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Strong Force, Quarkonium, and LIPS

Strong Force, Quarkonium, and LIPS. Why we believe there’s a strong force. Why Colour? Why not something with no inappropriate mental imagery Probing the Colour Force The study of simple massive quark bound states. Strong Force, Quarkonium, and LIPS.

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Strong Force, Quarkonium, and LIPS

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  1. Strong Force, Quarkonium, and LIPS • Why we believe there’s a strong force. • Why Colour? • Why not something with no inappropriate mental imagery • Probing the Colour Force • The study of simple massive quark bound states

  2. Strong Force, Quarkonium, and LIPS • So Far…not speculated what holds the proton together. • Also Serious Mystery: W- (sss) • W- is J = 3/2 • So the spin wave function can be: |1  2  3> • c(spin)f(flavour) = |s1s2s3> | 1  2  3> • COMPLETELY SYMETRIC!! Slides available at: www-pnp.physics.ox.ac.uk/~huffman/

  3. Strong Force And Quarkonium • Must have another part to wave function • Y = c(spin)f(flavour)j(space) = symetric • Not allowed for Fermions! • Not only is colour needed, we know it must have an antisymetric wave function and it must be in a singlet state with zero net colour.

  4. Discovery of J/y One of the more interesting things is the ‘width’ in the mass of the J/y. On a mass resonance: Breit-Wigner:

  5. Positronium e+ Solve Hydrogen atom but with a reduced mass of me/2: e- Get first bound state of -6.8eV. Can do the same for the strong force. Use this potential for the quarks and fit to aS and F0. Discover: aS = 0.3 and F0is 16 tons!

  6. Why so narrow? 1). Gluons are spin 1 and massless like photons 2). Gluons have parity -1 One gluon forbidden: c cbar is colour singlet; gluons have colour charge Two gluons: P and C problem Three gluons allowed but it is now suppressed by a factor of as6 Spectroscopic notation: n2s+1LJ J/y 13S1cc0 13P0or 23P0 ln is true only for 1/r potential

  7. J/y has JPC = 1-- like the photon r+p- r0p0 r-p+ I,I3 What is the Isospin of the J/y? We already know that I3=0 because of the Quark composition. Because I3≤ I, we know that I = 0,1,2,3…. Integer not ½ integer. Look at the decays of the J/y to I-spin eigenstates: J/yr+p-, r0p0, r-p+ in almost equal proportions Both rho and pion have Isospin I = 1 So the J/y could have I = 0,1, or 2 only. Use the 1x1 Clebsh-Gordon table to settle the matter. yes no no

  8. How the Beit-Wigner width is measured: In Theory Conservation of Probability  In Fact DEbeam E 3 3.15

  9. Why This Shape? Would like to motivate this with a relativistic wave equation. To do this try using E2=p2c2+m2c4 Operator equivalents of E and P: So the QM equivalent of Energy and momentum conservation is: This is called the Klein-Gordon equation.

  10. Solutions to K-G equation: With: For now, ignore negative E solutions. Throw in a potential (But can we stay fully relativistic??) Naïve Solution Becomes:

  11. If we assume V is a real function you can multiply the K-G equation by f* and multiply the complex conjugate of the K-G equation by f. The potential, V, drops out. You then get a continuity equation that you can interpret as some sort of conservation of probability Suppose that V is a purely imaginary constant V = iG

  12. Assume G is << (p2c2+m2c4) and expand the second term: Note that we no longer have Probability conservation!!!

  13. In the Rest Frame of the particle p=0and we are left with: Transform into ‘Energy’ space: And The Breit-Wigner form emerges.

  14. Fermi's Golden Rule • Probability per unit time of a transition from initial state |i> to final state |f> is constant. • Call itW Non-relativistic! Mfi is the ‘matrix element’, in QM you recognize it as r(E) is the ‘density of states available at energy E’.

  15. Understanding the: Lorentz Invariant Phase Space Factor dLIPS

  16. How many QM ‘states’ are there in a volume ‘V’ up to a given momeum ‘P’? z y Dx x Dpx How big is this?

  17. Understanding dLIPS 6 – dimensions are needed in QM to describe a particle. Three in space x0, y0, z0; and three in momentum px0, py0, pz0 6 dimensions!! Want to increment these values by the smallest amount possible and be assured I have crossed to a new state: The smallest term in this group is the DxDp term… the uncertainty principle tells us its size!

  18. Understanding dLIPS Smallest distinguishablevolume  one state!

  19. Understanding dLIPS Fine for the ith particle. But suppose we have N total particles in the final state(and we only need to worry about the final state becausein any experiment we take great pain to put the initial particles into a single, well-defined state). Ni+Nj = wrong!! These states are more like dice! Or calculation of specific heat of a crystal. How many possible combinations of two distinguishable pairs are possible?

  20. One Problem …This isn’t Lorentz invariant. Another Problem … V1V2…Vn is annoying Understanding dLIPS Turns out the Matrix Element has Volumes that will cancel with these volume elements. Is Lorentz Invariant!!!

  21. Understanding dLIPS Now we need to add upall of our dN’s to get thetotal. Anticipate the 1/Vn terms from the matrix element.Integration is over all possible values of the ith momentum. But we do not have independent momenta, if all but one of the momenta is known, the last one is also known!

  22. Understanding dLIPS Needed to keepLorentz inv. And this is perfectly fine…just remember to apply energyand momentum conservation at the end. But using properties of the Dirac delta Function we can re-cast this equation in the following form (and explicitly include energy and momentum conservation.

  23. Understanding dLIPS We do have Energy and Momentum conservation. So, for example, in CM frame with total Energy W. Note the additional factors Final Phase-space factor

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