Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
8:00am 9:00 10:00 11:00 12:00pm 1:00 2:00 3:00 4:00 5:00 6:00 7:00 Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Apr 25??? Make up schedule April 11 catch a 1:00pm flight April 27 leave early morning by car April 11 114 Ferguson Apr 24???
2
The Nuclear pp cycle producing energy in the sun 6 protons 4 He + 6 + 2 e + 2p 26.7 MeV Begins with the reaction 0.26 MeV neutrinos
3
500 trillion solar neutrinos every second!
4
ALL NEUTRINOS ARE LEFT-HANDED ALL ANTI -NEUTRINOS ARE RIGHT-HANDED Helicity = m s /s = 1 Helicity = m s /s = 1
5
Dirac Equation (spin-½ particles) ( p m 0 j 0 j j 0 p ( ) = ( ) 0 0 0 p p 0 where p p x p y p z 0 1 1 0 0 -i i 0 1 0 0 -1 p z p x ip y p x +ip y p z ( 0 p 0 p m
6
Our “Plane wave” solutions ( for FREE Dirac particles) r,t) = a exp[i/h(Et-p r)] u (E,p) a e (i/h)x p u (E,p) which gave ( p m u = ( )( ) E/c mc p u A p E/c mc u B from which we note: u A = ( p u B u B = ( p u A c mc c mc
7
Dirac Equation (spin-½ particles) EcEc multiply from left by (-i 1 recall i 0 1 2 3 -i 3 1 = - i 1 ) 2 2 3 = + i 2 3 = + i 2 3 ) ( )( ) = + i i 1 ) ( ) = 1 p )I ) = i m 3 EcEc since = since ( i ) 0 1 -1 0 0 1 -1 0 0 -1 so p x 1 p x 1 I p x 1 p y 2 p z 3 = m -i 3 0 = +i 0 1 2 3 = 5 -i 3 2 = 2 -i 3 3 = 3
8
p )I ) = i m 3 EcEc This gives an equation that looks MORE complicated! How can this form be useful? For a ~massless particle (like the or any a relativistic Dirac particle E >> m o c 2 ) E=|p|c as m o 0 (or at least m o <<E) p| p )I ) = Which then gives: or: p I ) = ^ What do you think this looks like? p I ^ is a HELICITY OPERATOR! I = 0 0
9
In Problem Set #5 we saw that if the z-axis was chosen to be the direction of a particle’s momentum were all well-defined eigenspinors of S z i.e. p I ) u(p) = u(p) ^ “helicity states” p I ) = ^ p I ) ^ 5 “measures” the helicity of So
10
Looking specifically at 5 u(p) = = uAuBuAuB uBuAuBuA For massless Dirac particles (or in the relativistic limit) 5u(p)= 5u(p)= p I ) u(p) ^
11
We’ll find a useful definition inthe “left-handed spinor” u L (p)= u(p) (1 5 ) 2 Think: “Helicity= 1” In general NOT an exact helicity state (if not massless!) Since 5 u(p) = ±u(p) for massless or relativistic Dirac particles 0 if u(p) carries helicity +1 u(p) if u(p) carries helicity 1 if neither it still measures how close this state is to being pure left-handed separates out the “helicity 1 component” Think of it as a “projection operator” that picks out the helicity 1 component of u(p)
12
Similarly, since for ANTI-particles: 5 v(p) = (p· I)v(p) again for m 0 we also define: v L (p)= v(p) (1 5 ) 2 with corresponding “RIGHT-HANDED” spinors: u R (p) = u(p) (1 5 ) 2 v R (p)= v(p) (1 5 ) 2 and adjoint spinors like since 5 † = 5 since 5 = - 5
13
Chiral Spinors Particles u L = ½(1 5 ) u u R = ½(1+ 5 ) u u L = u ½(1 5 ) u R = u ½(1 5 ) Anti-particles v L = ½(1 5 ) v v R = ½(1 5 ) v v L = v ½(1 5 ) v R = v ½(1 5 ) Note: u L + u R = ( ) u + ( ) u = 1 5 2 1 5 2 u and also: ( ) ( ) u = 1 5 2 1 5 2 1 2 5 + 5 ) 2 4 ( ) u 2 2 5 4 = ( ) u 1 5 2 = ( ) u
14
Chiral Spinors Particles u L = ½(1 5 ) u u R = ½(1+ 5 ) u u L = u ½(1 5 ) u R = u ½(1 5 ) Anti-particles v L = ½(1 5 ) v v R = ½(1 5 ) v v L = v ½(1 5 ) v R = v ½(1 5 ) note also: ( ) ( ) u = 1 5 2 1 5 2 1 2 5 + 5 ) 2 4 ( ) u 2 2 5 4 = ( ) u 1 5 2 = ( ) u while: ( ) ( ) u = 1 5 2 1 5 2 1 5 ) 2 4 ( ) u = 0 Truly PROJECTION OPERATORS!
15
Why do we always speak of beta decay as a process “governed by the WEAK FORCE”? What do DECAYS have to do with FORCE ? Where’s the FORCE FIELD? What IS the FORCE FIELD? What VECTOR PARTICLE is exchanged? n e-e- p e _ What’s been “seen” We’ve identified complicated 4-branch vertices, but only for the mediating BOSONS… Not the FERMIONS! ++ ++ ee e _ semi-leptonic decays leptonic decay
16
p e+e+ n e _ We’ve also “seen” the inverse of some of these processes: ee e
17
The semi-leptonic decays (with participating hadrons) must Internally involve the transmutation of individual quarks: dduddu u d ee e _ u ?? udud _ ++ duuduu e+e+ u d d e _
18
Protons, quarks, pions and muons are all electrically charged so do participate in: ee ee p p Can we use QED as a prototype by comparing or to ??? ee e n p leptonbaryon Charge-carrying currents imply a charged vector boson exchange! (we’ve already seen gluons carry color)
19
d e u e Then might explain -decay! +2/3 1/3 11 quark-flavor coupling ℓ- ℓ coupling e e u d _ To explain + decay: requires a +1 charge carrier What about decays? and e e e _ explains decays but coupling only to the left-handed particle states coupling strength modulated by left-handed components
20
e e W d e W W u e u e e W d We’ve seen the observed weak interactions: e + e + n p + e + e p + e n + e could all be explained in terms of the interaction picture of vector boson exchanges if we imagine a the existence of a W
21
W We’ve identified two fundamental vertices to describe the observed “weak” interactions. e W e or u W d Quark coupling Flips isospin! Changes mass! Changes electric charge! Lepton coupling Changes electric charge! Changes mass! Some new “weak charge” that couples to an energy/momentum carrying W ±
22
e e Continuing the analogy to qJ lepton A e ee e In general for a Quantum Mechanical charge carrier, the expression for “current” is of the form but these newest currents would have to allow e O e coupling to a “weak-field” W Which must carry electric charge (why?) but not couple to it (why?)
23
If this interaction reflects a symmetry, how many weak fields must there be? U(1) SU(2) SU(3) one field (the photon) YANG MILLS: (gluons) 3 fields COLOR: 8 fields U(1) is clearly inadequate U(2) would mean 3 weak fields we know we need W +, W Could there be a neutral W 0 ? But YANG-MILLS assumes we have “ISO”DOUBLET states!
24
Left-handed weak iso-doublets (in a new weak “iso”-space) u d e e Right-handed weak iso-singlets u R d R e R L L NOT part of a doublet… NOT linked by the weak force to neutrinos NOTE: there is NO ( e ) R We’ve discovered we do have:
25
Left-handed weak iso-doublets (in a new weak “iso”-space) u +½ d ½ e +½ e ½ Right-handed weak iso-singlets u R 0 d R 0 e R 0 L L With ISO-SPIN we identified a complimentary “hypercharge” representing another quantum value that could be simultaneously diagonalized with ISO-SPIN operators. We generalize that concept into a NEW HYPERCHARGE in this “weak” space.
26
Y L = 2Q – 2I 3 weak Left-handed I 3 weak u L +½ d L ½ ( e ) L +½ e L ½ Right-handed u R 0 d R 0 e R 0 Y R = 2(Q) – 2(0)= 2Q Y L = 2(-1) – 2(-1/2) Y L = 2(0) – 2(+1/2) Y L = 2(-1/3) – 2(-1/2) Y L = 2(2/3) – 2(1/2) = 1 = 1/3
27
Not all weak participants have ELECTRIC CHARGE Its NOT electric charge providing the coupling All weak participants (by definition) carry weak iso-spin u +½ d ½ e +½ e ½ u +½ Y L = 1/3 d ½ Y L = 1/3 e +½ Y L = 1 e ½ Y L = 1 L L e W e u W d But interactions are only well-defined by the theory if the fermion legs to a vertex have equal coupling strengths L L Y L = 2Q – 2I 3 weak
28
With DOUBLET STATES and an associated “charge” defined we can attempt a Yang-Mills gauge-field model to explain the weak force but with some warnings...
29
e W 0 e The Yang-Mills theory requires introducing a 3 rd field: Could this be the photon? How do we distinguish this process from exchange? Maybe the noted U(1) symmetry is part of a much larger symmetry: U(1) S U(2) ? U EM (1) U Y (1) ×SU L (2) U(1) U(1) × S U(2)
30
Straight from U(1) and the SU(2) Yang-Mills extension, consider: charge-like coupling to a photon-like field some new Yang- Mills coupling T i = i /2 for left-handed doublets = 0 for right-handed singlets This looks like it could be U(1) with = q and B A Yg12Yg12 This all means we now work from a BIG comprehensive Lagrangian summed over all possible fermions f to include terms for u, d, c, s, t, b, e, , , e, ,
31
which contains, for example: plus similar terms for , , c, s, , , t, b,
32
Straight from U(1) and the SU(2) Yang-Mills extension, consider: charge-like coupling to a photon-like field some new Yang- Mills coupling T i = i /2 for left-handed doublets = 0 for right-handed singlets This looks like it could be U(1) with = q and B A Yg12Yg12 This all means we now work from a BIG comprehensive Lagrangian summed over all possible fermions f to include terms for u, d, c, s, t, b, e, , , e, ,
33
which contains, for example: plus similar terms for , , c, s, , , t, b,
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.