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LECTURE 14 HADRONS PHY492 Nuclear and Elementary Particle Physics Last Two Lectures: Fermions Leptons : elementary particles in the standard model All have spin = 1/2 February 10, 2014 Quarks : strongly interacting particles fundamental constituents of matter, but cannot be detected directly All have spin = 1/2 14 PHY492, Lecture 2 Hadrons February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 3 Forces Electromagnetic interaction : Coulomb potential 1 qQ 4πε0 r Weak interaction : unified theory by A.Salam, S.Weinberg, S.Glashow → Electroweak interaction Strong interaction : Nuclear force (Hamada-Johnston pot.) attractive hard core QCD Lagrangian February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 4 Flavor Independence Flavor Independence : The strong force between two quarks at a fixed distance apart is independent of which quark flavors u, d, s, c, b, t are involved. ( after taking into account quark mass differences ) s equals to d s but differs from u s u As a consequence of flavor independence. hadrons in families have approximately the same masses ( charge multiplets ). Example : February 10, 2014 π+ π0 π- 139.57 (MeV/c2) 139.49 (MeV/c2) n p 938.27 (MeV/c2) 939.56 (MeV/c2) 139.57 (MeV/c2) Small correction: electromagnetic force PHY492, Lecture 14 5 Charge independence of nuclear forces Flavor independence of the strong forces between u and d quarks leads directly the charge independence of nuclear forces. charge symmetry p equals to p n n Structure of Structure of AZN is similar to 11 5 B6 ANZ 11C5 6 (mirror nuclei) February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 6 Isospin Symmetry Isospin symmetry : the symmetry between u and d quarks (1) proton and neutron are viewed as the “up” and “down” I3 components of a single particle, +1/2 the nucleon N with an isospin quantum number I = 1/2 p I3 = +1/2 for proton I3 = - 1/2 for neutron (2) Hadronic resonance state Δ(1232) with I = 3/2 : Δ++, Δ+, Δ0, (uuu) (uud) (udd) I3 +3/2 Δ- (ddd) n -1/2 +1/2 -1/2 -3/2 February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 7 Quark Model Spectroscopy The observed hadrons are of three types; baryons ( qqq ), antibaryons ( qqq ), and mesons ( qq ). Baryon number baryons antibaryons mesons qqq qqq qq 1 -1 0 p = uud, n = udd π+ = ud, π0 = uu,dd, π- = du Kaons, with unknown quantum number ( strangeness ), were discovered unexpectedly. With the advent of the quark model in 1964, it was realized that strangeness S was, apart from its sign, the strangeness quark number, S = - Ns S = 1 : K+ (494) = us, K0(498) = ds S = -1 : K- = us , K0 = ds, Λ = uds Similarly, charm quantum number C = Nc = N(c ) – N(c ) ≈ = -Nb = - [N(b) – N(b)] bottom quantum number B February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 8 Supermultiplet The meson states of the qq form with its spin and parity can be described as the supermultiplet as shown below. The hypercharge Y is defined as ≈ Y=B+S+C+B+T Jπ = 0- Jπ = 1/2+ Isospin February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 9 Lifetime Lifetime of hadrons has a close relation to the interaction involved in the decay. interaction K*+(us) → K0(ds) + π+(ud) π0(uu,dd) → γ + γ strong interaction 1.3×10-23 s electromagnetic interaction 0.8×10-16 s π+(ud) → µ+ + νµ weak interaction n(udd) → p(uud) + e- + νe weak interaction February 10, 2014 lifetime PHY492, Lecture 14 2.6×10-8 s 103 s 10 Magnetic moments Magnetic moments of hadrons can be explained by the sums of contributions from the quark magnetic moments. 2Mp Mp Mp µu = 3mu µN , µd = 3md µN , µs = 3m µN s Nuclear magneton u d s Λ = uds µΛ = µs S = 0 proton (1/2) = uud u u d S = 1 S = 1/2 | proton > = - Sz µN = eh/2Mp Sz OR 2/3 |d;1/2,-1/2> |uu;1,1> 1/3 |d;1/2, 1/2> |uu;1,0> µproton = 4/3 µu – 1/3 µd = Mp/mu(d) · µN February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 11 Feasibility of reactions Check the following conservation laws; - Q (charge) must be conserved - Lepton numbers Leµτ must be conserved - Quark number Nq (Baryon number B) must be conserved - Each Nf (f=u,d,s,c,b,t) must be conserved for strong, electromagnetic interactions - Mass, energy, momentum conservation. (a) Σ0 → Λ + γ (b) p + p → Σ+ + n + Κ0 + π+ (c) Ξ- → Λ + π- (d) Δ+ → p + π0 February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 12 Hadron Masses Ignore what is written in Martin on hadron masses. • The idea of “constituent” or “effective” or “bound” mass is a hand-waving attempt to simplify what can only be explained quantitatively with relativistic quantum field theory. • I don’t think there’s much point in inventing a confusing treatment when it’s easier to understand the true concepts at play. February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 13 Hadron Masses Let’s start with the idea of gluons (more on this later in Ch 5) February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 14 Hadron Masses Let’s start with the idea of gluons (more on this later in Ch 5) February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 15 Color Confinement Let’s start with the idea of gluons (more on this later in Ch 5) February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 16 Color Confinement Let’s start with the idea of gluons (more on this later in Ch 5) February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 17 Hadron Masses Let’s start with the idea of gluons (more on this later in Ch 5) February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 18 Hadron Masses Quarks are bound by gluons, but must obey sensible quantum orbital states. February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 19 Hadron Masses The energy stored by the gluons goes *UP* as the average radial separation of the quarks increases. February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 20 Hadron Masses The energy stored by the gluons goes *UP* as the average radial separation of the quarks increases. February 10, 2014 PHY492, Lecture 14 21