What Do K and Alpha Represent in Yukawa's Potential?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Ayame17
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Potential
Ayame17
Messages
43
Reaction score
0
This may seem like a really obvious question to those that know it but...

We looked at Yukawa's potential the other day, in the form W(r)=\frac{\alpha}{r}*e^{-Kr}, but our lecturer never explained what K and \alpha actually are! I've looked on the net and all I can find is that they are constants. What does they actually stand for?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Roughly speaking, alpha is a constant representing the "strength" of the force... for the EM force it would be the fine structure constant. K is a constant representing the inverse of the range of the force R\approx \frac{\hbar}{Mc}. (M is the mass of the mediating boson). For the EM force R would be infinite, so K would be 0.

Ref: Particle Physics, Martin and Shaw, 3rd Ed.
 
Ah, now that makes a lot of sense! Thanks very much!
 
Back
Top