| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
foot model,foot model content,3d foot model,3d model of foot,anatomical... chirocity.com | Hydrocollator Parts -Fits Model SS2, Model M2, Model E1, Model E2, Model chattanoogachiropracticta... | Top Model | Male Model | Fitness Model Los Angeles | Fitness Model LA | shawnphillipstraining.com |
This is a detailed description of the standard model (SM) of particle physics. It describes how the leptons, quarks, gauge bosons and the Higgs particle fit together. It gives an outline of the main physics that the theory describes, and new directions in which it is moving. It might be helpful to read this article along with the companion overview of the standard model.
[edit] A chiral gauge theoryThis article uses the Dirac basis instead of the more appropriate Weyl basis for describing spinors. The Weyl basis is more convenient because there is no natural correspondence between the left-handed and right-handed fermion fields other than that generated dynamically through the Yukawa couplings after the Higgs field has acquired a vacuum expectation value (VEV). The chirality projections of a Dirac field ψ are
where γ5 is the the fifth gamma matrix. These are needed because the SM is a chiral gauge theory, ie, the two helicities are treated differently. [edit] Right handed singlets, left handed doubletsUnder the weak isospin SU(2) the left-handed and right-handed chiralities have different charges. The left-handed particles are weak-isospin doublets (2), whereas the right-handed are singlets (1). The right-handed neutrino does not exist in the standard model. (However, in some extensions of the standard model it does.) The up-type quarks are charge 2/3 quarks: u, c, t. The charge -1/3 quarks (d, s, b) are called down-type quarks. The charged leptons (e, μ, τ) are denoted by l, and their corresponding neutrinos by ν. The theory contains
There is no right-handed neutrino in the SM. This is essentially by definition. When the Standard Model was written down, there was no evidence for neutrino mass. Now, however, a series of experiments including Super-Kamiokande have indicated that neutrinos indeed have a tiny mass. This fact can be simply accommodated in the Standard Model by adding a right-handed neutrino. This, however, is not strictly necessary. For example, the dimension 5 operator This pattern is replicated in the next generations. We introduce a generation label i = 1,2,3 and write ui to denote the three generations of up-type quarks, and similarly for the down type quarks. The left-handed quark doublet also carries a generation index, QiL, as does the lepton doublet, EiL. [edit] Why this?What dictates this form of the weak isospin charges? The coupling of a right-handed neutrino to matter in weak interactions was ruled out by experiment long ago. Benjamin Lee and J. Zinn-Justin, and Gerardus 't Hooft and Martinus Veltman in 1972 suggested the inclusion of left and right-handed fields into the same multiplet. This possibility has been ruled out by experiment. This leaves the construction given above. For the leptons, the gauge group can then be [edit] The gauge field partThe gauge group has already been described. Now one needs the fields. The non-Abelian gauge field strength tensor in terms of the gauge field We need to introduce three gauge fields corresponding to each of the subgroups
[edit] The gauge field LagrangianThe gauge part of the electroweak Lagrangian is The standard model Lagrangian consists of another similar term constructed using the gluon field tensor. [edit] The W, Z and photonThe charged W bosons are the linear combinations Z bosons (Zμ) and photons (Aμ) are mixtures of W3 and B. The precise mixture is determined by the Weinberg angle θW:
with The electric charge Q, weak isospin T3 (aka Tz) and weak hypercharge YW are related by Note: usually weak hypercharge is scaled so that which is a formally equivalent to Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula. [edit] The charged and neutral current couplingsThe charged currents These charged currents are precisely those which entered the Fermi theory of beta decay. The action contains the charge current piece It will be discussed later in this article that the W boson becomes massive, and for energy much less than this mass, the effective theory becomes the current-current interaction of the Fermi theory. However, gauge invariance now requires that the component W3 of the gauge field also be coupled to a current which lies in the triplet of SU(2). However, this mixes with the U(1), and another current in that sector is needed. These currents must be uncharged in order to conserve charge. So we require the neutral currents The neutral current piece in the Lagrangian is then There are no mass terms for the fermions. Everything else will come through the scalar (Higgs) sector. [edit] Quantum chromodynamicsLeptons carry no colour charge; quarks do. Moreover, the quarks have only vector couplings to the gluons, ie, the two helicities are treated on par in this part of the standard model. So the coupling term is given by Here Ta stands for the generators of SU(3) colour. The mass term in QCD arises from interactions in the Higgs sector. [edit] The Higgs fieldOne requires masses for the W, Z, quarks and leptons. Recent experiments have also shown that the neutrino has a mass. However, the details of the mechanism that give the neutrinos a mass are not yet clear. So this article deals with the classic version of the SM (circa 1990s, when neutrino masses could be neglected with impunity). [edit] The Yukawa termsGiving a mass to a Dirac field requires a term in the Lagrangian which couples the left and right helicities. A complex scalar doublet (charge 2) Higgs field, (φ + ,φ0) is introduced, which couples through the Yukawa interaction where Gu,d are 3×3 matrices of Yukawa couplings, with the ij term giving the coupling of the generations i and j. [edit] Symmetry breakingThe Higgs part of the Lagrangian is where λ > 0 and μ2 > 0, so that the mechanism of spontaneous symmetry breaking can be used. In a unitarity gauge one can set φ + = 0 and make φ0 real. Then [edit] Including neutrino massAs mentioned earlier, in the SM classic there are no right-handed neutrinos. The same mechanism as the quarks would then give masses to the electrons, but because of the missing right-handed neutrino the neutrinos remain massless. Small changes can also accommodate massive neutrinos. Two approaches are possible—
See seesaw mechanism. These alternatives can easily lead beyond the SM. [edit] The GIM mechanism and the CKM matrixMain articles: GIM mechanism and CKM matrix The Yukawa couplings for the quarks are not required to have any particular symmetry, so they cannot be diagonalized by unitary transformations. However, they can be diagonalized by separate unitary matrices acting on the two sides (this process is called a singular value decomposition). In other words one can find diagonal matrices This matrix V is called the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix. The matrix is usually not diagonal, and therefore causes mixing of the quark flavours. It also gives rise to CP-violations in the SM. [edit] See also
[edit] References and external links
|
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |