Quantum numbers
In classical mechanics, aConservation laws
All of the various charges discussed above are conserved by the fact that the corresponding charge operators can be understood as ''generators of symmetries'' that commute with the Hamiltonian. Thus, the eigenvalues of the various charge operators are conserved. Absolutely conserved quantum numbers in the Standard Model are: *Flavour symmetry
If there are two or more particles which have identical interactions, then they may be interchanged without affecting the physics. All (complex) linear combinations of these two particles give the same physics, as long as the combinations are orthogonal, or perpendicular, to each other. In other words, the theory possesses symmetry transformations such as , where and are the two fields (representing the various '' generations'' of leptons and quarks, see below), and is any unitary matrix with a unitFlavour quantum numbers
Leptons
All leptons carry a lepton number . In addition, leptons carry weak isospin, , which is − for the three charged leptons (i.e.Quarks
All quarks carry a baryon number and all anti-quarks have They also all carry weak isospin, The positively charged quarks (up, charm, and top quarks) are called ''up-type quarks'' and have the negatively charged quarks (down, strange, and bottom quarks) are called ''down-type quarks'' and have Each doublet of up and down type quarks constitutes one generation of quarks. For all the quark flavour quantum numbers listed below, the convention is that the flavour charge and the electric charge of a quark have the same sign. Thus any flavour carried by a charged meson has the same sign as its charge. Quarks have the following flavour quantum numbers: * The third component of isospin (usually just "isospin") (), which has value for the up quark and for the down quark. * Strangeness (): Defined as where represents the number of strange quarks () and represents the number of strange antiquarks (). This quantum number was introduced by Murray Gell-Mann. This definition gives the strange quark a strangeness of −1 for the above-mentioned reason. * Charm (): Defined as where represents the number of charm quarks () and represents the number of charm antiquarks. The charm quark's value is +1. * Bottomness (or ''beauty'') (): Defined as where represents the number of bottom quarks () and represents the number of bottom antiquarks. * Topness (or ''truth'') (): Defined as where represents the number of top quarks () and represents the number of top antiquarks. However, because of the extremely short half-life of the top quark (predicted lifetime of only ), by the time it can interact strongly it has already decayed to another flavour of quark (usually to a bottom quark). For that reason the top quark doesn't hadronize, that is it never forms any meson or baryon. These five quantum numbers, together with baryon number (which is not a flavour quantum number), completely specify numbers of all 6 quark flavours separately (as i.e. an antiquark is counted with the minus sign). They are conserved by both the electromagnetic and strong interactions (but not the weak interaction). From them can be built the derived quantum numbers: * Hypercharge (): *Antiparticles and hadrons
Flavour quantum numbers are additive. Hence antiparticles have flavour equal in magnitude to the particle but opposite in sign. Hadrons inherit their flavour quantum number from their valence quarks: this is the basis of the classification in the quark model. The relations between the hypercharge, electric charge and other flavour quantum numbers hold for hadrons as well as quarks.Flavour problem
The flavour problem (also known as the flavour puzzle) is the inability of current Standard Model flavour physics to explain why the free parameters of particles in the Standard Model have the values they have, and why there are specified values for mixing angles in the PMNS and CKM matrices. These free parameters - theQuantum chromodynamics
Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) contains six flavours of quarks. However, their masses differ and as a result they are not strictly interchangeable with each other. The up and down flavours are close to having equal masses, and the theory of these two quarks possesses an approximate SU(2) symmetry ( isospin symmetry).Chiral symmetry description
Under some circumstances (for instance when the quark masses are much smaller than the chiral symmetry breaking scale of 250 MeV), the masses of quarks do not substantially contribute to the system's behavior, and to zeroth approximation the masses of the lightest quarks can be ignored for most purposes, as if they had zero mass. The simplified behavior of flavour transformations can then be successfully modeled as acting independently on the left- and right-handed parts of each quark field. This approximate description of the flavour symmetry is described by a chiral group .Vector symmetry description
If all quarks had non-zero but equal masses, then this chiral symmetry is broken to the ''vector symmetry'' of the "diagonal flavour group" , which applies the same transformation to both helicities of the quarks. This reduction of symmetry is a form of '' explicit symmetry breaking''. The strength of explicit symmetry breaking is controlled by the current quark masses in QCD. Even if quarks are massless, chiral flavour symmetry can be spontaneously broken if the vacuum of the theory contains a chiral condensate (as it does in low-energy QCD). This gives rise to an effective mass for the quarks, often identified with the valence quark mass in QCD.Symmetries of QCD
Analysis of experiments indicate that the current quark masses of the lighter flavours of quarks are much smaller than the QCD scale, ΛQCD, hence chiral flavour symmetry is a good approximation to QCD for the up, down and strange quarks. The success of chiral perturbation theory and the even more naive chiral models spring from this fact. The valence quark masses extracted from the quark model are much larger than the current quark mass. This indicates that QCD has spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking with the formation of a chiral condensate. Other phases of QCD may break the chiral flavour symmetries in other ways.History
Isospin
Isospin, strangeness and hypercharge predate the quark model. The first of those quantum numbers, Isospin, was introduced as a concept in 1932 by Werner Heisenberg, to explain symmetries of the then newly discovered neutron (symbol n): * The mass of the neutron and the proton (symbol ) are almost identical: They are nearly degenerate, and both are thus often referred to as “ nucleons”, a term that ignores their intrinsic differences. Although the proton has a positive electric charge, and the neutron is neutral, they are almost identical in all other aspects, and their nuclear binding-force interactions (old name for the residual color force) are so strong compared to the electrical force between some, that there is very little point in paying much attention to their differences. * The strength of the strong interaction between any pair of nucleons is the same, independent of whether they are interacting as protons or as neutrons. Protons and neutrons were grouped together as nucleons and treated as different states of the same particle, because they both have nearly the same mass and interact in nearly the same way, if the (much weaker) electromagnetic interaction is neglected. Heisenberg noted that the mathematical formulation of this symmetry was in certain respects similar to the mathematical formulation of non-relativistic spin, whence the name "isospin" derives. The neutron and the proton are assigned to the doublet (the spin-, 2, or fundamental representation) of SU(2), with the proton and neutron being then associated with different isospin projections and respectively. The pions are assigned to the triplet (the spin-1, 3, or adjoint representation) of SU(2). Though there is a difference from the theory of spin: The group action does not preserve flavor (in fact, the group action is specifically an exchange of flavour). When constructing a physical theory of nuclear forces, one could simply assume that it does not depend on isospin, although the total isospin should be conserved. The concept of isospin proved useful in classifying hadrons discovered in the 1950s and 1960s (see particle zoo), where particles with similar mass are assigned an SU(2) isospin multiplet.Strangeness and hypercharge
The discovery of strange particles like the kaon led to a new quantum number that was conserved by the strong interaction: strangeness (or equivalently hypercharge). The Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula was identified in 1953, which relates strangeness and hypercharge with isospin and electric charge.The eightfold way and quark model
Once the kaons and their property of strangeness became better understood, it started to become clear that these, too, seemed to be a part of an enlarged symmetry that contained isospin as a subgroup. The larger symmetry was named the Eightfold Way by Murray Gell-Mann, and was promptly recognized to correspond to the adjoint representation of SU(3). To better understand the origin of this symmetry, Gell-Mann proposed the existence of up, down and strange quarks which would belong to the fundamental representation of the SU(3) flavor symmetry.GIM-Mechanism and charm
To explain the observed absence of flavor-changing neutral currents, the GIM mechanism was proposed in 1970, which introduced the charm quark and predicted the J/psi meson. The J/psi meson was indeed found in 1974, which confirmed the existence of charm quarks. This discovery is known as the ''November Revolution''. The flavor quantum number associated with the charm quark became known as ''charm''.Bottomness and topness
The bottom and top quarks were predicted in 1973 in order to explain CP violation,{{cite journal , first1 = M. , last1 = Kobayashi , first2 = T. , last2 = Maskawa , title = CP-Violation in the Renormalizable Theory of Weak Interaction , journal = Progress of Theoretical Physics , volume = 49 , issue = 2 , pages = 652–657 , year = 1973 , doi = 10.1143/PTP.49.652 , bibcode = 1973PThPh..49..652K , doi-access = free , hdl = 2433/66179 , hdl-access = free which also implied two new flavor quantum numbers: ''bottomness'' and ''topness''.See also
* Standard Model (mathematical formulation) * Cabibbo–Kobayashi–Maskawa matrix * Strong CP problem and chirality (physics) * Chiral symmetry breaking and quark matter * Quark flavour tagging, such as B-tagging, is an example of particle identification in experimental particle physics.References
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