What is Quark: Definition and 255 Discussions

A quark () is a type of elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nuclei. All commonly observable matter is composed of up quarks, down quarks and electrons. Owing to a phenomenon known as color confinement, quarks are never found in isolation; they can be found only within hadrons, which include baryons (such as protons and neutrons) and mesons, or in quark–gluon plasmas. For this reason, much of what is known about quarks has been drawn from observations of hadrons.
Quarks have various intrinsic properties, including electric charge, mass, color charge, and spin. They are the only elementary particles in the Standard Model of particle physics to experience all four fundamental interactions, also known as fundamental forces (electromagnetism, gravitation, strong interaction, and weak interaction), as well as the only known particles whose electric charges are not integer multiples of the elementary charge.
There are six types, known as flavors, of quarks: up, down, charm, strange, top, and bottom. Up and down quarks have the lowest masses of all quarks. The heavier quarks rapidly change into up and down quarks through a process of particle decay: the transformation from a higher mass state to a lower mass state. Because of this, up and down quarks are generally stable and the most common in the universe, whereas strange, charm, bottom, and top quarks can only be produced in high energy collisions (such as those involving cosmic rays and in particle accelerators). For every quark flavor there is a corresponding type of antiparticle, known as an antiquark, that differs from the quark only in that some of its properties (such as the electric charge) have equal magnitude but opposite sign.
The quark model was independently proposed by physicists Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig in 1964. Quarks were introduced as parts of an ordering scheme for hadrons, and there was little evidence for their physical existence until deep inelastic scattering experiments at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in 1968. Accelerator experiments have provided evidence for all six flavors. The top quark, first observed at Fermilab in 1995, was the last to be discovered.

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  1. liometopum

    Beta Decay Neutron: Proton, Electron Mass Difference

    Here is a beta decay related question: Masses are from Particle Data Group (http://pdg.lbl.gov/2008/listings/contents_listings.html) Neutron has udd quarks. Mass is approximately 2.5, 5, 5 MeV. Total 12.5 MeV Products are: 1. Proton. uud quarks. Mass approx 2.5, 2.5, 5 MeV 2. Electron...
  2. C

    What is quark content given strangeness and mass

    Homework Statement This is from Advanced Physics by Adams and Allday, section 9.11, question 2 c. What is the quark content of each of the following particles? [snip] c) Λ baryon, strangeness = -1, mass 1.12 GeV/c2? Homework Equations No equations. Table of masses at...
  3. C

    Exploring the Intricacies of Quark Spin in Physics

    ive been reading a bit about this and its blowing my mind a bit lol. To think that the spin of a quark has something to do with whether or not something will hapen and the opposite reaction will co-exist in another universe sounds crazy. When it says spin does it mean rotational spin sort of...
  4. W

    Exploring Charmness and Strangeness of Quarks

    Ive noticed when we are viewing the quark table in particular its charmness, and strangeness we know; c quark has a charmness of +1, but the strangeness of an s quark = -1. I would like to better understand why. Is it not thought that the s quark has a strangness of +1?
  5. G

    Quark Gluon Plasma - Exploring Uses and Effects

    Hi: Quark gluon plasma is created at very high temperature, right?. Could you please explain me what happens to Quark gluon plasma after it is cooled?, is it possible to use quark gluon plasma to create nucleons? Thanks
  6. A

    Why Does the Top Quark Move More Sluggishly Than the Bottom Quark?

    The Question: In their search for the top quark, physicists thought that another particle called the W might decay while stationary into one top and one bottom quark. They predicted “The resulting top quark moves off relatively sluggishly on one side while the lighter bottom quark travels more...
  7. humanino

    Searches for Quark Gluon Plasma and Color Glass Condensate

    Dear PFers, could somebody provide an update on the searches for quark gluon plasma, the color glass condensate interpretation, and/or their conceptual basis ? I have found a few big documents, if somebody knows where to find the latest review it would be most welcome. I would like a preview...
  8. O

    Quark composition of Neutral Antikaon?

    I need to determine the quark composition of the neutral antikaon. Below is a copy of my multiple choice question. http://img166.imageshack.us/img166/2025/quarksec1.jpg Here is my attempt at a solution: First, a neutral antikaon is a meson. This means it must be composed of a...
  9. J

    What is the current due to the circulation of the u quark?

    Homework Statement The neutron is a particle with zero charge. Nonetheless, it has a nonzero magnetic moment with z-component 9.66 * 10^-27 A*m^2. This can be explained by the internal structure of the neutron. A substantial body of evidence indicates that a neutron is composed of three...
  10. A

    Hadron Mass vs Quark Mass: Exploring the Binding Energy Mystery

    Why are Hadrons so much heavier than their quark components? For example, the components of the proton have a combined mass of 12 MeV but the proton is ~950 MeV. If we look at binding energy: B=\sum{m_{components}}-m_{whole} so the Binding Energy must be a large negative number. Is this right...
  11. E

    Q&A: Understanding Quark Gluon Plasma

    I'm having a problem understanding QGP. Hadrons are bound states of quarks which interact by interchanging colour. Now, as I understood we haven't observed free quarks because the force rises by distance and that force is really strong. As I read in QGP quarks and gluons are not bound, you can't...
  12. N

    Quark Structure of Particles & Antiparticles: Rules & Order

    I am asking this question because I did not get it clarified in any of the books I have read. What is the rule for having the quark structure of an antiparticle given the structure of the particle?Is it always OK to put bar on the quark symbols of the corresponding particle? Specifically,I...
  13. A

    Baryons and their quark constituents

    I have been given an assingment where I must show that the properties of the up, down and strange quarks follow from the properties of the baryons. I am just wondering why delta +1 (a baryon) has a spin 3/2 when it is, like a proton, composed of up, up, down. Aren't spins additive? and how do...
  14. X

    Exploring Quark Forces: Attraction & Distance

    I know that when quarks move away from the centre of a particle the attraction force on them increases. How and why does this happen? What happens if using an extreme amount of energy you do move it away to a decent distance? If the force gets stronger as it moves away, is there any force when...
  15. S

    What causes a quark to change its flavor?

    So what makes a down quark turn up? And why does this create a boson?
  16. jal

    Tetraneutrons, quark confinement

    I am searching for Experimental evidence for minimum length and structures. femto, (f), 10^-15, femtometer, (1015 fm = 1 m), radius of a proton ~ 1 fm http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/nucl-th/pdf/0302/0302048v2.pdf Can Modern Nuclear Hamiltonians Tolerate a Bound Tetraneutron? Steven C...
  17. L

    Exploring Quark Binding Energy: Technological and Theoretical Possibilities

    I am aware that quarks can not be separated due to the strong force growing with distance. My question is, instead of pulling them apart can you "remove" the energy between them and therefore separate them. There are two ways I have thought about this. One, the technological question of can...
  18. N

    Real photo of an atom or maybe quark?

    Homework Statement I'm making a sort of physics presentation because I'm graduating high-school soon and my physics so far sucks and the low grades won't let me go in university... anyway I need to make it look more scientific, not like an illustrated book for kids. That's why I need some REAL...
  19. R

    How Do Quark Matrix Masses Relate to Einstein's E=mc^2?

    Recently I have managed to understand some basics of the Standard Model and even have written some note about it (see http://arxiv.org/abs/math.DG/0605709" ). The quark masses there are matrix quantities. Two tripples of quarks (the upper row - one from each generation and the lower row - one...
  20. B

    So the top quark is pure mass, with no internal structure, as heavy as a gold nuclei?

    The gold nucleus has an atomic mass of 197 with 79 protons and 118N and 79 electrons. The top quark has about the same mass, but no internal structure. It's just a particle with pure mass. Why would a structure of pure mass and nothing internal decay?
  21. T

    Strange Quarks, Quark Stars, & Black Holes

    I have been wondering something. Assuming strange quark stars exist (and I know that this is still too early to call), is it possible that a black hole might just be an overgrown quark star that has gone over the required mass (say from feeding on a nearby star or a collision)? Is there any...
  22. R

    Calculating Quark Gravity in Proton and Antiproton: Equations and Formula

    I know it would be a small force, but what is the equation to calculate the gravity between the three quarks in the proton (uud), and then the antiproton ?
  23. K

    Conflicting Teachings concerning Quark confinement

    I've heard things from lineraly rising potential to linearly rising force. Since the change is over distance... which is it? If dF/dx is constant, then energy, being the product of force times distance, would increase at twice the exponential. That would mean that potential does not rise...
  24. Mk

    The Quark Thread: Answers to Questions

    The "Quark" thread The "Quark" thread seemed to have been indiscriminately locked (I appreciate a last post to say why). I still have question about quarks. From what marlon and arivero said, it sounds like quarks have not been "seen." Is this so? Why does the color force and strong force...
  25. wolram

    Can a single quark exist in isolation ?

    Can a single quark exist in isolation ?
  26. M

    Exploring the Peculiarity of Quark Masses

    Is there anything in fundamental theory to explain the peculiarity of quark masses? The up and down have about the same mass, however for the other two pairs, there are big disparities, i.e. charm much bigger than strange and top much bigger than bottom.
  27. W

    Massive and massless quark renormalization in QCD

    In modify minimal subtract sheme,using dimension regulation, I calculate the the renormalization constant of massive quark and massless quark,get the same result.But in some papers,they are different. Is there a review or any book on MS renormalization,that giving all the self energy and...
  28. Schrodinger's Dog

    What is the reason for the specific number of quarks in baryons and fermions?

    You'll have to excuse my ignorance I am fairly new to physics, having only the sort of predegree level of maths knowledge and a few ideas. How do we come to the conclusion that baryons have 3 quarks and fermions have 2? Is there a mathematical reason for this? I assume this is proven or...
  29. C

    Quark Confinement Period, a Question.

    Greetings, I've read that Quarks became confined and able to bind into baryons like protons and neutrons in the Period of ~10*-12seconds -to- ~10*-5seconds. Its been stated that as the average photon's energy in this period (kT) dropped below about 1 GeV, that quarks could finally bind to...
  30. K

    Quark composition of nucleons : dimensionality ?

    As a layperson, I read that nuclei components nucleons(n,p) are normally built up of three quarks. But does that number of particle not define only a plane (outside the radii of quarks themselves)...Are nucleon having only a surface (or a volume wiht 1 negligeable length) and not a volume ...
  31. E

    What Is a Quark? Proton Composition & Size

    Is it true you have 3 quarks that make up a proton...but one quark is bigger than a proton? How come? Can it be said that a quark is the smallest size that a sub-atomic particle can ever be broken down to? :rofl:
  32. M

    Measuring Particle Mass: Is Charge a Constant Property?

    I refer to the high energy collisions of particles. The more energy you put in, the more mass you get out... Or at least heavier particle/antiparticle pairs. But, I only know of measuring the angles of trajectory around a magnetic fields and using the mass/charge ratio assuming the charge is...
  33. S

    Exploding and Collapsing Stars: The Mystery of Dark Quark Bodies

    The fate of all stars seems to be they either exploded or collapse because they run out of energy. Could it be that black holes are black because the do not produce any photons. They would be dark quark bodies because they are just burned out stars. I was wondering if this makes any sense...
  34. N

    Why is the top quark so massive?

    The energy equivalence of the mass of a proton is 938.27 MeV; that of a top quark is published as being 173800 MeV. I thought that quarks were contained within nucleons and anti-nucleons. Can anyone explain this phenomenon? Cheers, Jim
  35. S

    Top quark and matter-antimatter

    up quark and down quark An up quark has a smaller mass than a down quark. Is it possible that an up quark is made from 2 antidowns with energy being released?
  36. G

    Are Quarks Really the Building Blocks of Matter?

    What's some of the maths and experiment that supports the theory that neutrons and protons and elctrons are made up of 3 or 2 quarks, why not 8 5 or 4 or 100, what tells us that they exists and that there are so many flavours, what masses do these quarks have and does this tally with the masses...
  37. wolram

    Ew quark/anti quark pops into existence

    According to this page in wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark when quarks are pulled from one another at some point a new quark/anti quark pops into existence. What would happen if a lump of quark matter was captured by a black hole, Could it produce an endless stream of new quarks...
  38. R

    Quark confinement in early universe

    When the universe expanded so that the quarks in it reached a separation of 10^-15 metres, did quark confinement create new quarks,and if so, what proportion of the quarks that galaxies are made of, were created by confinement?
  39. D

    Understanding Quark Colours and Particle Interactions

    Hello, trying to get my head around the (MANY) particles I'm learning about at the moment. First question is about quark colours. I understand the different types of quark (up , down, strange, charmed, bottom and top) but I don't understand how the colours work, why is it necesary for the...
  40. M

    Critical distance for quark exchange

    I was wondering if their is a critical distance for quark exchange. say you have a proton and a neutron in the nucleus. When the quarks get very close to each other they exchange from the proton to the netron. they can no longer tell the difference between its up quark and the neutron's up quark...
  41. dextercioby

    What is a Quark Field? Answers & Explanation

    What is a quark field?? According to the SM of particles and interractions,a quark (any of 'em) is the quanta of a quark field.So what is a quark field?? Is it: a)an irreductible representation of the SU(3)-color symmetry group, b)an irreductible representation of the SU(6)-flavor...
  42. D

    Quark Constituents: Scientists Figure Out & Recognize New Quarks

    how do scientists figure out the quark constituents of particles, and recognize new quarks when they do?
  43. K

    Tracking Colour & Charge: Investigating Quark Behaviour

    Individual quarks change colour as time passes. Since colour is physically tied to electric charge - colour and electric charge travel through space together - why doesn't a change in colour change the electric charge of the quark somehow? And when a muon loses mass and becomes an electron...
  44. K

    Nuclear fission produces quark mass

    "nuclear" fission produces quark mass A top quark is roughly 32 times more massive than a bottom quark. A charm quark is roughly 8 times more massive than a strange quark. And a down quark is roughly 2 times more massive than an up quark. In nuclear fission 2 neutrons yield 4 neutrons...
  45. E

    How Do Neutrinos, Leptons, and Quarks Relate in Vacuum Theory?

    On the bottom of http://elasticity2.tripod.com/ I have added two supplements that explain the relationship between e neutrino, electron, positron and u quark. This is up for discussion in Theory development :Vacuum theory; mass and charge
  46. T

    Quark Spins: +2/3 and -1/3 Charge

    what are the spin of quarks with +2/3 and -1/3 charge? need info urgently
  47. I

    5 Quark Particle "Discovered": What Does It Mean?

    Apparently, a subatomic particle with 5 quarks has been "discovered"... :wink: (not quite confirmed) http://physicsweb.org/article/news/7/7/1 How do scientists determine the number of quarks in a particle? Is it true that a subatomic particle must have at least 3 quarks? why? how is it...
  48. K

    Calculating Quark Radius from Mass Equation

    When I use the following equation which assumes quarks are spheres of charge and compressing the spheres creates mass (by doing work): mass of quark = integral of ( k q ^2 / r^2 c^ 2 ) d r and input masses from the mass equation I arrived at by trial and error a few months ago in which n...
  49. R

    Understanding Quark Confinement in Hadrons

    Could someone please clarify my problem with the subject of quark confinement within hadrons. I understand that from the potential that more and more energy is required to further separate two quarks (or quark anti-quark) and think i understand why that at a point a quark anti-quark pair is...
  50. K

    Equation that predicts quark masses

    The standard model can't predict the rest masses of all known and unknown particles - something is missing from it.I have found an equation by trial and error that predicts all quark masses: EQUATION THAT PREDICTS QUARK REST MASSES The following equation generates the masses, in...
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