In particle physics, a meson () is a type of subatomic particle composed of an equal number of and , usually one of each, bound together by the strong interaction. Because mesons are composed of quark subparticles, they have a meaningful physical size, a diameter of roughly one femtometre (10 m),
Outside the nucleus, mesons appear in nature only as short-lived products of very high-energy collisions between particles made of quarks, such as (high-energy protons and neutrons) and baryonic matter. Mesons are routinely produced artificially in or other particle accelerators in the collisions of protons, , or other particles.
Higher-energy (more massive) mesons were created momentarily in the Big Bang, but are not thought to play a role in nature today. However, such heavy mesons are regularly created in particle accelerator experiments that explore the nature of the heavier quarks that compose the heavier mesons.
Mesons are part of the hadron particle family, which are defined simply as particles composed of two or more quarks. The other members of the hadron family are the : subatomic particles composed of odd numbers of valence quarks (at least three), and some experiments show evidence of , which do not have the conventional valence quark content of two quarks (one quark and one antiquark), but four or more.
Because quarks have a spin , the difference in quark number between mesons and baryons results in conventional two-quark mesons being , whereas baryons are .
Each type of meson has a corresponding antiparticle (antimeson) in which quarks are replaced by their corresponding antiquarks and vice versa. For example, a positive pion () is made of one up quark and one down antiquark; and its corresponding antiparticle, the negative pion (), is made of one up antiquark and one down quark.
Because mesons are composed of quarks, they participate in both the weak interaction and strong interaction. Mesons with net electric charge also participate in the electromagnetic interaction. Mesons are classified according to their quark content, total angular momentum, parity and various other properties, such as C-parity and G-parity. Although no meson is stable, those of lower mass are nonetheless more stable than the more massive, and hence are easier to observe and study in particle accelerators or in cosmic ray experiments. The lightest group of mesons is less massive than the lightest group of baryons, meaning that they are more easily produced in experiments, and thus exhibit certain higher-energy phenomena more readily than do baryons. But mesons can be quite massive: for example, the J/Psi meson () containing the charm quark, first seen 1974, is about three times as massive as a proton, and the upsilon meson () containing the bottom quark, first seen in 1977, is about ten times as massive as a proton.
The first candidate for Yukawa's meson, in modern terminology known as the muon, was discovered in 1936 by Carl David Anderson and others in the of cosmic ray interactions. The muon had about the right mass to be Yukawa's carrier of the strong nuclear force, but over the course of the next decade, it became evident that it was not the right particle. It was eventually found that the muon did not participate in the strong nuclear interaction at all, but rather behaved like a heavy version of the electron, and was eventually classed as a lepton like the electron, rather than a meson. In making this choice, physicists decided that properties other than particle mass should control their classification.
There were years of delays in the subatomic particle research during World War II (1939–1945), with most physicists working in applied projects for wartime necessities. When the war ended in August 1945, many physicists gradually returned to peacetime research. The first true meson to be discovered was what would later be called the pion (or pion). During 1939–1942, Debendra Mohan Bose and Bibha Chowdhuri exposed Ilford Photo half-tone photographic plates in the high altitude mountainous regions of Darjeeling, and observed long curved ionizing tracks that appeared to be different from the tracks of alpha particles or protons. In a series of articles published in Nature, they identified a cosmic particle having an average mass close to 200 times the mass of electron. This discovery was made in 1947 with improved full-tone photographic emulsion plates, by Cecil Powell, Hugh Muirhead, César Lattes, and Giuseppe Occhialini, who were investigating cosmic ray products at the University of Bristol in England, based on photographic films placed in the Andes mountains. Some of those mesons had about the same mass as the already-known mu "meson", yet seemed to decay into it, leading physicist Robert Marshak to hypothesize in 1947 that it was actually a new and different meson. Over the next few years, more experiments showed that the pion was indeed involved in strong interactions. The pion (as a virtual particle) is also used as force carrier to model the nuclear force in atomic nucleus (between proton and neutron). This is an approximation, as the actual carrier of the strong force is believed to be the gluon, which is explicitly used to model strong interaction between quarks. Other mesons, such as the virtual are used to model this force as well, but to a lesser extent. Following the discovery of the pion, Yukawa was awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize in Physics for his predictions.
For a while in the past, the word meson was sometimes used to mean any force carrier, such as "the Z meson", which is involved in mediating the weak interaction. However, this use has fallen out of favor, and mesons are now defined as particles composed of pairs of quarks and antiquarks.
are —specifically in this case, particles having spin . Because spin projections vary in increments of 1 (that is 1 ), a single quark has a spin vector of length , and has two spin projections, either or . Two quarks can have their spins aligned, in which case the two spin vectors add to make a vector of length , with three possible spin projections and , and their combination is called a vector meson or Vector boson triplet. If two quarks have oppositely aligned spins, the spin vectors add up to make a vector of length and only one spin projection , called a scalar meson or Scalar boson singlet. Because mesons are made of one quark and one antiquark, they are found in triplet and singlet spin states. The latter are called or pseudoscalar mesons, depending on their parity (see below).
There is another quantity of quantized angular momentum, called the orbital angular momentum (quantum number ), that is the angular momentum due to quarks orbiting each other, and also comes in increments of 1 . The total angular momentum (quantum number ) of a particle is the combination of the two intrinsic angular momentums (spin) and the orbital angular momentum. It can take any value from up to , in increments of 1.
+ Meson angular momentum quantum numbers for = 0, 1, 2, 3 | |
0 | 0 |
1 | |
2 | |
3 | |
1 | 1 |
2, 0 | |
3, 1 | |
4, 2 |
Particle physicists are most interested in mesons with no orbital angular momentum ( = 0), therefore the two groups of mesons most studied are the = 1; = 0 and = 0; = 0, which corresponds to = 1 and = 0, although they are not the only ones. It is also possible to obtain = 1 particles from = 0 and = 1. How to distinguish between the = 1, = 0 and = 0, = 1 mesons is an active area of research in meson spectroscopy.
Based on this, one might think that, if the wavefunction for each particle (more precisely, the quantum field for each particle type) were simultaneously mirror-reversed, then the new set of wavefunctions would perfectly satisfy the laws of physics (apart from the weak interaction). It turns out that this is not quite true: In order for the equations to be satisfied, the wavefunctions of certain types of particles have to be multiplied by −1, in addition to being mirror-reversed. Such particle types are said to have negative or odd parity ( = −1, or alternatively = −), whereas the other particles are said to have positive or even parity ( = +1, or alternatively = +).
For mesons, parity is related to the orbital angular momentum by the relation:
As a consequence, all mesons with no orbital angular momentum ( = 0) have odd parity ( = −1).
-parity rarely is studied on its own, but more commonly in combination with P-parity into CP-parity. -parity was originally thought to be conserved, but was later found to be violated on rare occasions in .
If
When the first mesons were discovered, they too were seen through the eyes of isospin and so the three pions were believed to be the same particle, but in different isospin states.
The mathematics of isospin was modeled after the mathematics of spin. Isospin projections varied in increments of 1 just like those of spin, and to each projection was associated a "Quantum state". Because the "pion particle" had three "charged states", it was said to be of isospin Its "charged states" , , and , corresponded to the isospin projections and respectively. Another example is the "rho meson", also with three charged states. Its "charged states" , , and , corresponded to the isospin projections and respectively.
The exact and quark composition determines the charge, because quarks carry charge e whereas quarks carry charge e. For example, the three pions all have different charges
After the quark model was adopted, physicists noted that the isospin projections were related to the up and down quark content of particles by the relation
In the "isospin picture", the three pions and three rhos were thought to be the different states of two particles. However, in the quark model, the rhos are excited states of pions. Isospin, although conveying an inaccurate picture of things, is still used to classify hadrons, leading to unnatural and often confusing nomenclature.
Because mesons are hadrons, the isospin classification is also used for them all, with the quantum number calculated by adding for each positively charged up-or-down quark-or-antiquark (up quarks and down antiquarks), and for each negatively charged up-or-down quark-or-antiquark (up antiquarks and down quarks).
It was noted that charge ( Q) was related to the isospin projection ( I3), the baryon number ( B) and flavour quantum numbers ( S, C, , T) by the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula:
There are at least five exotic meson resonances that have been experimentally confirmed to exist by two or more independent experiments. The most statistically significant of these is the Z(4430), discovered by the Belle experiment in 2007 and confirmed by LHCb in 2014. It is a candidate for being a tetraquark: a particle composed of two quarks and two antiquarks.LHCb collaborators (2014): Observation of the resonant character of the Z(4430)− state See the main article above for other particle resonances that are candidates for being exotic mesons.
Note that these issues also exist in principle for other neutral, flavored mesons; however, the weak eigenstates are considered separate particles only for kaons because of their dramatically different lifetimes.J.W. Cronin (1980)
where the is a result of the parity of the corresponding spherical harmonic of the wavefunction. The "+1" comes from the fact that, according to the Dirac equation, a quark and an antiquark have opposite intrinsic parities. Therefore, the intrinsic parity of a meson is the product of the intrinsic parities of the quark (+1) and antiquark (−1). As these are different, their product is −1, and so it contributes the "+1" that appears in the exponent.
C-parity
then, the meson is " even" ( = +1). On the other hand, if
then the meson is " odd" ( = −1).
G-parity
then, the meson is " even" ( = +1). On the other hand, if
then the meson is " odd" ( = −1).
Isospin and charge
Original isospin model
Replacement by the quark model
but they all have similar masses ( ) as they are each composed of a same total number of up and down quarks and antiquarks. Under the isospin model, they were considered a single particle in different charged states.
where the -symbols are the count of up and down quarks and antiquarks.
Flavour quantum numbers
where S, C, , and T represent the strangeness, charm, bottomness and topness flavour quantum numbers respectively. They are related to the number of strange, charm, bottom, and top quarks and antiquark according to the relations:
S &= -(n_\text{s} - n_\bar{\text{s}}) \\
C &= +(n_\text{c} - n_\bar{\text{c}}) \\
B^\prime &= -(n_\text{b} - n_\bar{\text{b}}) \\
T &= +(n_\text{t} - n_\bar{\text{t}}),
\end{align}
meaning that the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula is equivalent to the expression of charge in terms of quark content:
Classification
Types of meson
+Types of mesons 0 1 1 0 2
Nomenclature
Flavourless mesons
+ Nomenclature of flavourless mesons a+
a0
a−f χc χb χt
Flavoured mesons
+ Nomenclature of flavoured mesons
Exotic mesons
List
Pseudoscalar mesons
Vector mesons
Notes on neutral kaons
See also
Footnotes
External links
Further reading
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