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Strange Particles AS level Notes. Strange Particles. By the 1950s, many new particles were being discovered with the use of accelerators (you study those at A2 – they accelerate charged particles by using magnetic and electric fields.)
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Strange Particles • By the 1950s, many new particles were being discovered with the use of accelerators (you study those at A2 – they accelerate charged particles by using magnetic and electric fields.) • They were produced from collisions between protons, neutrons, and pions
Strange Particles • Some of these particles were called strange particles because of some strange properties in their production and decay! • They were always produced in pairs • Some would decay and not have a proton or a neutron as an end product • All are unstable • All are created by strong force interactions and often decay via the weak force
Strange Particles • Contain an 's' quark or anti-quark • Have surprisingly long lives (100,000 times longer than expected!) • Are produced in pairs which suggests that they have an additive conserved quality.
Our Syllabus • There are lots of different types of strange particles but • The only one you need to know about for the AQA syllabus at AS level is: the kaon - k
Kaon k • Mass = ½ proton mass • Spin = 0 • Two particles: k+, k0 • Two antiparticles: k-, k0-bar • Lifetime = 10-8 or 10-10 seconds
Kaon k • In 1947 the British physicists Rochester and Butler observed the new kaon particles. • They observed these particles in two matter forms: • a neutral one ko that decayed into the pions p+ and p- , and a • positively charged one that decayed into a muon m+ (a muon is basically like a heavy electron) and a photon.
What is the problems with that? • You cannot make the quarks add up properly! • Strangeness (which looked so ‘conservative’ because of pair production) was not conserved in weak interaction decays
Truly Strange Particles! • Strangeness is not conserved when weak interactions take place – that is how it is possible for the decays of strange particles into none strange ones! • So, if strangeness is not conserved that is evidence of a weak interaction in these particles in the reaction concerned.
Conservation of Strangeness • Strangeness must be conserved in all strong and electromagnetic interactions, but • not conserved in weak interactions
Creation of Strange Particles • Strange particles are always created in pairs by strong processes in such a way that the total strangeness remains zero. • If one particle has strangeness then the other must have strangeness. • An example of strange particle production is when a negative pion collides with proton, giving rise to a neutral lambda particle and a neutral kaon.