fundamental particles

Cards (36)

  • Elementary particles

    Particles that are the fundamental constituents of matter
  • Classification of elementary particles
    1. Quarks and strangeness
    2. Forces of nature and messenger particles
  • General properties of elementary particles

    • Advent of high energy particle colliders has allowed the observation of new particles
    • Many particles are short lived and their existence can only be inferred from results of decay processes and not by direct observation
    • Particles are categorised through the standard model
  • Groupings of known particles

    • Fermions or bosons
    • Leptons or hadrons
    • Particle or antiparticle
  • Forces of nature

    • Strong
    • Electromagnetic
    • Weak
    • Gravity
  • Electro-weak force

    Unification of electromagnetic and weak forces
  • Attempts are being made to devise theories that unify the strong force with the electro-weak force: GRAND UNIFIED THEORY (GUT)
  • Fermion
    Particle with intrinsic angular momentum or spin of 1/2, 3/2, 5/2, etc.
  • Boson
    Particle with spin of 0, 1, 2, etc.
  • Fermions
    • Obey the Pauli exclusion principle - only a single fermion can be assigned to a given quantum state
  • Bosons
    • Do not obey the Pauli exclusion principle - many bosons can be placed in the same quantum state
  • Hadron
    Particle that experiences the strong force
  • Lepton
    Particle that experiences only the weak force and the electromagnetic force
  • Meson
    Hadron that is a boson
  • Baryon
    Hadron that is a fermion
  • Particle
    Has the same mass and spin but opposite charge, if charged, and the opposite sign of quantum numbers such as strangeness
  • Particles and antiparticles will annihilate which results in the release of energy in the form of other particles or photons
  • Lepton families
    • 3 families of leptons
  • Lepton number

    Quantum number for leptons, +1 for a particle and -1 for an antiparticle
  • In any reaction lepton number is conserved
  • Baryon number
    Quantum number for baryons, +1 for a baryon and -1 for an antibaryon, 0 for other particles
  • In any reaction baryon number is conserved and a process that changes the net baryon number cannot occur
  • Strangeness
    Quantum number associated with hadrons, conserved in interactions involving the strong force
  • The idea of strangeness allows the grouping of baryons and mesons in a pattern known as The Eightfold Way
  • Looking at patterns for other forms of baryon and meson spin > 1/2 or spin > 0 allowed the prediction of other massive particles
  • Quark
    Sub-unit that mesons and baryons are built from, has charge which is a multiple ±1/3, baryon number which is a multiple ±1/3, and strangeness of either 0 or -1
  • Combinations of quarks in groups of 3 result in the predicted properties for the baryons. Mesons are quark-anti-quark pairs.
  • Messenger particles

    Field particles or exchange particles that mediate the four fundamental forces
  • Messenger particles for the four fundamental forces

    • Virtual photons for electromagnetic
    • Pions and gluons for strong
    • W+, W-, Z0 particles for weak
    • Gravitons for gravitational
  • All of the above messenger particles have been detected with the exception of gravitons
  • Properties of the four fundamental forces

    • Relative strength
    • Range of force
    • Mediating particle
    • Mass (GeV/c2)
  • Gravity
    Universal attractive force, decreases with distance, increases with mass, weak force
  • Electromagnetism
    Charge based force, like charges repel, unlike charges attract, force decreases with distance, important for holding matter together
  • Colour (strong) force

    Force that only involves quarks, at very short range 10-15 m, force increases with distance
  • Weak force

    Changes the flavour of quarks, responsible for radioactive decay
  • The Standard Model of Particle Physics is a theory that describes the fundamental particles and forces of nature