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Standard Model
Standard Model
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Standard Model of
particle physics is a theory which describes the
strong,
weak, and
electromagnetic
fundamental forces, as well as the fundamental particles that make up all
matter. It is a
quantum field theory, and consistent with both
quantum mechanics and
special relativity. To date, almost all experimental tests of the three
forces described by the Standard Model have agreed with its predictions.
However, the Standard Model is not a
complete theory of fundamental interactions, primarily because it does not
describe gravity.
The Standard Model contains both
fermionic and
bosonic
fundamental particles. Fermions are particles which possess half-integer
spin and obey the
Pauli exclusion principle, which states that no fermions can share the same
quantum state. Bosons possess integer spin and do not obey the Pauli
exclusion principle. Informally speaking, fermions are particles of matter and
bosons are particles that transmit forces. For a detailed description of the
differences between fermions and bosons, see the article on
identical particles.
In the Standard Model, the theory of the
electroweak interaction (which describes the weak and electromagnetic
interactions) is combined with the theory of
quantum chromodynamics. Each of these theories are
gauge field theories, meaning that they model the
forces between
fermions by
coupling them to bosons which mediate (or "carry") the forces. The
Lagrangean
of each set of mediating bosons is
invariant
under a transformation called a
gauge transformation, so these mediating bosons are referred to as gauge
bosons. The bosons in the Standard Model are:
-
Photons,
which mediate the
electromagnetic interaction.
-
W+
and W- and
Z0
bosons, which mediate the
weak nuclear force
-
Eight species of
gluons, which
mediate the
strong nuclear force. Six of these gluons are labelled as pairs of
"colors" and "anti-colors" (for example, a gluon can carry "red" and
"anti-green".) The other two species are a more complicated mix of colors and
anti-colors.
-
The
Higgs
bosons, which induce
spontaneous symmetry breaking of the gauge groups and are responsible for
the existence of
inertial mass.
It turns out that the gauge transformations of the gauge
bosons can be exactly described using a
unitary
group called a "gauge group". The gauge group of the strong interaction is
SU(3), and the gauge group of the
electroweak interaction is
SU(2)×U(1).
Therefore, the Standard Model is often referred to as
SU(3)×SU(2)×U(1). The Higgs boson is the only boson in the theory which is
not a gauge boson; it has a special status in the theory, and has been the
subject of some controversy.
Gravitons,
the bosons believed to mediate the
gravitational interaction, are not accounted for in the Standard Model.
There are twelve different types, or "flavours", of fermions
in the Standard Model. Amongst the
proton,
neutron, and
electron,
those fermions which constituent the vast majority of
matter, the
Standard Model considers only the electron a fundamental particle. The proton
and neutron are aggregates of smaller particles known as
quarks, which are
held together by the strong interaction. The fundamental fermions in the
Standard Model are:
Left handed fermions in the Standard Model
| Fermion |
Symbol |
Electromagnetic charge |
Weak charge (as a representation)* |
Weak isospin |
Hypercharge |
Strong charge (color) (as a representation)* |
Mass** |
| Generation 1 |
|
Left Handed Electron |
e |
-1 |
2 |
-1/2 |
-1/2 |
1 |
0.511 MeV |
|
Left Handed Electron neutrino |
νe |
0 |
2 |
+1/2 |
-1/2 |
1 |
< 50 eV |
|
Left Handed Positron |
ec |
1 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0.511 MeV |
|
Left Handed Electron antineutrino |
|
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
< 50 eV |
|
Left Handed Up quark |
u |
+2/3 |
2 |
+1/2 |
+1/6 |
3 |
~5 MeV *** |
|
Left Handed Down quark |
d |
-1/3 |
2 |
-1/2 |
+1/6 |
3 |
~10 MeV *** |
|
Left Handed antiUp antiquark |
uc |
-2/3 |
1 |
0 |
-2/3 |
|
~5 MeV *** |
|
Left Handed antiDown antiquark |
dc |
+1/3 |
1 |
0 |
+1/3 |
|
~10 MeV *** |
| Generation 2 |
|
Left Handed Muon |
μ |
-1 |
2 |
-1/2 |
-1/2 |
1 |
105.6 MeV |
|
Left Handed Muon neutrino |
νμ |
0 |
2 |
+1/2 |
-1/2 |
1 |
< 0.5 MeV |
|
Left Handed antiMuon |
μc |
1 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
105.6 MeV |
|
Left Handed Muon antineutrino |
|
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
< 0.5 MeV |
|
Left Handed Charm quark |
c |
+2/3 |
2 |
+1/2 |
+1/6 |
3 |
~1.5 GeV |
|
Left Handed Strange quark |
s |
-1/3 |
2 |
-1/2 |
+1/6 |
3 |
~100 MeV |
|
Left Handed antiCharm antiquark |
cc |
-2/3 |
1 |
0 |
-2/3 |
|
~1.5 GeV |
|
Left Handed antiStrange antiquark |
sc |
+1/3 |
1 |
0 |
+1/3 |
|
~100 MeV |
| Generation 3 |
|
Left Handed Tau |
τ |
-1 |
2 |
-1/2 |
-1/2 |
1 |
1.784 GeV |
|
Left Handed Tau neutrino |
ντ |
0 |
2 |
+1/2 |
-1/2 |
1 |
< 70 MeV |
|
Left Handed antiTau |
τc |
1 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
1.784 GeV |
|
Left Handed Tau antineutrino |
|
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
< 70 MeV |
|
Left Handed Top quark |
t |
+2/3 |
2 |
+1/2 |
+1/6 |
3 |
178 GeV |
|
Left Handed Bottom quark |
b |
-1/3 |
2 |
-1/2 |
+1/6 |
3 |
~4.7 GeV |
|
Left Handed antiTop antiquark |
tc |
-2/3 |
1 |
0 |
-2/3 |
|
178 GeV |
|
Left Handed antiBottom antiquark |
bc |
+1/3 |
1 |
0 |
+1/3 |
|
~4.7 GeV |
* - These are not ordinary
Abelian
charges which can be added together but labels of
Group representations of
Lie groups.
** - Mass is really a coupling between a
left handed fermion and a right handed fermion. For example, the mass of an
electron is really a coupling between a left handed electron and a right handed
electron, which is the
antiparticle of a left handed
positron.
Also neutrinos show large mixings in their mass coupling, so it's not accurate
to talk about neutrino masses in the
flavor basis or to suggest a left handed electron neutrino and a right
handed electron neutrino have the same mass as this table seems to suggest.
*** - What is actually measured
experimentally are the masses of
baryons and
hadrons and
various cross section rates. Since quarks can't be isolated because of
QCD
confinement, the quantity here is supposed to be the mass of the quark at
the
renormalization scale of the
QCD
phase transition. In order to compute this quantity, physicists have to set
up a
lattice model and try out various masses for the quarks until the model
comes up with a close fit with experimental data. Since the masses of the first
generation quarks are significantly below the QCD scale, the uncertainties here
are pretty large. In fact, current QCD
lattice models seem to suggest a significantly lower mass of these quarks
from that of this table.
The fermions can be arranged in three "generations", the
first one consisting of the electron, the up and down quarks, and the electron
neutrino.
All ordinary matter is made from first generation particles; the higher
generation particles decay quickly into the first generation ones and can only
be generated for a short time in high-energy experiments. The reason for
arranging them in generations is that the four fermions in each generation
behave almost exactly like their counterparts in the other generations; the only
difference is in their masses. For example, the electron and the muon both have
half-integer spin and unit electric charge, but the muon is about 200 times more
massive.
The electron and the electron-neutrino, and their
counterparts in the other generations, are called "leptons".
Unlike the other fermions, they do not possess a quality called "color", and
therefore their interactions (weak and electromagnetic) fall off rapidly with
distance. On the other hand, the strong force between quarks gets stronger with
distance, so that quarks are always found in colorless combinations called
hadrons. These
are either fermionic
baryons composed of three quarks (the proton and neutron being the most
familiar example) or bosonic mesons composed
of a quark-antiquark pair (such as pions). The mass of
such aggregates exceeds that of the components due to their
binding energy.
The Standard Model predicted the existence of W and Z bosons,
the gluon, the top quark and the charm quark before these particles had been
observed. Their predicted properties were experimentally confirmed with good
precision.
The Large Electron-Positron collider at CERN tested various
predictions about the decay of Z bosons, and found them confirmed.
Although the Standard Model has had great success in
explaining experimental results, it has never been accepted as a complete theory
of fundamental physics. This is because it has two important defects:
-
The model contains 19 free parameters, such as particle
masses, which must be determined experimentally (plus another 10 for neutrino
masses). These parameters cannot be independently calculated.
-
The model does not describe the gravitational interaction.
Since the completion of the Standard Model, many efforts have
been made to address both problems.
One attempt to address the first defect is known as
grand unification. The so-called grand unified theories (GUTs) hypothesized
that the SU(3), SU(2), and U(1) groups are actually subgroups of a single large
symmetry group. At high energies (far beyond the reach of current experiments),
the symmetry of the unifying group is preserved; at low energies, it reduces to
SU(3)×SU(2)×U(1) by a process known as
spontaneous symmetry breaking. The first theory of this kind was proposed in
1974 by Georgi and
Glashow, using SU(5) as the unifying group. A distinguishing characteristic of
these GUTs is that, unlike the Standard model, they predict the existence of proton
decay. In 1999,
the
Super-Kamiokande
neutrino observatory reported that it had not detected proton decay,
establishing a lower limit on the proton half-life of 6.7× 1032
years. This and other experiments have falsified numerous GUTs, including SU(5).
In addition, there are cosmological reasons why the standard
model is believed to be incomplete. Within it,
matter and
antimatter
are symmetric. While the preponderance of matter in the universe can be
explained by saying that the universe just started out this way, this
explanation strikes most physicists as inelegant. Furthermore, the Standard
Model provides no mechanism to generate the
cosmic inflation that is believed to have occurred at the beginning of the
universe, a consequence of its omission of gravity.
The
Higgs
boson, which is predicted by the Standard Model, has not been observed as of
2002.
The first experimental deviation from the Standard Model came
in 1998, when
Super-Kamiokande published results indicating
neutrino oscillation. This implied the existence of non-zero
neutrino
masses since massless particles travel at the speed of light and so do not
experience the passage of time.
The Standard Model did not accommodate massive neutrinos,
because it assumed the existence of only "left-handed" neutrinos, which have
spin aligned counter-clockwise to their axis of motion. If neutrinos have
non-zero mass, they necessarily travel slower than the
speed of light. Therefore, it would be possible to "overtake" a neutrino,
choosing a reference frame in which its direction of motion is reversed without
affecting its spin (making it right-handed).
Since then, physicists have revised the Standard Model to
allow neutrinos to have mass, which make up additional free parameters beyond
the initial 19. Confusingly, this new model is still called by the same name as
the old one; the Standard Model.
A further extension of the Standard Model can be found in the
theory of
supersymmetry, which proposes a massive supersymmetric "partner" for every
particle in the conventional Standard Model. Supersymmetric particles have been
suggested as a candidate for explaining dark
matter.
See also:
Theory of everything
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