gauge boson Yes Yes No Gluon Gauge boson No No Yes Neutrino Fermion Yes No No Electron Fermion Yes Yes No Muon Fermion Yes Yes No Mesons Bosons Yes Yes Yes Baryons Fermions Yes Yes Yes Quarks Fermions Yes Yes Yes Leptons Hadrons Decays Phenomenological point of view The number decaying in a time dt dN N t dt The number of particles present at time t N t N 0e t Decays (cont.) Write it in terms of the time-dependent wave function. But it doesn’t work! So introduce the imaginary part. Then, that makes sense. iEt t 0 exp E E0 12 i iE 0t t t 0 exp exp 2 Decay (cont.) However, what is the ? Is there any physical meaning? Now let’s transform it into the “energy space.” The wave function will be expressed in terms of energy instead of time. The modulus square of the function will be the probability density. It turns out that the is the uncertainty of energy at a decaying state. In other words, the is the full width at half maximum. Decays (cont.) Possibility of the decay properties and its classification… There is no simple connection between decay appears and other particle properties… Decay energies differ with hadronic, electromagnetic and weak forces. The output from interaction and the decay time are not related. (It involves a deeper rule.)