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Quarks: Is That All There Is? |
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Quarks have been mentioned at various points in this text as fundamental building blocks and members of the exclusive club of truly elementary particles. Note that an elementary or fundamental particle has no substructure (it is not made of other particles) and has no finite size other than its wavelength. This does not mean that fundamental particles are stable—some decay, while others do not. Keep in mind that all leptons seem to be fundamental, whereas no hadrons are fundamental. There is strong evidence that quarks are the fundamental building blocks of hadrons as seen in [Figure 1]. Quarks are the second group of fundamental particles (leptons are the first). The third and perhaps final group of fundamental particles is the carrier particles for the four basic forces. Leptons, quarks, and carrier particles may be all there is. In this module we will discuss the quark substructure of hadrons and its relationship to forces as well as indicate some remaining questions and problems.
Quarks were first proposed independently by American physicists Murray Gell-Mann
and George Zweig in 1963. Their quaint name was taken by Gell-Mann from a James
Joyce novel—Gell-Mann was also largely responsible for the concept and name of
strangeness. (Whimsical names are common in particle physics, reflecting the
personalities of modern physicists.) Originally, three quark types—or flavors—were proposed to account for the then-known mesons and baryons. These
quark flavors are named up (u), down (d), and strange (s). All
quarks have half-integral spin and are thus fermions. All mesons have integral
spin while all baryons have half-integral spin. Therefore, mesons should be made
up of an even number of quarks while baryons need to be made up of an odd number
of quarks. [Figure 1] shows the quark substructure of the proton,
neutron, and two pions. The most radical proposal by Gell-Mann and Zweig is the
fractional charges of quarks, which are $$±\left(\frac{2}{3}\right){q}{e} $$
and $$\left(\frac{1}{3}\right){q}{e} $$ , whereas all directly observed
particles have charges that are integral multiples of
To understand how these quark substructures work, let us specifically examine
the proton, neutron, and the two pions pictured in [Figure 1] before
moving on to more general considerations. First, the proton p is composed of
the three quarks uud, so that its total charge is $$+\left(\frac{2}{3}\right)
{q}{e}+\left(\frac{2}{3}\right){q}{e}-\left(\frac{1}{3}\right){q}{e}={q}{e}
$$ , as expected. With the spins aligned as in the figure, the proton’s
intrinsic spin is
We see that this is equivalent to a down quark changing flavor to become an up quark:
Name | Symbol | Antiparticle | Spin | Charge |
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Mass |
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Up |
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1/2 |
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0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.005 |
Down |
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1/2 |
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0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.008 |
Strange |
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1/2 |
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0 | 0 | 0 | 0.50 |
Charmed |
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1/2 |
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0 |
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0 | 0 | 1.6 |
Bottom |
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1/2 |
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0 | 0 |
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0 | 5 |
Top |
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1/2 |
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0 | 0 | 0 |
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Particle | Quark Composition | |
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Baryons7,8 | ||
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This is an example of the general fact that the weak nuclear force can change
the flavor of a quark. By general, we mean that any quark can be converted to
any other (change flavor) by the weak nuclear force. Not only can we get
Again, from [Figure 1], we see that the
Two general rules for combining quarks to form hadrons are:
- Baryons are composed of three quarks, and antibaryons are composed of three antiquarks.
- Mesons are combinations of a quark and an antiquark.
One of the clever things about this scheme is that only integral charges result, even though the quarks have fractional charge.
All quark combinations are possible. [Table 2] lists some of these
combinations. When Gell-Mann and Zweig proposed the original three quark
flavors, particles corresponding to all combinations of those three had not been
observed. The pattern was there, but it was incomplete—much as had been the case
in the periodic table of the elements and the chart of nuclides. The
Strategy
The composition of the
Solution
The total charge of uss is $$+\left(\frac{2}{3}\right){q}{e}-\left(
\frac{1}{3}\right){q}{e}-\left(\frac{1}{3}\right){q}_{e}=0 $$ , which is
correct for the
Discussion
This procedure is similar to what the inventors of the quark hypothesis did when
checking to see if their solution to the puzzle of particle patterns was
correct. They also checked to see if all combinations were known, thereby
predicting the previously unobserved
At first, physicists expected that, with sufficient energy, we should be able to free quarks and observe them directly. This has not proved possible. There is still no direct observation of a fractional charge or any isolated quark. When large energies are put into collisions, other particles are created—but no quarks emerge. There is nearly direct evidence for quarks that is quite compelling. By 1967, experiments at SLAC scattering 20-GeV electrons from protons had produced results like Rutherford had obtained for the nucleus nearly 60 years earlier. The SLAC scattering experiments showed unambiguously that there were three pointlike (meaning they had sizes considerably smaller than the probe’s wavelength) charges inside the proton as seen in [Figure 3]. This evidence made all but the most skeptical admit that there was validity to the quark substructure of hadrons.
More recent and higher-energy experiments have produced jets of particles in collisions, highly suggestive of three quarks in a nucleon. Since the quarks are very tightly bound, energy put into separating them pulls them only so far apart before it starts being converted into other particles. More energy produces more particles, not a separation of quarks. Conservation of momentum requires that the particles come out in jets along the three paths in which the quarks were being pulled. Note that there are only three jets, and that other characteristics of the particles are consistent with the three-quark substructure.
The quark model actually lost some of its early popularity because the original
model with three quarks had to be modified. The up and down quarks seemed to
compose normal matter as seen in [Table 2], while the single strange
quark explained strangeness. Why didn’t it have a counterpart? A fourth quark
flavor called charm (c) was proposed as the counterpart of the strange
quark to make things symmetric—there would be two normal quarks (u and d)
and two exotic quarks (s and c). Furthermore, at that time only four leptons
were known, two normal and two exotic. It was attractive that there would be
four quarks and four leptons. The problem was that no known particles contained
a charmed quark. Suddenly, in November of 1974, two groups (one headed by C. C.
Ting at Brookhaven National Laboratory and the other by Burton Richter at SLAC)
independently and nearly simultaneously discovered a new meson with
characteristics that made it clear that its substructure is
History quickly repeated itself. In 1975, the tau (
As mentioned and shown in [Figure 1], quarks carry another quantum
number, which we call color. Of course, it is not the color we sense with
visible light, but its properties are analogous to those of three primary and
three secondary colors. Specifically, a quark can have one of three color values
we call red (
Why must hadrons be white? The color scheme is intentionally devised to explain
why baryons have three quarks and mesons have a quark and an antiquark. Quark
color is thought to be similar to charge, but with more values. An ion, by
analogy, exerts much stronger forces than a neutral molecule. When the color of
a combination of quarks is white, it is like a neutral atom. The forces a white
particle exerts are like the polarization forces in molecules, but in hadrons
these leftovers are the strong nuclear force. When a combination of quarks has
color other than white, it exerts extremely large forces—even larger than the
strong force—and perhaps cannot be stable or permanently separated. This is part
of the theory of quark confinement, which explains how quarks can exist and
yet never be isolated or directly observed. Finally, an extra quantum number
with three values (like those we assign to color) is necessary for quarks to
obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Particles such as the
Fundamental particles are thought to be one of three types—leptons, quarks, or carrier particles. Each of those three types is further divided into three analogous families as illustrated in [Figure 5]. We have examined leptons and quarks in some detail. Each has six members (and their six antiparticles) divided into three analogous families. The first family is normal matter, of which most things are composed. The second is exotic, and the third more exotic and more massive than the second. The only stable particles are in the first family, which also has unstable members.
Always searching for symmetry and similarity, physicists have also divided the
carrier particles into three families, omitting the graviton. Gravity is special
among the four forces in that it affects the space and time in which the other
forces exist and is proving most difficult to include in a Theory of Everything
or TOE (to stub the pretension of such a theory). Gravity is thus often set
apart. It is not certain that there is meaning in the groupings shown
in [Figure 6], but the analogies are tempting. In the past, we have
been able to make significant advances by looking for analogies and patterns,
and this is an example of one under current scrutiny. There are connections
between the families of leptons, in that the
- Hadrons are thought to be composed of quarks, with baryons having three quarks and mesons having a quark and an antiquark.
- The characteristics of the six quarks and their antiquark counterparts are given in [Table 1], and the quark compositions of certain hadrons are given in [Table 2].
- Indirect evidence for quarks is very strong, explaining all known hadrons and their quantum numbers, such as strangeness, charm, topness, and bottomness.
- Quarks come in six flavors and three colors and occur only in combinations that produce white.
- Fundamental particles have no further substructure, not even a size beyond their de Broglie wavelength.
- There are three types of fundamental particles—leptons, quarks, and carrier particles. Each type is divided into three analogous families as indicated in [Figure 6].
(b) Do all hadrons with a strange quark also have nonzero strangeness?
(b) There is a spread of about 100 MeV in the decay energy of the
(c) Does its decay proceed via the strong or weak force?
(b) $$ 3.3 \times 10^{-24} \text{s} $$ (c) Strong (short lifetime)
(a) Find this lifetime.
(b) Verify from the quark composition of the particles that this reaction
annihilates and then re-creates a d quark and a
(c) Draw a Feynman diagram of the production and decay of the
(b) Draw a Feynman diagram of the reaction showing the individual quarks involved.
(a) What is the change in strangeness?
(b) Verify that baryon number and charge are conserved, while lepton numbers are unaffected.
(c) Write the equation in terms of the constituent quarks, indicating that the weak force is responsible.
(c)
(b) What is the uncertainty in the energy due to the short lifetime?
(c) Write the decay in terms of the constituent quarks.
(d) Verify that baryon number, lepton numbers, and charge are conserved.
(a) Write the decay in terms of the quark constituents.
(b) How much energy is released?
(c) What is the ultimate release of energy, given the decay mode for the pi zero
is
(c) 547.9 MeV
(b) Write the decay in terms of the quark constituents of the particles.
(b)
(b) This number is less than the number of known baryons. Explain why.
(b) There are more baryons observed because we have the 6 antiquarks and various mixtures of quarks (as for the π-meson) as well.
(b) What is the analogous decay process for the antiproton?
(b) Given that the
(c) Why is this energy greater than the proton’s total mass (converted to energy)?
(b) 938.8 MeV
(c) The annihilation energy of an extra electron is included in the total energy.
(b) Do the same for the
(b) What should its decay mode be?
b)
(b) Show that all combinations of a quark and an antiquark produce only integral charges. Thus mesons must have integral charge.
- {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote1} 1{: class="
footnote-ref-link"} The lower of the
$$± $$ symbols are the values for antiquarks. - {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote2} 2{: class="
footnote-ref-link"}
$$B $$ is baryon number, S is strangeness,$$c $$ is charm,$$b $$ is bottomness,$$t $$ is topness. - {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote3} 3{: class=" footnote-ref-link"} Values are approximate, are not directly observable, and vary with model.
- {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote4} 4{: class=" footnote-ref-link"} These two mesons are different mixtures, but each is its own antiparticle, as indicated by its quark composition.
- {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote5} 5{: class=" footnote-ref-link"} These two mesons are different mixtures, but each is its own antiparticle, as indicated by its quark composition.
- {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote6} 6{: class=" footnote-ref-link"} These two mesons are different mixtures, but each is its own antiparticle, as indicated by its quark composition.
- {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote7} 7{: class="
footnote-ref-link"} Antibaryons have the
antiquarks of their counterparts. The antiproton
$$\stackrel{-}{p} $$ is$$\stackrel{-}{u}\stackrel{-}{u}\stackrel{-}{d} $$ , for example. - {: class="footnote-ref" #footnote8} 8{: class="
footnote-ref-link"} Baryons composed of the
same quarks are different states of the same particle. For example, the
$${\Delta }^{+} $$ is an excited state of the proton. { data-list-type="bulleted" data-bullet-style="none"}
bottom : a quark flavor
charm : a quark flavor, which is the counterpart of the strange quark
color : a quark flavor
down : the second-lightest of all quarks
flavors : quark type
fundamental particle : particle with no substructure
quantum chromodynamics : quark theory including color
quark : an elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter
strange : the third lightest of all quarks
theory of quark confinement : explains how quarks can exist and yet never be isolated or directly observed
top : a quark flavor
up : the lightest of all quarks