Hadron

Hadron

In particle physics, a hadron (Pron-en|ˈhæːdɹɒn, from the _el. ἁδρός, "hadrós", ", ") Audio|En-us-hadron.ogg|listen (.ogg format) is a bound state of quarks. Hadrons are held together by the strong force, similar to how atoms are held together by the electromagnetic force. There are two subsets of hadrons; baryons and mesons. Of which the most well known baryons are protons and neutrons.

Introduction

According to the quark model [http://pdg.lbl.gov/2008/reviews/quarkmodrpp.pdf C. Amsler et al., "Quark Model in Review of Particle Physics", Phys. Lett. B667, 1 (2008)] ] , the properties of hadrons are primarily determined by their so-called "valence quarks". For example, a proton is composed of two up quarks (each with electric charge +2/3) and one down quark (with electric charge -1/3). Adding these together yields the proton charge of +1. Although the constituent quarks also carry color charge (nothing to do with visual color), a property of the strong nuclear force called color confinement requires that any composite state carry no residual color charge. That is, hadrons must be colorless. There are two ways to accomplish this: three quarks of different colors, or a quark of one color and an anti-quark carrying the corresponding anti-color. Hadrons based on the former are called baryons while those based on the latter are called mesons.

Like all subatomic particles, hadrons are assigned quantum numbers corresponding to the representations of the Poincaré group: "JPC(m)", where "J" is the spin quantum number, "P", the intrinsic (or P) parity, and "C", the charge conjugation, or C parity, and the particle four-momentum, "m", (i.e., its mass). Note that the mass of a hadron has very little to do with the mass of its valence quarks; rather, due to mass–energy equivalence, most of the mass comes from the large amount of energy associated with the strong nuclear force. Hadrons may also carry flavor quantum numbers such as isospin (or G parity), and strangeness. All quarks carry an additive, conserved quantum number called baryon number ("B"), which is +1/3 for quarks and -1/3 for anti-quarks. This means that baryons --which are groups of three quarks-- have "B=1" while mesons have "B=0".

Hadrons have excited states known as resonances. Each ground-state hadron may have several excited states; hundreds of resonances have been observed in particle physics experiments. Resonances decay extremely quickly (within about 10−24 seconds) via the strong nuclear force.

In other phases of QCD matter the hadrons may disappear. For example, at very high temperature and high pressure, unless there are sufficiently many flavors of quarks, the theory of quantum chromodynamics (QCD) predicts that quarks and gluons will interact weakly and will no longer be confined within hadrons. This property, which is known as asymptotic freedom, has been experimentally confirmed at the energy scales between a GeV and a TeV [http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ex/0606035 S. Bethke, "Experimental tests of asymptotic freedom", Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. 58, 351 (2007)] ] .

Baryons

All known baryons are made of three valence quarks, and are therefore fermions. They have baryon number "B=1", while anti-baryons (composed of three anti-quarks) have "B=-1". In principle, some baryons could be composed of further quark-antiquark pairs in addition to the three quarks (or antiquarks) that make up basic baryons. Baryons containing a single additional quark-antiquark pair are called pentaquarks. Evidence for these states was claimed by several experiments in the early 2000s, though this has since been refuted [http://pdg.lbl.gov/2008/reviews/pentaquarks_b801.pdf C. Amsler et al., "Pentaquarks" by C. G. Wohl in "Review of Particle Physics", Phys. Lett. B667, 1 (2008)] ] . No evidence of baryon states with even more quark-antiquark pairs has been found.

Mesons

Mesons are bosons composed of a quark-antiquark pair. They have baryon number "B=0". Examples of mesons commonly produced in particle physics experiments include pions and kaons. The former also play a role holding atomic nuclei together via the residual strong force. Hypothetical mesons have more than one quark-antiquark pair; a meson composed of two of these pairs is called a tetraquark. Currently there is no evidence of their existence. Mesons that lie outside the quark model classification are called exotic mesons. These include glueballs and hybrid mesons (mesons bound by excited gluons).

See also

* Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
* Leptons
* List of particles
* Standard model
* Subatomic particles
* Quark star

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • hadron — HADRÓN, hadroni, s.m. (fiz.) Particulă cu masă superioară sau egală cu protonul supusă unei interacţiuni electromagnetice şi gravitaţionale foarte slabe. – Din engl., fr. hadron. Trimis de gall, 13.09.2007. Sursa: DEX 98  hadrón s. n. Trimis de… …   Dicționar Român

  • hadron — [ adrɔ̃ ] n. m. • 1965; du gr. hadros « abondant » et de (électr)on ♦ Phys. nucl. Particule à interaction forte (contrairement au lepton), formée de quarks soudés par des gluons, et possédant un spin isotopique. ⇒ particule; gluon, parton, quark …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • hadron — n. (Physics) any elementary particle that interacts strongly with other particles. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • hádron — s. m. [Física] Partícula composta de quarks unidos por interação forte. • [Brasil] Plural: hádrones ou hádrons.   ‣ Etimologia: francês hadron   ♦ Grafia em Portugal: hadrão …   Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa

  • *hadron — ● hadron nom masculin (grec hadros, fort, et électron) Particule susceptible d interactions fortes. (On distingue les baryons [exemple : le nucléon] et les mésons [exemple : le pion].) …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • hadron — (n.) 1962, from Gk. hadros thick, bulky, the primary sense, also strong, great; large, well grown, ripe, from PIE root *sa to satisfy. With elementary particle suffix ON (Cf. on). Coined in Russian as adron …   Etymology dictionary

  • hadron — hàdrōn m <G hadróna> DEFINICIJA fiz. subatomska čestica koja interagira jakim interakcijama, hadroni nisu elementarne čestice i sastoje se od kvarkova i/ili antikvarkova, dijele se na mezone i barione, mezoni su hadroni cjelobrojnog spina… …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • hadron — [had′rän΄] n. [Gr hadros, thick, strong + ON] Particle Physics any of a class of subatomic particles, including the proton, neutron, meson, and hyperon, that consist of a combination of quarks and antiquarks: see also STRONG INTERACTION hadronic… …   English World dictionary

  • Hadron — Schéma de l intérieur d un proton : deux quarks up et un down. Leur charge de couleur évolue dynamiquement par l échange de gluons. Un hadron est un composé de particules subatomiques régi par l interaction forte. Dans le Modèle Standard de… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Hadron — Hadronen Fermionen halbzahliger Spin Bosonen ganzzahliger Spin Baryonen 3 Quarks Mesonen 1 Quark + 1 Antiquark Antibaryonen 3 Antiquarks …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”