Title: Symmetries
1Symmetries
- By Dong Xue
- Physics Astronomy
- University of South Carolina
2Outline
- Symmetries
- Parity(P)
- Particle-antiparticle conjugation(C)
- Time reversal(T)
- Pion decay
- Quark flavours and baryonic number
- Leptonic flavours and lepton number
- Isospin
- Sum of two isospins
- G - parity
3Symmetries
- The conservation laws limit the possibility of an
initial state transforming into another state in
a quantum process (collision or decay) and are
expressed in terms of the quantum numbers. - Noether's theorem Symmetries
Conservation Laws - Symmetry
Conversation Law -
- Translation in time
Energy - Translation in space
Momentum - Rotation
Angular momentum - Gauge transformation Charge
-
4- Discrete additive quantum numbers.
- "Charges" of all fundermental interactions.
- Quark flavours, baryon number, lepton
flavours and - lapton numbers.
- Discrete multiplicative quantum numbers.
- Parity, particle - antiparticle conjugation
and time - reversal.
5Parity
- The parity operation is the inversion of the
three coordinate axes. - Definition of parity for different particles
- Proton positive
parity (P1) - Fermions
- Other fermions
relative to the proton - QFT requires fermions and antifermions to
have opposite parities while bosons and
antibosons to have the same parity. - At the quark level, all quarks have positive
parity and antiquarks have negative parity. - The parity of the photon is negative.
- How about the parity for strange hyperons?
6Parity of two-particle system
- The relationship between two bases
- The inversion of the axes in polar coordinates is
7Thus the parity of two-particle system is given
by
- Parity of two mesons with the same intrinsic
parity
- Parity of Fermion - antifermion pair
8The parity of the pion
- Consider the following process
- The initial angular momentum of the reaction
is J1. - The deuterium nucleus contains two nucleons,
of positive intrinsic parity, in an S wave. - Final state contains 2 identical fermions,
there is one choice for this state
9Particle-antiparticle conjugation
- The particle-antiparticle conjugation operator C
changes the particle into its antiparticle,
leaving space coordinates, time and spin
unchanged, but the sign of all the additive
quantum numbers is changed. - The charge conjugation of the photon
- For a state of n photons
10- The charge conjugation of the pions
- The charge conjugation of the meson
- The charge conjugation of the particle -
antiparticle pair - Meson and antimeson with zero spin
11- Meson and antimeson with non-zero spins
-
- The above relationship also holds for fermion
- antifermion system.
12Time reversal and CPT
- Time reversal operator inverts time leaving the
coordinates unchanged. - The invariance of the theories under the combined
operations P, C and T is called CPT. - A sequence of CPT is that the mass and lifetime
of a particle and its antiparticle must be
identical.
13Pion decay
- Charged pions decay predominantly (gt99) in the
channel - The second most probable channel is
- The ratio of decay width between the two channels
is
14E is the total energy, is the phase -
space volume, M is the matrix element.
15- The matrix element contains their wavefunctions
combined in a covariant quantity. - Following are the possible combinations
- Another three factors of matrix element
- the wavefunction of the pion in its
initial state. (PS)
16- the pion decay constant. (S)
- the four - momentum of the pion. (V)
-
- Construct the possibe matrix elements with the
above - elements
- Pseudoscalar term Axial vector
current term -
- Scalar term Vector
current term -
17- Start with the vector current term
- The wavefunction of the final - state leptons,
are solutions of the Dirac equation -
18This factor has the correct order of magnitude to
explain the smallness of
Also start with the axial vector current term
19Quark flavours and baryonic number
- Definition of the baryon number
- Within the limits of experiments, all known
interactions conserve the baryon number. - Consider the proton decay
- The present limit is almost years.
20- Baryon number of the quarks is B 1/3
- Definition of quantum numbers of quark flavours
21Leptonic flavours and lepton number
- The lepton number is defined as
- Similarly, the lepton flavor numbers are given as
22Isospin
- Symmetry property of nuclear forces
- two nuclear states with the same spin and
the same - parity differing by the exchange of a proton
with a - neutron have approximately the same energy.
- Proton and neutron are considered two states of
the nucleon, which has isospin I 1/2. - For isospin I , the dimensionality 2I 1 is the
number of different particles or nuclear levels,
they differ by the third component , the
group is called an isotopic multiplet.
23Next introduce the flavour hypercharge
The third component of the isospin is defined by
Gell - Mann and Nishijima relationship
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26The sum of two isospins
- The rules for isospin composition are the same as
for angular momentum. - Consider a system of two particles, one of
isospin 1 and one of isospin 1/2. The total
isospin can be 1/2 or 3/2. - This statement can be written as
- Alternative is to label the representation with
the number of its states (2I1) instead of with
its isospin (I). - Thus the above relationship becomes
- Oberserve the following reaction
27- Consider two bases
- The isospins and their third components of each
particle are defined, which are given as - The total isospin (I) and its third component (
) are defined, - The relationship between the two bases is
- Here the quantities
are the Clebsch - Gordan coefficients.
28G-Parity
- G-parity is convenient when dealing with non -
strange states with zero baryonic number. - Start with the , which is an eigenstate of
the charge conjugation C. - G is defined as C followed by a rotation
around the y - axis in isotopic space, namely
29- Consider the charge states
- Then apply C and the rotation to these
expressions
30Thank you !