Top Banner
The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective O. W. Greenberg University of Maryland Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility January 16, 2009
85

The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Jan 08, 2016

Download

Documents

Amara

The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective. O. W. Greenberg University of Maryland Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility January 16, 2009. Outline. I Particle physics prior to color II Personal influences III Discovery of hidden color charge IV Response of community - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

The Discovery of Color;A Personal Perspective

O. W. GreenbergUniversity of Maryland

Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

January 16, 2009

Page 2: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 2

OutlineI Particle physics prior to colorII Personal influencesIII Discovery of hidden color chargeIV Response of communityV Introduction of gauged SU(3) colorVI The period of dormancyVII Asymptotic freedom and the QCD

Lagrangian

Page 3: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 3

I Particle physics prior to color

Page 4: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 4

Particle physics prior to color

• The muon and pion had been discovered.

• Strange particles were found in cosmic rays.

– Lambda and Sigma hyperons.

– Kaon and antikaon, both charged and neutral.

– Xi, the cascade; the Omega minus.

– Tau-theta puzzle.

Page 5: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 5

Accelerators come online

• About 1½ V events per day in a bubble chamber on a medium-height mountain.

• Separated beams of ~106 K’s every 3 sec. at the AGS

• New problem: to avoid swamping the detectors.

• Major problem at the LHC.

Page 6: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 6

Paradox: copious production,

slow decay.

• Attempt to understand using known dynamics

• Potential barriers, possibly connected with spin could inhibit decays—did not work.

Page 7: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 7

Paradox: copious production,

slow decay, (continued).• A. Pais, associated production.

• Strangeness is conserved for rapid production by strong and electromagnetic interactions

• Violated for slow decay by weak interactions.

Page 8: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 8

Strangeness

• Gell-Mann, Nakano and Nishijima—displaced charge multiplets.

• Nishijima, Gell-Mann formula, Q=I3+Y/2.

• Weak interaction selection rules.

Page 9: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 9

K-zero, K-zero bar complex

• K1, K2 with different decay modes, lifetimes.

• Particle mixing effects, regeneration.

• Beautiful illustration of superposition principle of quantum theory.

Page 10: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 10

Tau-theta puzzle

• Tau→3 pi

• Theta→2 pi

• Same lifetimes

• Bruno Rossi—probably one particle

Page 11: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 11

Tau-theta puzzle, (continued)

• Dalitz analysis→different parities

• Parity was considered sacred

• The plot thickens

• The unexpected stimulates thought

Page 12: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 12

Tau-theta puzzle (continued)

• Suggestions by Lee and Yang

• Possible Interference Phenomena between Parity Doublets

• Question of Parity Conservation in Weak Interactions, 22 June 1956

Page 13: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 13

Tau-theta puzzle, (continued)

• Lee and Yang proposed parity doublets to explain this puzzle.

• Lee and Yang examined the data for conservation of parity, and found there was no evidence for parity conservation in weak interactions.

• Two solutions for one problem—can’t both be correct.

Page 14: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 14

Wigner’s comment

• Why should parity be violated before the rest of the Lorentz group?

• Why is that surprising?

• Discrete transformations are independent of the connected component of the Lorentz group.

Page 15: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 15

Parity violation was found earlier?

• Double scattering of beta decay electrons,

R.T. Cox, et al., PNAS 14, 544 (1928).

Redone with electrons from an electron gun with much higher statistics. No effect seen,

C.J. Davisson and L.H. Germer,

Phys. Rev. 33, 760 (1929).

Page 16: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

II Personal influences

Page 17: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 17

Divergent influences

• Very simple ideas used to classify newly discovered particles.

• Sophisticated techniques based on quantum field theory.

Page 18: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 18

Wightman, Axiomatic Quantum Field Theory

• Asymptotic condition in quantum field theory—formalization of LSZ scattering theory.

Purely theoretical—no numbers, except to label pages and equations.

• Operator-valued distributions, relative mathematical rigor.

Page 19: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 19

Interest in identical particles

• Why only bosons or fermions?

• Are there other possibilities?

• H.S. Green’s parastatistics (1953) as a generalization of each type.—

• Boson—paraboson, order p,

• Fermion—parafermion, order p;

• p=1 is Bose or Fermi.

Page 20: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 20

1962: Naples, Istanbul, SACLAY

• Axiomatic version of parastatistics with Dell’Antonio and Sudarshan in Naples.

• Presented at NATO summer school in Bebek, near Istanbul.

• Starting a collaboration with Messiah after giving a talk at SACLAY.

Page 21: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 21

Istanbul

• NATO summer school organized by Feza Gursey at the Robert College in Bebek

• Eduardo Caianiello, Sidney Coleman, David Fairlie, Shelly Glashow, Arthur Jaffe, Bruria Kauffman, Louis Michel, Giulio Racah, Eugene Wigner

Page 22: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 22

SACLAY with Messiah

• Albert Messiah, who fought with the Free French army of General Leclerc, was at SACLAY

• Entering SACLAY with guards on either side.

Page 23: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 23

Generalized statistics

• First quantized theory that allows all representations of the symmetric group.

• Second quantized theory: Theorems that show the generality of parastatistics—Green’s ansatz is not necessary.

Page 24: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

III Discovery of hidden color charge

Page 25: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 25

1964

• Crucial year for the discovery of quarks and color.

Page 26: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 26

Introduction of quarks

• Gell-Mann—”quarks”—current quarks.

• Zweig—”aces”—constituent quarks.

• Why only qqq and q-qbar?

• No reason in the original models.

Page 27: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 27

Background, Princeton, Fall 1964

• Relativistic SU(6), Gursey and Radicati

• Generalization of Wigner’s nonrelativistic nuclear physics idea to combine SU(2)I with SU(2)S to get an SU(4) to classify nuclear states.

• Gursey and Radicati combined SU(3)f with SU(2)S to get an SU(6) to classify particle states.

Page 28: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 28

SU(6) classifications

Page 29: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 29

Mesons

Page 30: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 30

Baryons

Page 31: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 31

Statistics paradox

• 56

• 70

• 20

Page 32: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 32

Magnetic moment ratio

• Beg, Lee, and Pais

Page 33: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 33

Page 34: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 34

Previous calculations of magnetic moments

• Complicated calculations using pion clouds failed.

• Nobody even realized that the ratio was so simple.

Page 35: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 35

Significance of the magnetic moment calculation

• A simple one-line calculation gave the ratio accurate to 3%.

• Very convincing additional argument for the quark model.

• Quarks have concrete reality.

Page 36: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 36

The spin-statistics theorem

• Particles that have integer spin

must obey Bose statistics

• Particles that have odd-half-integer spin must obey Fermi statistics.

Page 37: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 37

Generalized spin-statistics theorem

• Not part of general knowledge:

• Particles that have integer spin must obey parabose statistics and particles that have odd-half-integer spin must obey parafermi statistics.

• Each family is labeled by an integer p; p=1 is ordinary Bose or Fermi statistics.

Page 38: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 38

Parafermi quark model, 1964

• Suggested a model in which quarks carry order-3 parafermi statistics.

• This allows up to three quarks in the same space-spin-flavor state without violating the Pauli principle, so the statistics paradox is resolved.

• This leads to a model for baryons that is now accepted.

Page 39: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 39

Resolution of the statistics paradox

• Exhilarated—resolving the statistics problem seemed of lasting value.

• Not interested in higher relativistic groups; from O’Raifeartaigh’s and my own work I knew that combining internal and spacetime symmetries is difficult or impossible..

Page 40: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 40

Baryon spectroscopy

• Hidden parafermi (color) degree of freedom takes care of the required antisymmetry of the Pauli principle.

• Quarks can be treated as Bosons in the visible space, spin and flavor degrees of freedom.

Page 41: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 41

Table of excited baryons

• Developed a simple bound state model with s and p state quarks in the 56, L=0 and 70, L=1 supermultiplets.

Page 42: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 42

Page 43: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 43

Later developments of baryon spectroscopy

• OWG, Resnikoff

• Dalitz, and collaborators

• Isgur and Karl

• Riska and collaborators

Page 44: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

IV Response of community

Page 45: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 45

How did the physics community react?

• J. Robert Oppenheimer

• Steven Weinberg

Page 46: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 46

Gave Oppenheimer a preprint in Princeton

• Met him at a conference in Maryland

• “Greenberg, it’s beautiful!”

Page 47: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 47

Oppenheimer’s response, (continued)

• “but I don’t believe a word of it.”

Page 48: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 48

Weinberg, ”The making of the standard model”

• ”At that time I did not have any faith in the existence of quarks.” (1967)

Page 49: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 49

Sources of skepticism

• Quarks had just been suggested.

• Fractional electric charges had never been seen.

• Gell-Mann himself was ambiguous.

Page 50: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 50

Gell-Mann’s comments

• ”It is fun to speculate …if they were physical particles of finite mass (instead of purely mathematical entities as they would be in the limit of infinite mass)….A search … would help to reassure us of the non-existence of real quarks.”

Page 51: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 51

Skepticism, continued

• Assuming a hidden degree of freedom on top of the fractionally charged unseen quarks seemed to stretch credibility to the breaking point.

• Some felt that parastatistics was inconsistent.

Page 52: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Other attempts to resolve paradox

Page 53: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 53

Attempts to make a higher-dimensional relativistic theory

• U(6,6)• U(12)• GL(12,C)

• Pais, Salam, et al, Freund, et al.

• Pais, Rev. Mod. Physics 38, 215 (1966).

Page 54: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 54

No-go theorems

• Later work of Coleman and Mandula and of Haag, Lopuszanski and Sohnius showed that the only way to combine internal and spacetime symmetries in a larger group is supersymmetry.

Page 55: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 55

Attempt to avoid a new degree of freedom

• Dalitz preferred a complicated ground state that would avoid the statistics problem.

• As rapporteur Dalitz always put a model with Fermi quarks first.

• The first rapporteur who preferred the parastatistics model was Harari, Vienna, 1968.

Page 56: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 56

Arguments for a simple ground state

• General theorems lead to an s-wave ground state.

• The simplest antisymmetric polynomial in the quark coordinates is

Page 57: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 57

Arguments for a simple ground state

(continued) Then not clear what to choose for excited

states.

• The polynomial

vanishes because the coordinates are linearly dependent.

Adding pairs leads to unseen “exploding SU(3) states” that are not seen.

Page 58: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 58

Arguments for a simple ground state

(continued)

• Zeroes in the ground state wave function would lead to

– zeroes in the proton electric and magnetic form factors, which are not seen.

Page 59: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 59

Other models

• Baryonettes, in which 9 objects (baryonettes) compose a hadron.

• Many other models.

Page 60: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 60

If quarks are not “real?”

• If quarks are just mathematical constructs, then their statistics is irrelevant.

Page 61: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 61

V Introduction of gauged SU(3) color

Page 62: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 62

Nambu; Han-Nambu

• Explicit color SU(3)— Nambu, Han-Nambu, 1965;

• Used three dissimilar triplets in order to have integer charges.

• “Introduce now eight gauge vector fields which behave as (1,8), namely as an octet in SU(3)''.”

Page 63: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 63

Nambu’s paper in Weisskopf festschrift

• In Preludes in Theoretical Physics,

(North Holland, 1966).

• Discussed mass formula based on octet gluon exchange.

• Very overlooked paper

Page 64: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 64

Color & electromagnetism commute

• Identical fractional electric charges allow color & electromagnetism to commute.

• Allows color to be an exact, unbroken, symmetry.

• Crucial part of understanding of quantum chromodynamics, QCD.

Page 65: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 65

VI The period of dormancy

Page 66: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 66

Saturation

• Why are hadrons made from just two combinations,

Page 67: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 67

Work with Zwanziger, 1966

• Surveyed existing models, constructed new models to account for saturation.

• Only models that worked were parafermi model, order 3, and equivalent 3-triplet or color SU(3) models.

Page 68: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 68

Equivalence as classification symmetry

States that are bosons or fermions in parafermi model, order 3,

are in

1-to-1 correspondence with states that are color singlets in SU(3) color model.

Page 69: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 69

Gradual diffusion of ideas

Greenberg, Zwanziger, 1966 parastatistics for bosons and fermions

equivalent to color

Bjorken, scaling prediction, 1966, 1968 Feynman, parton model, 1969

Callan, Gross, spin of partons is ½, 1968

Page 70: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 70

Anomaly; electroproduction

• Adler, Bell-Jackiw, pi0 decay, 1969

• Cabibbo, Parisi, Testa,

e+ e- to hadrons,1970

Page 71: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 71

Relations and differences between the models

Page 72: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 72

‘t Hooft Wilson

• Quantization of gauge theory, ‘t Hooft, 1967

• Renormalization group, Wilson, 1971

Page 73: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 73

Conflicting issues

• Quarks, fiction, mathematical, confined, or real?

• Quark charges, integral or fractional?

Quark statistics, fermi, para, explicit color?

• Gluons, singlets or octets?

Page 74: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 74

Evidence for color

• 1964, O.W. Greenberg, baryon spectra

• 1969, S. Adler, J. Bell & R. Jackiw

explained pi to 2 gamma decay rate.

• From 1964 to 1969 baryon spectroscopy was the only experimental evidence for color.

Page 75: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

VII The discovery of asymptotic freedom and the writing of the QCD

Lagrangian

Page 76: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 76

Asymptotic freedom

D. Gross and, F. Wilczek

Phys. Rev. Lett. 30, 1343 (1973).

H.D. Politzer

Phys. Rev. Lett. 30, 1346 (1973).

Both write the QCD Lagrangian.

Reconciles quasi-free quarks of parton model with confined quarks of low-energy hadrons

Page 77: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 77

Advantages of the color octet

• H. Fritzsch, M. Gell-Mann and H. Leutwyler

Phys. Lett. 47B, 365 (1973).

Very influential paper.

Page 78: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 78

Properties that require gauge theory

• Confinement

• S. Weinberg, 1973

• D.J. Gross and F. Wilczek, 1973

• H. Fritzsch, M. Gell-Mann and H. Leutwyler, 1973

Page 79: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 79

Properties that require gauge theory (continued)

• Asymptotic freedom, Gross, Wilczek, 1973

Politzer, 1973

• Reconciles quasi-free quarks of the parton model with confined quarks of low-energy hadrons

Page 80: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 80

Properties that require gauge theory (continued)

• Running of coupling constants and precision tests of QCD.

• Jets in high-energy collisions.

Page 81: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Summary

Page 82: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 82

Two facets of strong interaction

1 Color as classification symmetry & global quantum number– parafermi model (1964)– was first introduction of color as global

quantum number.

Page 83: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 83

Two facets of strong interaction

2 SU(3) color as local gauge theory- Han-Nambu model (1965) was first

introduction of gauged SU(3) color.

Page 84: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 84

General acceptance of color

3 General acceptance required a surprizingly long dormancy period in which many new ideas were assimilated.

Page 85: The Discovery of Color; A Personal Perspective

Greenberg_Color 85

Concluding remarks

I have reviewed the discoveries and ideas connected with the color degree of freedom in particle physics.

I hope you can contribute to the next round of discoveries.