tg85
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I have question that I've been thinking about for some time now, and that I can't get my head around. I an experimentalist without education in quantum field theory, and my quantum mechanics introduction courses were a long time ago, so bear with me please.
As far as I understand, neutral kaons oscillate between {K}^0 and \bar{K}^0, and this process comes about because of box-type Feynman diagrams. They decay either very quickly as {K}_\text{S} or after a long lifetime as {K}_\text{L}. This is sometimes explained as: The short-lived component of the wave-function decays quickly, after which only the long-lived component remains.
Does that mean that at the time the particle is created, it is not created as a {K}_\text{S} or {K}_\text{L}, and its lifetime is not fixed? As far as I know, the particles are produced, e.g., as {K}^0 (a flavor eigenstate?), which can be written as a mixture of {K}_\text{S} and {K}_\text{L}. These two have different masses.
My problem is: why does this not contradict energy conservation? I guess it's a quantum effect, having to do with not knowing the particle's mass until it is measured. But then, I don't understand how it is produced in the first place. For producing a particle, I need energy equal to its mass. If, say, I look at the decay K^*(892) \to K^0 \pi^0, knowing the K^*(892) mass and the pion's energy and momentum should let me calculate the kaon's mass. So how can I have a chance of measuring different masses later (even though the difference is on the scale of μeV)? Does the particles' width/mass uncertainty give the necessary wiggle room? Or would an exact measurement of the pion "collapse" the state and determine whether I have a {K}_\text{S} or {K}_\text{L}?
The same question bugs me with neutrinos, which oscillate between flavors but are assumed to have (as far as I know) slightly different masses.
I'm sorry for the long post. Here are a few additional points that confuse me, mainly concerning nomenclature:
As far as I understand, neutral kaons oscillate between {K}^0 and \bar{K}^0, and this process comes about because of box-type Feynman diagrams. They decay either very quickly as {K}_\text{S} or after a long lifetime as {K}_\text{L}. This is sometimes explained as: The short-lived component of the wave-function decays quickly, after which only the long-lived component remains.
Does that mean that at the time the particle is created, it is not created as a {K}_\text{S} or {K}_\text{L}, and its lifetime is not fixed? As far as I know, the particles are produced, e.g., as {K}^0 (a flavor eigenstate?), which can be written as a mixture of {K}_\text{S} and {K}_\text{L}. These two have different masses.
My problem is: why does this not contradict energy conservation? I guess it's a quantum effect, having to do with not knowing the particle's mass until it is measured. But then, I don't understand how it is produced in the first place. For producing a particle, I need energy equal to its mass. If, say, I look at the decay K^*(892) \to K^0 \pi^0, knowing the K^*(892) mass and the pion's energy and momentum should let me calculate the kaon's mass. So how can I have a chance of measuring different masses later (even though the difference is on the scale of μeV)? Does the particles' width/mass uncertainty give the necessary wiggle room? Or would an exact measurement of the pion "collapse" the state and determine whether I have a {K}_\text{S} or {K}_\text{L}?
The same question bugs me with neutrinos, which oscillate between flavors but are assumed to have (as far as I know) slightly different masses.
I'm sorry for the long post. Here are a few additional points that confuse me, mainly concerning nomenclature:
- Is it true that the {K}^0 is a flavor eigenstate, but not a mass eigenstate?
- Does that mean that I cannot assign a mass to it at all? Then again, the {K}^0 and \bar{K}^0 are the only particle-antiparticle pair here, so does the principle of the two having equal masses not apply here?
- Does the strong interaction always produce flavor eigenstates?
- How do the terms in these groups relate to each other? (I'm not expecting an answer here, I just want to demonstrate my confusion):
- Kaons
- {K}^0 and \bar{K}^0
- {K}_1 and {K}_2 (often used in explanations of CP violation as the not-quite CP eigenstates)
- {K}_\text{S} and {K}_\text{L}
- Eigenstates:
- Mass eigenstate
- CP eigenstate
- Strong eigenstate
- Weak eigenstate
- Flavor eigenstate
- Strangeness eigenstate
- Isospin eigenstate
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