How Many Mesons, Baryons, and Leptons Exist?

  • Thread starter Thread starter KaneOris
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Baryons Mesons
KaneOris
Messages
113
Reaction score
0
Does anyone know how many there are, also how many are just thoeretical. We know of the proton, neutron, and election, but do we know that Tau and Muons exist? Also does anyone think we'll keep finding more
 
Physics news on Phys.org
all particles in the standard model have been confirmed experimentally. Muons, taus etc. The only thing is the higgs and sparticles which are entirely theoretical.
 
Kane,

Check out this very nice site on the different elementary particles in the Standard Model described by Quantum Field Theory...

http://pdg.web.cern.ch/pdg/particleadventure/frameless/startstandard.html

regards
marlon :approve:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Most of these elementary particles were discovered before the quark model was created. I remember seeing a discusssion on PBS with Oppenheimer about all the various mesons and speculating about the existence of some underlying theory to explain what was then considered a mess.
 
Yes, the muon and tau were both discovered before any quark theories
 
Toponium is a hadron which is the bound state of a valance top quark and a valance antitop quark. Oversimplified presentations often state that top quarks don't form hadrons, because they decay to bottom quarks extremely rapidly after they are created, leaving no time to form a hadron. And, the vast majority of the time, this is true. But, the lifetime of a top quark is only an average lifetime. Sometimes it decays faster and sometimes it decays slower. In the highly improbable case that...
I'm following this paper by Kitaev on SL(2,R) representations and I'm having a problem in the normalization of the continuous eigenfunctions (eqs. (67)-(70)), which satisfy \langle f_s | f_{s'} \rangle = \int_{0}^{1} \frac{2}{(1-u)^2} f_s(u)^* f_{s'}(u) \, du. \tag{67} The singular contribution of the integral arises at the endpoint u=1 of the integral, and in the limit u \to 1, the function f_s(u) takes on the form f_s(u) \approx a_s (1-u)^{1/2 + i s} + a_s^* (1-u)^{1/2 - i s}. \tag{70}...
Back
Top