Title: CONSTITUENTS OF MATTER
1- CONSTITUENTS OF MATTER
- Hadrons (baryons and mesons)
- Leptons (muons, electrons and neutrinos)
- Exchange (messenger) particles (will discuss
later)
In the 60s Gell-Mann and Zweig working
independently showed that properties of Baryons
(charge, strangeness) could be established by
adopting arrangements with 3 constituent
particles, Gell Mann called quarks . A certain
combination of quarks inside a Baryon could
describe both its charge and strangeness.
e.g. a proton (belongs to the Baryon group) is
made up of three quarks 2 up quarks and one down
quark.
2QUARKS Proton u 2/3e , u 2/3e , d
-1/3e Proton (uud 1e) Neutron (udd 0e) If
was also found that some Baryons could have the
same quark combination. However Paulis Exclusion
Principle suggests that no two different
particles can have the same quantum properties.
This problem was overcome by introducing a quark
colour. Red , Blue and Green. There are now 6
quarks with either charge of 2/3 or 1/3 and
Baryon Number 1/3 and colour either red, blue or
green. Up (lightest) Charmed Down Bottom Strang
e Top (heaviest)
3Quarks were experimentally verified both at
Stanford and at CERN in Geneva. At SLAC, highly
energetic electrons were fired at protons and
there scattering angles suggested the existence
of 2 ups and one down quark.
4- Fundamental Particle summary
- Leptons
- electron, electron neutrino
- muon, muon neutrino
- tau, tau neutrino
- Quarks
- Up, down, strange, charmed, bottom, top
- Mesons (made up of quark / antiquark pairs.
Colour neutral) - Baryons (made up of 3 quarks. Also Colour
neutral)
5- FIRST GENERATION (stable particles)
- Up and Down quarks, electron and electron
neutrino - SECOND GENERATION (unstable)
- Charmed and Strange quarks, muon and muon
neutrino - THIRD GENERATION (more unstable)
- Bottom, Top quarks, Tau and Tau neutrino
6THE FUNDAMENTAL INTERACTIONS
- Gravity
- Strong
- Weak
- Electromagnetic
7- ELECTROMAGNETIC INTERACTION
- Occurs between charged particles.
- Classically explained by electric and magnetic
fields - Recent explanation (1940s) through QED. Quantum
Electrodynamics or Quantum Field Theory - Charged particles interact with each other via
the EXCHANGE of a messenger particle called a
PHOTON. The photon carries the energy and
momentum characterized classically by the
electric field. - The messenger particle is virtual, meaning that
it cannot be detected.
8Consider two electrons
Electrons repel because they are exchanging
virtual messenger particles (virtual photons).
Note It would appear that the creation of a
virtual photon from an electron would defy the
conservation of energy (extra energy in the form
h.f). Heisenbergs Uncertainty Principle claims
that energy can be created (DE) as long as it
destroyed before (Dt). i.e. Dt h / DE This
also accounts for why the strength of the e/m
interaction is long range and gets weaker with
distance. A greater distance separating charges
would take a longer time and therefore a smaller
DE exchanged.
9- WEAK INTERACTION
- A similar process is used to describe the weak
interaction. - The weak force is extremely short range (less
than the diameter of a proton) and comparatively
weak in comparison to the strong force. - The short range nature of the Weak Force force
suggests messenger particles with mass, unlike
the photon in the case of the e/m interaction. - The messenger particle for the weak force
initially the W and W- - Both of which have mass (energy) and therefore
limited in time and range as a messenger
particle. (Dt h / DE ) - A new theory was established in the 1970s
unifying both the e/m and the weak interaction
called the ELECTROWEAK interaction .There are now
4 messenger particles - W, W- , Zo, g (photon)
10Examples of Weak Interactions
ne
p
Beta Decay A neutron emits a W- and transforms
itself into a proton.
e-
W-
n
Proton-Neutrino Scattering The Zo is the
mediating particle between the proton and neutrino
ne
p
Zo
ne
p
11- STRONG INTERACTION
- Describes the interactions between quarks
- The messenger particle is the gluon
- The gluon has the ability to transform the colour
of a quark but not its flavour or type. - Quarks are held together inside hadrons by the
exchange of gluons.
Up (blue)
Down (red)
g
Quark Encounter
Up (red)
Down (blue)
12- Residual Strong Force
- The gluons that bind quarks together inside
hadrons are also responsible for the interaction
of hadrons themselves. - Protons and Protons are held together inside the
nucleus because of a residual messenger particle
called a pion
Strong force interactions do not result in a net
change in quark type or flavour. Eg. There are
still the same number of us and ds after the
interaction.
13Quark Confinement
- Quarks have never been isolated from eachother
- Confinement theory suggests that Quarks cannot
exist individually because the color force
increases as they are pulled apart. It becomes
more energetically favorable to convert the input
energy into the mass of new quark anti quark
pairs.
14- Weak Interaction Revised
- Weak interactions can alter the flavour (type) of
a quark without altering its colour
u
u
d
W-
A down quark from the neutron is converted into
an up quark through the emission of a W-
particle. The W- then produces an electron
u
d
d
15- GRAVITATION
- The graviton is the messenger particle for the
gravitational force. - Similar to the photon it has zero rest mass which
explains its long range capabilities. - It is by far the weakest of all interactions and
offers the greatest challenge to unify with the
other 3 fundamental interactions
16- Summary
- There are 18 types of fundamental particles
- 6 leptons
- 6 quarks (make up mesons and baryons)
- 6 messenger or mediator particles (determine
strength and range of interaction)