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In 1947 the British
physicists Rochester and Butler observed new particles (see article).These
particles came in two forms: a neutral one that decayed into the pions p+
and p-
, and a positively charge one
that decayed into a muon m+
(heavy anti-electron)
and a photon. Later a negative one was observed.
Many similar particles
have since been found, both of 'mesonic' (quark and anti-quark ) and baryonic
(triple quark) types . They are collectively know as strange particles.
The surprising thing
about these particles was that their life time
was so long. Typically the decay times due to strong interactions
are very fast, of the order of a femto second (10-15 s). The
decay time of the K mesons was about 10-10 s, much more typical
of a weak decay. It was discovered that in weak interactions strangeness
(strangely!) was not conserved! Kaons decay by many mechanisms (that you
do NOT have to recall - but should not be surprised to see quoted in examinations
questions. For example when a K+, the lightest particle to contain a strange
quark, decays to a p+, which is comprised of
ordinary quarks only, the strange quark is converted into a down
quark. This is forbidden in any direct process by the Standard Model.
So it is no wonder they are called strange!
Using accelerators
it was found that strange particles are typically
formed in pairs. This mechanism was called 'associated production',
and is highly suggestive of an additive conserved quantity, such as charge,
which was called strangeness and
allocated a quantum number.
Strange particles:
- contain an
's' quark or antiquark
- have surprisningly
long lives (100,000 times longer than expected!)
- are produced
in pairs which suggests that they have an additive conserved quality.
- Neutral kaons
and anti neutral kaons are created by the strong interaction but
decay via the weak interaction (W-Bosons) - see here
- they decay
by a variety of mechanisms and 'strangeness' is not conserved when
a weak interaction occurs (eg. the S into an UP means that no strange
quarks result when strange particles decay)
- the only one
you need to know about in the kaon
Links for additional
reading on strange particles:
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2002/bnlpr011002.htm
http://kaon.kek.jp/
http://www.cerncourier.com/main/article/42/2/2
http://www.calstatela.edu/faculty/kaniol/f2000_lect_nuclphys/lect2/kaon_decay.htm
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