Exploring Quark Confinement: The Truth Behind the Force Between Quarks

In summary: I am looking for... well between a quark and something else.In summary, the force between quarks increases as they are pulled apart and there is not a well-defined potential between them. The concept of a linear potential has been proposed, but it does not fully explain the behavior of quarks. Further research is needed to better understand the potential between quarks and how it relates to the overall behavior of quarks within the nucleus.
  • #1
Bready
8
0
I've read conflicting definitions of what happens to the force between quarks as they're pulled apart. Do the gluon tubes form to maintain a constant force between them, or does the force actually increase as the distance between quarks increase?

Is there an easily defined potential between the quarks?
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
The force increases, but there is not a well-defined potential. For heavy quarks, there have been several attempts (of varying degrees of success) to create a potential, but for light quarks, a static potential is a poor approximation.
 
  • #3
The one I know of is a linear potential, which is pairwise acting between the quarks, like:
[tex]U_{ij}=k\cdot|r_i-r_j|[/tex]

where the constant should be of the order: [tex]k\sim m_pc^2/a[/tex] (mp=mass of proton) (its on Wikipedia I think also) and [tex]a=10^{-15}[/tex]m is the size of the proton.

But obviously it does not explain why quarks can only exist colorless or you must have three of them in a proton. Only phenomenologically it suggest that a quark will be so energetically enriched if you would try to separate it from the other, that it will generate a swarm of matter-antimatter, because of E=mc^2.

Also if you use this potential it would suggest that a quark in a proton could interact with another quark in another galaxy, and therefore the whole universe would explode because of this large potential energy.

I have an idea that you could derive some kind of potential from the QCD Lagrangian, in terms of the gluonic G-field (compare with electromagnetic field), where L is given by:
6324b3a9b6f386073c23c621cdb8830a.png


Classically you could obtain the potential Uij from an electron if you assume [tex]\Psi^2=\delta(\vec{r}-\vec{r}_j)[/tex] for electron j, and then solve for the EM-field, i.e. the electric potential from a point particle, know as the Coulomb interaction. Perhaps you could do a similar trick when solving the equations the gluon-fields (involving the eight Gell-Mann matrices)? Putting back this G into the equations for the dirac-like (Schrödinger) equation for the quark-fields one would then get an effective potential? Stright forward (but messy I guess)! Any have tried? Post the answer here then please...
 
  • #4
Doesn't that just lead to the non-Abelian version of Maxwell's equation? In other words, the Yang Mills equation?

[itex](\partial^{\mu}-igT^aA_a^\mu)^{\mu}F_{\mu\nu} = J_\nu [/itex]
 
  • #5
xepma said:
Doesn't that just lead to the non-Abelian version of Maxwell's equation? In other words, the Yang Mills equation?

[itex](\partial^{\mu}-igT^aA_a^\mu)^{\mu}F_{\mu\nu} = J_\nu [/itex]

Something like that, but are you sure about this form of the equation really? It seems like the equations you should get from
[itex]G_{\mu\nu,a}G^{\mu\nu}_a[/itex]

would be 8 coupled Helmholtz equations (if we set the 4-source J=Psi*Psi*g*... equal to zero). Look at: http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0210/0210398v1.pdf" at page 27 eq.2.24 (also 2.19).

If we ignore the self-interaction (we only consider interactions between different quarks) and consider time-independent solution for these 8 different A-fields (each A-field contain the 4 usual relativistic components, where A0=the scalar potential, which appears as the potential in the Schrödinger equation), we could maby find Green functions (8x8 matrix inverse Helmholzt-operator?...) to use on a Dirac-delta like source (matter density). Tell me if I'm wrong.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #6
I suspect that the last few messages are at too high a level to answer the OP's question.
 
  • #7
per.sundqvist said:
Something like that, but are you sure about this form of the equation really? It seems like the equations you should get from
[itex]G_{\mu\nu,a}G^{\mu\nu}_a[/itex]

would be 8 coupled Helmholtz equations (if we set the 4-source J=Psi*Psi*g*... equal to zero). Look at: http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0210/0210398v1.pdf" at page 27 eq.2.24 (also 2.19).

If we ignore the self-interaction (we only consider interactions between different quarks) and consider time-independent solution for these 8 different A-fields (each A-field contain the 4 usual relativistic components, where A0=the scalar potential, which appears as the potential in the Schrödinger equation), we could maby find Green functions (8x8 matrix inverse Helmholzt-operator?...) to use on a Dirac-delta like source (matter density). Tell me if I'm wrong.

Equation [2.19] is the Lagrangian of Yang-Mills theory, while equation [2.24] is the definition of a non-Abelian curvature tensor. So the formulas you refer to are more or less the definition of the curvature tensor. The equations I wrote down earlier are the (classical) equations of motion you get from a term [itex]\textrm{Trace}[G_{\mu\nu,a}G^{\mu\nu}_a][/itex] in the action. The "Helmholtz equations" follow by substituting the curvature tensor [itex]G_{\mu\nu}^a[/itex] by its definition in terms of the gauge field. The resulting equation is a mess though, since it's non-linear and the gauge fields do not commute. So the next step of inverting the operator is probably quite tricky.

If you want an introduction to some of these matters, I suggest the book by Baez: Gauge Fields, Knots and Gravity. It's full of errors, but fun to read.

Note that in the quantum case we cannot ignore the contribution coming from self-interaction. QCD has a coupling constant of order 1, meaning that higher order terms do not converge and so perturbation theory breaks down. In the high-energy limit this is less problematic, since the coupling constant is running and due to asymptotic freedom we enter a regime in which perturbation theory is indeed possible. The low-energy limit is still a big mess though.

@ Vanadium 50, sorry if this post is still too technical, but I couldn't refuse answering ;)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #8
To the OP...
Since we can't observe individual quarks it is difficult to say exactly what is going on inside the nuclei of atoms w.r.t. potentials. What seems to happen is that in trying to separate two quarks the energy quickly rises above the masses of quarks and new quark-anti-quark pairs are produced.

Remember quarks are elements of a Model... a damned good model but still the "reality" of them is not quite fixed in stone. Within the quark model we can test various potentials to see which fit with observations of nuclear collisions but we can't test them directly by measuring forces between individual quarks.
 
  • #9
jambaugh said:
Remember quarks are elements of a Model... a damned good model but still the "reality" of them is not quite fixed in stone.

Well, yes, but you could say the same thing about atoms.
 
  • #10
As Vanadium mentioned in his first post, the problem with potential is mostly that it is unsuitable to describe light quarks, since a potential is a non-relativistic construct. Potential models do a great job for heavy quarks, and non-relativistic QCD is a fairly well advanced path, but it does not address the confinement as it happens in our nucleons.
 
  • #11
humanino said:
Potential models do a great job for heavy quarks,

I'd say "good", rather than "great". The Bc mass predictions were all over the map, It's known that rather different looking potentials give the same energy levels in charmonium and bottomonium. So it does a good job, but IMHO, not anything one can write home about.
 
  • #12
xepma said:
Equation [2.19] is the Lagrangian of Yang-Mills theory, while equation [2.24] is the definition of a non-Abelian curvature tensor. So the formulas you refer to are more or less the definition of the curvature tensor. The equations I wrote down earlier are the (classical) equations of motion you get from a term [itex]\textrm{Trace}[G_{\mu\nu,a}G^{\mu\nu}_a][/itex] in the action. The "Helmholtz equations" follow by substituting the curvature tensor [itex]G_{\mu\nu}^a[/itex] by its definition in terms of the gauge field. The resulting equation is a mess though, since it's non-linear and the gauge fields do not commute. So the next step of inverting the operator is probably quite tricky.

If you want an introduction to some of these matters, I suggest the book by Baez: Gauge Fields, Knots and Gravity. It's full of errors, but fun to read.

Note that in the quantum case we cannot ignore the contribution coming from self-interaction. QCD has a coupling constant of order 1, meaning that higher order terms do not converge and so perturbation theory breaks down. In the high-energy limit this is less problematic, since the coupling constant is running and due to asymptotic freedom we enter a regime in which perturbation theory is indeed possible. The low-energy limit is still a big mess though.

@ Vanadium 50, sorry if this post is still too technical, but I couldn't refuse answering ;)

Ok ,thank you very much for this information, I will look it up some day. Have to understand the non-linearity and also try to get it down more explicit. If you compare self-interaction of electrons vs. electron-electron interaction it gives a very small correction (even if they look like to be of the same order), but you think the situation would be different with the quark-fields? Its not straight forward to understand the difference, but maby I try to find your reference.
/Per
 
  • #13
per.sundqvist said:
Ok ,thank you very much for this information, I will look it up some day. Have to understand the non-linearity and also try to get it down more explicit. If you compare self-interaction of electrons vs. electron-electron interaction it gives a very small correction (even if they look like to be of the same order), but you think the situation would be different with the quark-fields? Its not straight forward to understand the difference, but maby I try to find your reference.
/Per

The self-interactions are indeed the largest cause of the trouble (note that they arise due to the non-linearity). In the case of quantum electrodynamics the higher order corrections become smaller and smaller. In the case of QCD they become larger and larger. And since there are an infinite amount of them, there is no clue on where the total sum ends up...
 
  • #14
Vanadium 50 said:
Well, yes, but you could say the same thing about atoms.

Yea but it is not of the same level. You can isolate atoms, measure their free mass relative to unit charge and determine their acceleration in the presence of various fields. So to with nucleons but not so with quarks.
 

1. What is quark confinement?

Quark confinement is a fundamental principle in particle physics that states that quarks, which are the building blocks of matter, cannot be observed as isolated particles. They are always found in bound states with other quarks or antiquarks, forming composite particles such as protons and neutrons.

2. What is the force between quarks?

The force between quarks is known as the strong nuclear force. It is one of the four fundamental forces in nature and is responsible for holding quarks together to form particles. It is the strongest force among the four, but it only acts over a very short distance, which is why quarks are confined within particles.

3. How do scientists study quark confinement?

Scientists study quark confinement through a variety of methods, including theoretical models, particle accelerator experiments, and computer simulations. By studying the behavior of quarks and other subatomic particles, scientists can gain a better understanding of the nature of confinement and the strong nuclear force.

4. What is the relationship between quark confinement and the strong nuclear force?

The principle of quark confinement is closely related to the strong nuclear force. It is the strong nuclear force that binds quarks together, and the principle of confinement explains why quarks cannot be observed in isolation. Without confinement, the strong nuclear force would not be able to hold quarks together, and the universe as we know it would not exist.

5. Why is understanding quark confinement important?

Understanding quark confinement is crucial for our understanding of the fundamental forces and particles in the universe. It also has practical applications, such as in nuclear energy and technology. Furthermore, studying quark confinement can help us gain a deeper understanding of the laws of nature and how the universe works at the most fundamental level.

Similar threads

  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
11
Views
4K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
31
Views
4K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
3
Views
3K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
3
Views
3K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
17
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
2K
Back
Top