Forces, Reactions, and Reaction Rates
The forces that act between particles regulate how they interact with other particles. For example, pions feel the strong force and do not penetrate as far in matter as do muons, which do not feel the strong force. This was the way those who discovered the muon knew it could not be the particle that carries the strong force—its penetration or range was too great for it to be feeling the strong force. Similarly, reactions that create other particles, like cosmic rays interacting with nuclei in the atmosphere, have greater probability if they are caused by the strong force than if they are caused by the weak force. Such knowledge has been useful to physicists while analyzing the particles produced by various accelerators.
The forces experienced by particles also govern how particles interact with themselves if they are unstable and decay. For example, the stronger the force, the faster they decay and the shorter is their lifetime. An example of a nuclear decay via the strong force is
with a lifetime of about The neutron is a good example of decay via the weak force. The process has a longer lifetime of 882 s. The weak force causes this decay, as it does all decay. An important clue that the weak force is responsible for decay is the creation of leptons, such as and None would be created if the strong force was responsible, just as no leptons are created in the decay of . The systematics of particle lifetimes is a little simpler than nuclear lifetimes when hundreds of particles are examined—not just the ones in the table given above. Particles that decay via the weak force have lifetimes mostly in the range of to s, whereas those that decay via the strong force have lifetimes mostly in the range of to s. Turning this around, if we measure the lifetime of a particle, we can tell if it decays via the weak or strong force.
Yet another quantum number emerges from decay lifetimes and patterns. Note that the particles , and decay with lifetimes on the order of s—the exception is whose short lifetime is explained by its particular quark substructure, implying that their decay is caused by the weak force alone, although they are hadrons and feel the strong force. The decay modes of these particles also show patterns—in particular, certain decays that should be possible within all the known conservation laws do not occur. Whenever something is possible in physics, it will happen. If something does not happen, it is forbidden by a rule. All this seemed strange to those studying these particles when they were first discovered, so they named a new quantum number strangeness, given the symbol in the table given above. The values of strangeness assigned to various particles are based on the decay systematics. It is found that strangeness is conserved by the strong force, which governs the production of most of these particles in accelerator experiments. However, strangeness is not conserved by the weak force. This conclusion is reached from the fact that particles that have long lifetimes decay via the weak force and do not conserve strangeness. All of this also has implications for the carrier particles, since they transmit forces and are thus involved in these decays.
Example 16.3 Calculating Quantum Numbers in Two Decays
(a) The most common decay mode of the particle is Using the quantum numbers in the table given above, show that strangeness changes by one, baryon number and charge are conserved, and lepton family numbers are unaffected.
(b) Is the decay allowed, given the quantum numbers in the table given above?
Strategy
In part (a), the conservation laws can be examined by adding the quantum numbers of the decay products and comparing them with the parent particle. In part (b), the same procedure can reveal if a conservation law is broken or not.
Solution for (a)
Before the decay, the has strangeness After the decay, the total strangeness is –1 for the plus 0 for the Thus, total strangeness has gone from –2 to –1 or a change of +1. Baryon number for the is before the decay, and after the decay the has and the has so that the total baryon number remains +1. Charge is –1 before the decay, and the total charge after is also Lepton numbers for all the particles are zero, and so lepton numbers are conserved.
Discussion for (a)
The decay is caused by the weak interaction, since strangeness changes, and it is consistent with the relatively long lifetime of the
Solution for (b)
The decay is allowed if charge, baryon number, mass-energy, and lepton numbers are conserved. Strangeness can change due to the weak interaction. Charge is conserved as . Baryon number is conserved, since all particles have . Mass-energy is conserved in the sense that the has a greater mass than the products, so that the decay can be spontaneous. Lepton family numbers are conserved at 0 for the electron and tau family for all particles. The muon family number is before and after. Strangeness changes from +1 before to 0 + 0 after, for an allowed change of 1. The decay is allowed by all these measures.
Discussion for (b)
This decay is not only allowed by our reckoning, it is, in fact, the primary decay mode of the meson and is caused by the weak force, consistent with the long lifetime.
There are hundreds of particles, all hadrons, not listed in Table 16.2, most of which have shorter lifetimes. The systematics of those particle lifetimes, their production probabilities, and decay products are completely consistent with the conservation laws noted for lepton families, baryon number, and strangeness, but they also imply other quantum numbers and conservation laws. There are a finite, and in fact relatively small, number of these conserved quantities, however, implying a finite set of substructures. Additionally, some of these short-lived particles resemble the excited states of other particles, implying an internal structure. All of this jigsaw puzzle can be tied together and explained relatively simply by the existence of fundamental substructures. Leptons seem to be fundamental structures. Hadrons seem to have a substructure called quarks. Quarks: Is That All There Is? explores the basics of the underlying quark building blocks.