The Rest of the Yukawa's Theory

In summary: Yukawa theoryIn summary, my nuclear physics professor got mad because I claimed there is no pi meson in the nucleus and that yukawa's theory is not completely correct. I plugged in factors of hbar and c to get an exchange particle mass of 100 MeV for the pion, but a pion has a mass of about 140 MeV. I claim that yukawa's theory is not completely correct, but it does a remarkably good job. More careful calculations get even better results.
  • #1
ophase
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I had a conversation with my nuclear physics professor and she got mad bcs of me. I claimed there's no pi meson in the nucleus and i know a calculation (which is completed by Yukawa) that predicts an exchange particle mass about 100 MeV but a pion has a mass about 140 MeV. So I claimed that yukawa's theory is not completely correct.

Where did i go wrong?? She talks something about shell ?? what did she mean? what's the complete story of Yukawa's theory?
 
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  • #2
Yukawa's particle should have a mass ROUGHLY of order the size of the proton (in natural units). This is about 1 fm. Plugging in factors of hbar and c, this corresponds to a mass of about 130 MeV. And the pion is 135 and 139 MeV. Sounds really good for a one-significant-figure, back-of-the-envelope calculation to me!

I don't know what your prof got "mad"! But Yukawa's theory does a remarkably good job. More careful calculations get even better results. Of course, at the end of the day, the "REAL" answer is non-perturbative QCD, but we don't know how to calculate with that.
 
  • #3
Yukawa theory

Here's the original proof by Yukawa

Yukawa potential [tex]U(r)=\frac{-g^{2}_{s}}{4\pi}\frac{e^{-r/a}}{r}[/tex]
gs: Yukawa constant

Yukawa proposed that nuclear force has to be like elektromagnetic force. So the potential above need to satisfy second green equation with a source term:

[tex](\nabla^{2}-\frac{1}{a^{2}})U(r)=g^{2}_{s}\delta(r)[/tex]

Yukawa generalized the equation for non-static states.

[tex](\nabla^{2}-\frac{d^{2}}{c^{2}dt^{2}}-\frac{1}{a^{2}})U(r,t)=0[/tex] (*)

This equation is also relativistical invariant. Then Yukawa quantized the potential:

[tex]U(r)=\frac{-g^{2}_{s}}{4\pi}\frac{e^{ipr/\hbar-iEt/\hbar}}{r}[/tex]

Now we put that potential expression in the second green equation (*) and we get:

[tex]\frac{E^{2}}{c^{2}\hbar^{2}}=\frac{p^{2}}{\hbar^{2}}+\frac{1}{a^{2}}[/tex]

[tex]E^2 =p^2c^2+\frac{c^{2}\hbar^{2}}{a^{2}}[/tex]

Here the last term should be the mass term:
[tex]m^{2}_{u}c^{4}=\frac{c^{2}\hbar^{2}}{a^{2}}[/tex]
If we assume a=2 fm, then the exchange particle mass is mu= 100 MeV.

In 1947 Pion discovered at 140 MeV and it's proved that there is no meson in the nucleus according to Yukawa theory.

I don't know the rest of that story. Probably someone made a correction about the calculation above. Any ideas??
 
  • #4
ophase said:
If we assume a=2 fm, then the exchange particle mass is mu= 100 MeV.

In 1947 Pion discovered at 140 MeV and it's proved that there is no meson in the nucleus according to Yukawa theory.

I don't know the rest of that story. Probably someone made a correction about the calculation above. Any ideas??

Where did your assumption for "a" come from? Why is it 2.0000000 fm?

You only have 1 sig fig, ophase, so "computing" [itex]m_\pi=100[/itex] GeV is what we physicists call WONDERFUL agreement! Being off by less than a factor of 2 - that's a GREAT bit of predicting!
 
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  • #5
Yukawa theory

a is the average nuclear radius.

So you'r saying that a wonderful agreement. But physicists made predictions for W,Z bosons as exchange particle for weak interaction. And yukawa expanded his theory for W,Z bosons.
Whati want to know is Why did the physicists make predictions about W,Z bosons??
We have a great theory above... So why bother for W,Z bosons which are quite massive (approx90GeV)?
 
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  • #6
ophase said:
a is the average nuclear radius.

So you'r saying that a wonderful agreement. Somehow people made predictions for W,Z bosons as exchange particle for weak interaction.
Why did the physicists make predictions about W,Z bosons then??
We have a great theory above... So why bother for W,Z bosons?
Why we can't observe pions inside the nucleus ??

If we assume a=2 fm, then the exchange particle mass is mu= 100 MeV.


That is wrong duder, a is not the mean nuclear radius nor is the mean nuclear radius 2fm. The thing one did is as blechman told you, that you get that the force carrier has mass of approx 132MeV/c^2

"In 1947 Pion discovered at 140 MeV and it's proved that there is no meson in the nucleus according to Yukawa theory." Is just bull-talking.

The meson exchange potentials are good models, the nucleons are colorless so the force carriers sholud also be colourless (gluons have colour). But this is an approximation due to the fact that we don't know how to calculate these things yet (see blechmans posts).

W and Z bosons are for the WEAK interaction. So I don't understand your:
"Why did the physicists make predictions about W,Z bosons then??
We have a great theory above... So why bother for W,Z bosons? "

This just follows from quantization of fields etc..

Also the pions in the pion exchange potential are virtual.

You should trust and learn from your teacher, if you don't understand these things now, come back to them later when you have more knowledge.
 
  • #7
ophase said:
a is the average nuclear radius.

So you'r saying that a wonderful agreement. But physicists made predictions for W,Z bosons as exchange particle for weak interaction. And yukawa expanded his theory for W,Z bosons.
Whati want to know is Why did the physicists make predictions about W,Z bosons??
We have a great theory above... So why bother for W,Z bosons which are quite massive (approx90GeV)?

The W and Z bosons were proposed 30 years later in an attempt to explain the weak nuclear force, as malawi_glenn says. Pions were proposed (long before we knew about gluons) to explain the strong nuclear force. These are quite different beasts. SNF keeps the protons bound in a nucleus, while the WNF mediates beta-decay (for example).

The thing you have to remember, ophase, is that if you only have one sig fig in your calculation, then you are only allowed one sig fig result! Electroweak has MANY sig figs (we've done VERY careful measurements of beta decay, for example) so by the time W and Z were proposed in the 60's, we could pin them down theoretically much better than Yukawa could his pions back in the 30's.
 
  • #8
malawi_glenn said:
Also the pions in the pion exchange potential are virtual.

This is true, but it's not relevant. The Yukawa potential is still [itex]e^{-m_\pi r}/r[/itex] with [itex]m_\pi=[/itex]140 MeV (in natural units), regardless of the offshellness of the pion. That's why I didn't bring it up.
 
  • #9
Yukawa theory

blechman said:
This is true, but it's not relevant. The Yukawa potential is still [itex]e^{-m_\pi r}/r[/itex] with [itex]m_\pi=[/itex]140 MeV (in natural units), regardless of the offshellness of the pion. That's why I didn't bring it up.

That's what I'm trying to say from the beginning. We know the feymann diagram for d quark --> u quark + W(-) boson (Beta decay) and u quark --> d quark + W(+) boson (positron emisson)

And that means there is virtual pion exchange between nucleons. But in nuclear physical aspect, that also means "there is no meson" in a nucleus as long as the pion is virtual.

On the other hand, in field theory aspect, i don't know how to explain after calculating a pion has approx 140 MeV mass (above) while a W boson has 80 GeV mass !

Do you know any theoretical predictions for W boson mass ?
 
  • #10
I don't understand any of that, ophase. Saying "there's no mesons int he nucleus as long as the pion is virtual" is like saying "there are no photons in a beam of light!" They're there!

What's REALLY happening is - forget pions! There are quarks and gluons and they are exchanging NON-perturbatively. We have no idea how to calculate with such a theory, so the pion language makes more sense (this concept goes under the name "Effective Field Theory"). But this explanation is very nice, and quantitatively accurate. So, it's "right".

Calculating the mass of the mesons comes from experiment. We know the mass of the W-boson is so large because we measure beta-decay. This measurement gives us the Fermi coupling constant, which is related to 1/m_W^2. This is opposed to the DIFFERENT phenomena of nuclear bounding energy, which proceeds (effectively) through a Yukawa interaction with a range 1/m_pi. We measure these quantities, and extract the masses from these measurements. And they do a great job!
 
  • #11
Yukawa theory

I cannot forget mesons bcs i wrote it on the exam paper...:)) I'd rather talked about in quark scale but that's just where I'm in conflict with nuclear physicists. They don't talk in quark scale.

Saying "there's no mesons in the nucleus as long as the pion is virtual" I meant in quark scale you can explain virtual pion exchange between nucleons with W,Zbosons instead of creating a Pion. And you'r right there are quarks and gluons. So we don't need a pion ! And it means "No mesons in a nucleus".
But it cost me 5 points in the exam. So am i wrong now??
 
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  • #12
And i said yukawa theory is not complete bcs Yukawa predicted wrong that all 4 fields interacts via a common mediating quantum field. Because in 1935, Yukawa didn't have any ideas about gauge theories that will unify the three field.

All the weakness of Standard Model comes from Yukawa theory: S.Symmetry breaking, Higgs mechanism, Massive bosons, hierarchy problem...etc.
 
  • #13
ophase said:
I cannot forget mesons bcs i wrote it on the exam paper...:)) I'd rather talked about in quark scale but that's just where I'm in conflict with nuclear physicists. They don't talk in quark scale.

Saying "there's no mesons in the nucleus as long as the pion is virtual" I meant in quark scale you can explain virtual pion exchange between nucleons with W,Zbosons instead of creating a Pion. And you'r right there are quarks and gluons. So we don't need a pion ! And it means "No mesons in a nucleus".
But it cost me 5 points in the exam. So am i wrong now??

Iam not an expert on this yet, but my teacher in nuclear physics (professor in Hadron physics) have told us what a wonderful job the pion exchange potentials does, but that we should not expect this as the truth, that we "must" get down to quark scale in order to figure out how colourless objects interact. This is the future for us who are students now :) So there is a reason why nuclear physicsts don't talk on quark scale (yet), does bio-chemistrits talk about the DNA molecule on electron scale and use maxwells equations? ;)

Do you have references to "you can explain virtual pion exchange between nucleons with W,Zbosons instead of creating a Pion" ? W,Z are much heavier, so it should be easier to produce mesons, also mesons have longer range than W and Z.
 
  • #14
ophase said:
I cannot forget mesons bcs i wrote it on the exam paper...:)) I'd rather talked about in quark scale but that's just where I'm in conflict with nuclear physicists. They don't talk in quark scale.

Nor should they. You can't resolve quarks and gluons in nuclear physics, so you should not talk about them (see malawi_glenn's post).

Saying "there's no mesons in the nucleus as long as the pion is virtual" I meant in quark scale you can explain virtual pion exchange between nucleons with W,Zbosons instead of creating a Pion. And you'r right there are quarks and gluons. So we don't need a pion ! And it means "No mesons in a nucleus".
But it cost me 5 points in the exam. So am i wrong now??

Hang on a second. Forget W and Z - they have NOTHING to do with this! You can think of "pion exchange" as being some sort of non-perturbative thing where an infinite number of GLUONS are being exchanged. On the scales of which we are speaking, these "infinite number of gluons" form these sort-of mesonic packets that we acknowledge as the pion (and also the kaon, rho, eta, omega, phi, a1, f1, f2...). The details of this kind of analysis goes under the name of "Regge Trajectories" and is a very advanced subject in nuclear physics (and, in case you're interested, the historical beginnings of string theory!).

Anyway, these pion (and other meson) exchanges generate a Yukawa potential between the protons and neutrons in the nucleus. And the resulting force dominates the electromagnetic repulsion between the protons. In order for this force to match physical observations, we find (see previous posts) that the LIGHEST (and therefore (naively) the most important) meson must have a mass OF ***ORDER*** 100 MeV. Later, they discovered two particles that fit the description: one at 100 MeV (muon) and one at 140 MeV (pion). Later it was realized that the muon was NOT a Yuakwa meson, although some older textbooks (and nuclear physicists!) still call it the "mu meson". The pion, however, was exactly where it belonged, and Yukawa won (and deserved!) his Nobel Prize.
ophase said:
And i said yukawa theory is not complete bcs Yukawa predicted wrong that all 4 fields interacts via a common mediating quantum field. Because in 1935, Yukawa didn't have any ideas about gauge theories that will unify the three field.

Yukawa's model of the SNF has nothing to do with unification of forces! I don't know if historically that was Yukawa's goal (I didn't think so!). But you are right in that the pion has NOTHING to do with the W and Z bosons, the photon or gravity! But it *IS* an effective description of the gluon force at low energies. And it does remarkably well for itself, especially when you add the other mesons (see above). Let me say it again: NONE OF THIS HAS **ANYTHING** TO DO WITH W/Z BOSONS! That's the WRONG FORCE!

All the weakness of Standard Model comes from Yukawa theory: S.Symmetry breaking, Higgs mechanism, Massive bosons, hierarchy problem...etc.

That is just wrong! The Yukawa interactions in the SM have absolutely NOTHING to do with the gauge hierarchy problem, or any of the problems you mentioned, for that matter. To use the correct terminology: Yukawa interactions are "technically natural".
 
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  • #15
malawi_glenn said:
Do you have references to "you can explain virtual pion exchange between nucleons with W,Zbosons instead of creating a Pion" ? W,Z are much heavier, so it should be easier to produce mesons, also mesons have longer range than W and Z.

This just can't be. The weak nuclear force at such low energies can NEVER compete with the HUGE electromagnetic repulsion between the protons! Only the gluon force (effectively described by the pions and other mesons, as I said above) can overpower this repulsion.
 
  • #16
Yukawa Theory

Ok, blechman... Regge Theory and corresponding connection between Fermi Theory and Yukawa theory helped me so much to understand exchange mechanism. These were all unknown to me. But i'll still critise nuclear physicist not to explain which force uses which mechanism. They keep confusing my mind when they say smthg anyhow.

In conclusion, Yukawa Theory is quite essential and applicable to Weak interactions as well as Strong interactions. Yukawa built a potential and calculated the approx exchange particle mass for strong interaction. Then he expanded his theory to weak interactions.

Moreover he predicted graviton as exchange particle for gravitational interaction in non-relativistic limit. But we know one cannot explain GF using Yukawa theory. So doesn't it make Yukawa theory uncomplete??
 
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  • #17
The "Yukawa Theory" is the following potential:

[tex]V(r)=\frac{g}{4\pi}\frac{e^{-mr}}{r}[/tex]

That's all there is to it. It's a very generic situation (to use a technical term, "universality class"), that has relevance in all aspects of physics, including nuclear, particle, solid-state, atomic, etc. Which "Yukawa interaction" you are talking about is just a statement of what values of g and m to use. But the Yukawa interactions are just this exponential damped + inverse linear potential. That's all it means.

What more do you want?!

I didn't know that Yukawa tried to describe gravity this way. If he did, then he was wrong. But I suspect there's more to it. Surely he knew that the nonrelativistic potential for gravity was an inverse linear (m=0) potential, aka Newton! He might have been suggesting that the massless graviton generated the Newtonian potential in analogy to how the photon generates the Coulomb potential (which it does). But I think that idea goes back before Yukawa. Although maybe it was his idea. I don't know.

It is correct that the graviton, a massless excitation of the "quantum gravity field," does describe gravity. Non-relativistic expansions of the graviton exchange force do generate the Newtonian potential, so that's that.
 
  • #18
"But i'll still critise nuclear physicist not to explain which force uses which mechanism. They keep confusing my mind when they say smthg anyhow. "

Calm down :)
 
  • #19
I should mention, BTW, for all those listening, that when a nuclear physicist says "Yuakwa forces", he or she is referring to the PION exchange and the *STRONG* nuclear force. I have never heard of nuclear physicists referring to the weak nuclear force as a Yukawa interaction:

1) *Technically* the WNF is not a Yukawa interaction, since the W and Z bosons are spin 1, and Yukawa implicitly assumes that the mediating particle is spin 0. This is a nit-picky technicality, I'll grant you, but...

2) In order to resolve the Yukawa-nature (exponential potential) coming from a W or Z boson exchange, you have to be able to probe a distances smaller than roughly 1 am (attometer) which is [itex]10^{-3}[/itex] fm. These scales are beyond "nuclear physics" scales, and have no business in "nuclear physics;" this is where us "particle physicists" can shine! :cool:

Anyway, when nuclear physicists want to talk about the WNF, they use the Fermi Theory to do it (a contact interaction between 4 fermions, for those that are not familiar). This is a *very* different universality class from the Yukawa theories. Roughly speaking: nuclear physicists cannot resolve the "exchanged boson" that mediates the WNF, although they can do it for the SNF (the pion).

BTW: I made some rather grandiose claims about what nuc physicists will and will not say. Not being a true nuclear physicist myself, I hope that no one thinks that presumptuous! :rolleyes:
 
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  • #20
blechman: I think it depends on who you ask (age) and in what field they are in. Nuclear physics is a big field today. Span from mesons to nuclear power.
 
  • #21
malawi_glenn said:
blechman: I think it depends on who you ask (age) and in what field they are in. Nuclear physics is a big field today. Span from mesons to nuclear power.

sure, but in any of these sub-branches of the grandiose "nuclear physics" paradigm, does anyone use the phrase "Yukawa Interaction" to describe anything other than pion (meson) physics?
 
  • #22
nope, not what I have encountered so far. How come you ask?
 
  • #23
That's all I was asking. The original post was claiming to be troubled by "weak-force Yukawa" and "strong-force Yuakwa" (and apparently even "gravity Yukawa" for some reason!) but I was just pointing out that in nuc phys, "Yukawa" is ALWAYS SNF, so there's nothing to be confused about.

At least in my experience. Not being a "certified nuclear physicist" (my research is at scales no lower than 1 GeV, usually much higher) I didn't want to claim what others would say. That's all.
 
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  • #24
ophase said:
Here's the original proof by Yukawa

Yukawa potential [tex]U(r)=\frac{-g^{2}_{s}}{4\pi}\frac{e^{-r/a}}{r}[/tex]
gs: Yukawa constant

Yukawa proposed that nuclear force has to be like elektromagnetic force. So the potential above need to satisfy second green equation with a source term:

[tex](\nabla^{2}-\frac{1}{a^{2}})U(r)=g^{2}_{s}\delta(r)[/tex]

Yukawa generalized the equation for non-static states.

[tex](\nabla^{2}-\frac{d^{2}}{c^{2}dt^{2}}-\frac{1}{a^{2}})U(r,t)=0[/tex] (*)

This equation is also relativistical invariant. Then Yukawa quantized the potential:

[tex]U(r)=\frac{-g^{2}_{s}}{4\pi}\frac{e^{ipr/\hbar-iEt/\hbar}}{r}[/tex]

Now we put that potential expression in the second green equation (*) and we get:

[tex]\frac{E^{2}}{c^{2}\hbar^{2}}=\frac{p^{2}}{\hbar^{2}}+\frac{1}{a^{2}}[/tex]

[tex]E^2 =p^2c^2+\frac{c^{2}\hbar^{2}}{a^{2}}[/tex]

Here the last term should be the mass term:
[tex]m^{2}_{u}c^{4}=\frac{c^{2}\hbar^{2}}{a^{2}}[/tex]
If we assume a=2 fm, then the exchange particle mass is mu= 100 MeV.

In 1947 Pion discovered at 140 MeV and it's proved that there is no meson in the nucleus according to Yukawa theory.

I don't know the rest of that story. Probably someone made a correction about the calculation above. Any ideas??
The Yukawa potential is a solution of the Klein-Gordon equation

[tex](\nabla^{2}-\frac{1}{c^{2}}\frac{\partial^2}{\partial t^{2}})U(r,t)= \left( \frac{2\pi m_0 c}{h}\right)^2 U(r,t)[/tex]

Assuming U independent of time, it may be written

[tex](\frac{1}{r^{2}}\frac{\partial}{\partial r}\left(r^2 \frac{\partial}{\partial r} \right)U(r)= \left( \frac{2\pi}{\lambda_C}\right)^2 U(r)[/tex]

where [tex]\lambda_C[/tex] is the Compton wavelength of the particle. The simplest solution is then :

[tex]U(r)=\frac{U_0 e^{2\pi r/\lambda_C}}{r}[/tex]

However, this solution is not physical: it is wrong to suppress the time derivative. We have to solve the complete equation with a periodical but stationary potential:

[tex]U(r)=U_0\frac{e^{2\pi r/\lambda_C-i\omega t}}{r}[/tex]

The complete equation is:

[tex](\nabla^{2}-\frac{1}{c^{2}}\frac{\partial^2}{\partial t^{2}})U(r,t)= \left( \frac{2\pi m_0 c}{h}\right)^2 U(r,t)[/tex]

Replacing U we get after simplyfying the time dependent exponential :

[tex]\frac{1}{r^{2}}\frac{\partial}{\partial r}\left(r^2 \frac{\partial}{\partial r} \right)U(r)= - \left(\frac{\omega^2}{c^{2}} -\left( \frac{2\pi}{\lambda_C}\right)^2 \right)U(r)[/tex]

The solution is almost the same as above :

[tex]U(r)=\frac{U_0}{r} e^\sqrt{\left( \frac{2\pi}{\lambda_C}\right)^2-{\frac{\omega^2}{c^{2}}}[/tex]

There is a physical solution if :
[tex]\frac{2\pi}{\lambda_C}<{\frac{\omega}{c}[/tex]

That is when the solution is imaginary and tending to zero at infinity:
 

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  • #25
blechman said:
sure, but in any of these sub-branches of the grandiose "nuclear physics" paradigm, does anyone use the phrase "Yukawa Interaction" to describe anything other than pion (meson) physics?

I have seen an interaction of the form exp(-r/r_0)/r loosely referred to as a Yukawa interaction in several applications. This is similar to using "Coulombic" for 1/r.
Perhaps those who used "Yukawa" should have said "Yukawic", but that would sound like cough syrup.
 
  • #26
bjschaeffer, that's great ! I wish if your blog would be in english...

And I think everything is clear about yukawa theory for me now..
 

1. What is "The Rest of the Yukawa's Theory"?

"The Rest of the Yukawa's Theory" refers to the remaining components and principles of the Yukawa Theory of nuclear forces, proposed by Japanese physicist Hideki Yukawa in the 1930s. These components include the strong nuclear force, weak nuclear force, and electromagnetic force, which work together to bind atoms and particles together.

2. How does the Yukawa Theory explain nuclear forces?

The Yukawa Theory proposes that nuclear forces are mediated by the exchange of particles called mesons. These mesons act like "glue" between protons and neutrons, creating a strong nuclear force that holds the nucleus of an atom together. The theory also explains the weak nuclear force, which is responsible for radioactive decay, and the electromagnetic force, which binds electrons to the nucleus.

3. What are the implications of the Yukawa Theory?

The Yukawa Theory has been instrumental in our understanding of the subatomic world and has led to the development of nuclear energy and technology. It also paved the way for the Standard Model of particle physics, which is the most comprehensive theory we have for explaining the fundamental forces and particles in the universe.

4. How has the Yukawa Theory been tested and verified?

The Yukawa Theory has been extensively tested and verified through experiments and observations, including the discovery of predicted mesons, such as the pion and kaon. Additionally, the theory has successfully predicted the behavior of nuclear forces in various experiments, providing further evidence for its validity.

5. Are there any limitations or challenges to the Yukawa Theory?

While the Yukawa Theory has been successful in explaining many aspects of nuclear forces, it has some limitations. For example, it does not fully incorporate the effects of quantum mechanics and general relativity, which are necessary for understanding extreme conditions such as those found in black holes. Scientists continue to work on developing a unified theory that can encompass all known forces and particles.

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