Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation

In summary: The "confinement hypothesis": no free quarks or gluons. This is supported by experiment.No one has rigorously proven it, or even shown that it is mathematically possible to prove it."Lattice QCD" is a way to numerically simulate QCD on a computer, starting from a flat-spacetime lattice and doing integrals over the fields at each point. This is a way to do nonperturbative QCD calculations, including confirmation of the confinement hypothesis. But one doesn't have to believe the confinement hypothesis. It's an extrapolation into unknown territory.There are other high-energy behaviors that might happen, such as a phase transition to a quark-gluon plasma (QGP
  • #1
SteDolan
14
0
I'm a little confused about what is actually meant by the JP = 1/2 + octet.
I'm pretty sure it means the particles must have spin 1/2 in the ground state (l=0) and an even parity but what I'm confused over is the absence of an sss, uuu or ddd state. I understand that this would give I3 = 3/2 but why couldn't we have this but maintain spin 1/2?

I'm sure I'm just missing something obvious here, thanks a lot in advance for any help :D
 
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  • #2
It's a fermion, so the total wavefunction has to be antisymmetric. uuu is antisymmetric in color, so it needs to be symmetric in spin: e.g. 3/2.
 
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  • #3
SteDolan said:
I'm a little confused about what is actually meant by the JP = 1/2 + octet.
I'm pretty sure it means the particles must have spin 1/2 in the ground state (l=0) and an even parity but what I'm confused over is the absence of an sss, uuu or ddd state. I understand that this would give I3 = 3/2 but why couldn't we have this but maintain spin 1/2?
Let me give it a try. The overall wavefunction of the three fermions must be totally antisymmetric.
It's a product (space)(spin)(flavor)(color).

space is ℓ = 0, ℓ' = 0, which is totally symmetric
color is colorless, which is totally antisymmetric
if the flavor is uuu, that is totally symmetric

Together these imply that the remaining part, the spin part, must be totally symmetric, which requires it to be s = 3/2.
 
  • #4
Thanks! That makes sense, I didn't think about the wavefunction symmetry at all.
 
  • #5
What's what in JP:
J = total spin
P = parity

As to the light-baryon octet, it's a rather long story.

Quarks have color, flavor, spin, and orbit states.

Since they have spin 1/2, they follow Fermi-Dirac statistics, meaning that their combined wavefunction is antisymmetric. They are antisymmetric in color:
(rgb + gbr + brg - rbg - bgr - grb)/sqrt(6)

making them symmetric in the other states combined together. Orbit states we can ignore for the longer-lived baryons; the quarks are all in ground-state orbits. That leaves flavor and spin.

I'll consider only the three light flavors of quark: u, d, s, because those were the first ones discovered.

At first thought, one might want to have a state that's symmetric in flavor and spin separately.

For flavor, one gets uuu, uud, udd, ddd, uus, uds, dds, uss, dss, sss -- 10 flavor states.

The spin is all the quarks' spins parallel, giving spin 3/2. Thus, one ends up with 10 spin-flavor states. This is the light-baryon decuplet.


But we want an octet, so we must consider other possibilities. We must consider a system where spin and flavor separately have mixed symmetry, but combining into full symmetry.

The simplest case to examine is the case of all three quarks having different flavors: uds

Let's see how the u and d spins combine.
Parallel, symmetric: spin 1
Antiparallel, antisymmetric: spin 0

Add the s spin, and use angular-momentum addition. One gets three states:
Spin 3/2 -- we already did that
Spin 1/2, u and d parallel
Spin 1/2, u and d antiparallel

So we get not one, but two uds states.

If two of the quarks have the same flavor, then those quarks must have symmetric, parallel spins, giving total spin 1. That means that there is only one spin-1/2 state.

If all three quarks have the same flavor, then no spin-1/2 state is possible.

We thus get these states: uud, udd, uus, 2(uds), dds, uss, dss

These 8 states are the light-baryon octet that we were looking for.

This includes two uds baryons: the Lambda0 and the Sigma0. The Sigma0 is close in mass to the Sigma+ (uus) and the Sigma- (dds), meaning that the u and d quarks are symmetric in all three particles. The Lambda0's mass is more difference, because the QCD equivalent of the magnetic moment is somewhat less for the strange quark than for the up and down quarks.
 
  • #6
Thanks a lot for such a detailed reply! That really helps my understanding of wave function symmetry, especially in the 3 particle case.

Is there a reason the baryons are antisymmetric in color? Couldn't we have the wave function symmetric in color and antisymmetric in flavor and spin?
 
  • #7
SteDolan said:
Is there a reason the baryons are antisymmetric in color? Couldn't we have the wave function symmetric in color and antisymmetric in flavor and spin?
It's because, as I said above, physical states must be colorless. Colorless means they are invariant under rotations in the SU(3) color symmetry.

A quark by itself has anyone of three colors, in fact a quark state transforms under SU(3) as a 3-vector Va in the color space. What you need to do is couple three quarks together to form an invariant. Obviously the only way to do this is to use the antisymmetric symbol εabc. Thus the baryon wavefunction is like εabcUaVbWc, which is totally antisymmetric under interchange of the quarks.
 
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  • #8
One can certainly imagine such states, but we don't observe evidence of them. When we try to make color nonsinglets at high energies, nonsinglets like quarks or gluons, they make jets of hadrons as they separate.

Calculation of the QCD "charge" or coupling-constant strength g reveals that it has this behavior when it is relatively small:

g2 ~ b/log(p/p0) ~ b/log(r0/r)

where b is somewhere around 1, p is the interaction momentum, and r is the interaction distance. Note that p*r ~ 1 (uncertainty principle). This is from one-loop calculations; for better results, one needs more loops, of course. But when one does such calculations, one has good agreement with experiment for interaction momenta greater than a few GeV.

g becomes large at around p ~ p0 ~ a few hundred MeV and r ~ r0 ~ a fermi (10-15 m), and one must do lattice calculations. One finds there also that the effective coupling constant increases with distance.

Back to energies much greater than a GeV, these correspond to distances much less than a fermi. When quarks and gluons start getting about a fermi apart, they start making quark and gluon pair production and combination of quarks and gluons into hadrons. Thus, jets of hadrons.


All this has led to a theoretical concept called "color confinement". Looking at size scales greater than about 1 fermi, a state must be a color singlet, even if it must be composite in order to do so.
 

1. What is the Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation?

The Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation is a system used to describe the properties and behavior of subatomic particles, specifically quarks. It is based on the fundamental theory of quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and helps to explain the structure and interactions of hadrons, which are particles made up of quarks.

2. How is the Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation structured?

The Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation uses a combination of letters and numbers to represent the properties of quarks. The letters refer to the flavor (type) of the quark, while the numbers represent the spin, isospin, and hypercharge of the quark.

3. What are the different types of quarks in the Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation?

There are six types of quarks in the Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation: up, down, charm, strange, top, and bottom. These are also known as the fundamental or elementary quarks and are the building blocks of matter.

4. How does the Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation explain the properties of particles?

The Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation helps to explain the properties of particles by describing their internal structure and interactions. For example, the combination of different quarks and their properties can determine the mass, charge, and other characteristics of a particle.

5. What are the limitations of the Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation?

The Quark Model Spectroscopic Notation is limited in its ability to fully explain the behavior and properties of subatomic particles. It does not account for the effects of relativity and other phenomena such as confinement and color coherence. Additionally, it does not provide a complete understanding of the strong nuclear force, which is responsible for the interactions between quarks.

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