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Difference between revisions of "Meson"

(Determining Meson Composition)
(Examples)
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| style="height:20px; width:300px; text-align:center;" |'''Determine the composition of the π<sup>+</sup>'''
 
| style="height:20px; width:300px; text-align:center;" |'''Determine the composition of the π<sup>+</sup>'''
 
| style="height:20px; width:300px; text-align:center;" |'''Determine the composition of the K<sup>-</sup>'''
 
| style="height:20px; width:300px; text-align:center;" |'''Determine the composition of the K<sup>-</sup>'''

Revision as of 14:42, 18 July 2019

Key Stage 5

Meaning

Mesons are a type of hadron consisting of a quark-antiquark pair.

About Mesons

Mesons have a very short half life, decaying via the weak nuclear interaction or though the quark-antiquark pair annihilating one another.
Mesons consisting of the quarks; up-quark, down-quark and strange-quark are divided into two main categories; π-mesons and k-mesonss.
K-mesons have a strangeness of +1 or -1. However, π-mesons do not carry strangeness.
Mesons are affected by the:

Determining Meson Composition

NB: You do not need to memorise the exact composition of a given meson. However, you should be able to determine the quark composition given the charge and strangeness of the meson and by remembering the properties of the up-quark, down-quark and strange-quark.

Mesons can be shown in the following diagram:
MesonHexagon.png
The composition of these mesons can be determined given their charge and strangeness.

Examples

This table is for referencing the properties of the quarks.
Quark Charge Strangeness

Up-quark

\(q=+\frac{2}{3}\) \(S=0\)

Antiup-quark

\(q=-\frac{2}{3}\) \(S=0\)

Down-quark

\(q=-\frac{1}{3}\) \(S=0\)

Antidown-quark

\(q=+\frac{1}{3}\) \(S=0\)

Strange-quark

\(q=-\frac{1}{3}\) \(S=-1\)

Antistrange-quark

\(q=+\frac{1}{3}\) \(S=+1\)


Determine the composition of the π+ Determine the composition of the K-

Strangeness π+ has a strangeness of 0, therefore it contains no strange-quark or antistrange-quark.

Charge π+ has a positive charge. This can be achieved with one charge of \(+\frac{2}{3}\) (an up-quark) and \(+\frac{1}{3}\) (an antidown-quark).

Since \(+1 = +\frac{2}{3} + \frac{1}{3}\)

Therefore \(π^+ = u + \bar{d}\)

An up-antidown pair.

K- has a strangeness of -1, therefore it contains a strange-quark.

\(-1 = -\frac{1}{3} + x\)

K- has a negative charge. This can be achieved with one its strange-quark with a charge of \(-\frac{1}{3}\) and another charge of \(-\frac{2}{3}\) (an antiup-quark).

Since \(-1 = -\frac{1}{3} + -\frac{2}{3}\)

Therefore \(K^- = S + \bar{u}\)

A strange-antiup pair.