L3-classification of particles
L3-classification of particles
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Bosons and Fermions
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Leptons
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Leptons-The Electron and the Muon
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Neutrinos
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Hadrons
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Mesons
Mesons are bosons because of their integral spin.
The meson family is rather large and consists of many
variations, distinguished according to their composition of
quarks.
The pion (π-meson) is a meson that can either have charge
or be neutral.
In addition to the pion there is also a K meson, which exists
in both charged (K±) and neutral forms (K0). The K− meson
is the antiparticle of the K+, and their common decay mode
is into muons or pions.
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Baryons
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Particles and Lifetimes
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Fundamental and Composite Particles
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Conservation Laws and Symmetries
Physicists like to have clear rules or laws that
determine whether a certain process can occur or not.
It seems that everything occurs in nature that is not
forbidden.
Certain conservation laws are already familiar from our
study of classical physics. These include mass-energy,
charge, linear momentum, and angular momentum.
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Additional Conservation Laws
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Baryon Conservation
Why proton is stable?
For example, the process p e
does not violate the
conservation laws of charge, energy, linear momentum, or angular
momentum. However, it does not occur because it violates the
conservation of baryon number, i.e., B = 1 on the left and 0 on the right.
It is fortunate that this process "never" happens, since otherwise all
protons in the universe would gradually change into positrons! The
apparent stability of the proton, and the lack of many other processes
that might otherwise occur, are thus correctly described by introducing
the baryon number B together with a law of conservation of baryon
number.
Empirically this is part of a more general conservation law for
what is assigned a new quantum number called baryon number
that has the value B = +1 for baryons and −1 for antibaryons, and
0 for all other particles.
The conservation of baryon number requires the same total
baryon number before and after the reaction. 14
Lepton Conservation
The leptons are all fundamental particles, and there is a
conservation of leptons for each of the three kinds
(families) of leptons.
The number of leptons from each family is the same both
before and after a reaction.
We let Le = +1 for the electron and the electron neutrino;
Le = −1 for their antiparticles; and Le = 0 for all other
particles.
We assign the quantum numbers Lμ for the muon and its
neutrino and Lτ for the tau and its neutrino similarly.
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Strangeness
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The New Quantum Number: Strangeness
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Further…
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Hypercharge
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Color
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Three color charges were added
Red, green blue: r, g, b
And…three anti-colors
antired, antigreen and antiblue: r, g, b
Mesons have a color anticolor pair
Spin is either zero or 1 so can have ↑↑ or ↑↓
Baryons must have three different colors
Spin is ½ so have ↑↑↓ or ↓↓↑
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The Fundamental Forces in Nature
Strong Force
Range-Short range ~ 10-15 m (1 fermi)
Responsible for binding of quarks into neutrons and protons
Force mediator- Gluon
Electromagnetic Force
Strength-10-2 as strong as strong force
Range- infinite (1/r2 force law)
Responsible for Binding of atoms and molecules
Force mediator- Photon
Weak force
Strength- ~ 10-6 times as strong as the strong force
Responsible for beta decay, very short range ~10-18 m
Force mediator- W+, W- and Z0 bosons
Gravitational Force
Strength-10-43 times as strong as the strong force
Range –Infinite (Also 1/r2 force law)
Force mediator- Graviton (not yet discovered)
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Yukawa theory of the strong interaction and
the prediction of exchange quanta of strong
interaction
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Where g is a constant
solution
Natural Unit