Composition | K+ : u s
K− : s u |
---|---|
Statistics | Bosonic |
Family | Mesons |
Interactions | Strong, weak, electromagnetic, gravitational |
Symbol | K+ , K0 , K− |
Antiparticle | K+ : K−
K− : K+ |
Discovered | 1947 (Clifford Butler and George Rochester at Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester) |
Types | 4 |
Mass | K± : 493.677±0.016 MeV/c2 K0 : 497.611±0.013 MeV/c2 |
Mean lifetime | K± : (1.2380±0.0020)×10−8 s K S: (8.954±0.004)×10−11 s K L: (5.116±0.021)×10−8 s |
Electric charge | K± : ±1 e K0 : 0 e |
Spin | 0 ħ |
Strangeness | K+ , K0 : +1 K− , K0 : −1 |
Isospin | K+ , K0 : +1/2 K0 , K− : −1/2 |
Parity | −1 |
In particle physics, a kaon, also called a K meson and denoted
K
, [a] is any of a group of four mesons distinguished by a quantum number called strangeness. In the quark model they are understood to be bound states of a strange quark (or antiquark) and an up or down antiquark (or quark).
Kaons have proved to be a copious source of information on the nature of fundamental interactions since their discovery by George Rochester and Clifford Butler at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester in cosmic rays in 1947. They were essential in establishing the foundations of the Standard Model of particle physics, such as the quark model of hadrons and the theory of quark mixing (the latter was acknowledged by a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2008). Kaons have played a distinguished role in our understanding of fundamental conservation laws: CP violation, a phenomenon generating the observed matter–antimatter asymmetry of the universe, was discovered in the kaon system in 1964 (which was acknowledged by a Nobel Prize in 1980). Moreover, direct CP violation was discovered in the kaon decays in the early 2000s by the NA48 experiment at CERN and the KTeV experiment at Fermilab.
The four kaons are:
As the quark model shows, assignments that the kaons form two doublets of isospin; that is, they belong to the fundamental representation of SU(2) called the 2. One doublet of strangeness +1 contains the
K+
and the
K0
. The antiparticles form the other doublet (of strangeness −1).
Particle name | Particle symbol | Antiparticle symbol | Quark content | Rest mass (MeV/c 2) | I G | J P C | S | C | B' | Mean lifetime (s) | Commonly decays to (>5% of decays) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kaon [1] | K+ | K− | u s | 493.677±0.016 | 1⁄2 | 0− | 1 | 0 | 0 | (1.2380±0.0020)×10−8 | μ+ + ν μ or π+ + π0 or π+ + π+ + π− or π0 + e+ + ν e |
Kaon [2] | K0 | K0 | d s | 497.611±0.013 | 1⁄2 | 0− | 1 | 0 | 0 | [§] | [§] |
K-Short [3] | K0 S | Self | [†] [4] [5] | 497.611±0.013 [‡] | 1⁄2 | 0− | [*] | 0 | 0 | (8.954±0.004)×10−11 | π+ + π− or π0 + π0 |
K-Long [6] | K0 L | Self | [†] [4] [5] | 497.611±0.013 [‡] | 1⁄2 | 0− | [*] | 0 | 0 | (5.116±0.021)×10−8 | π± + e∓ + ν e or π± + μ∓ + ν μ or π0 + π0 + π0 or π+ + π0 + π− |
[*] See Notes on neutral kaons in the article List of mesons, and neutral kaon mixing, below.
[§] ^ Strong eigenstate. No definite lifetime (see neutral kaon mixing).
[†] ^ Weak eigenstate. Makeup is missing small CP–violating term (see neutral kaon mixing).
[‡] ^ The mass of the
K0
L and
K0
S are given as that of the
K0
. However, it is known that a relatively minute difference between the masses of the
K0
L and
K0
S on the order of 3.5×10−6 eV/c2 exists. [6]
Although the
K0
and its antiparticle
K0
are usually produced via the strong force, they decay weakly. Thus, once created the two are better thought of as superpositions of two weak eigenstates which have vastly different lifetimes:
(See discussion of neutral kaon mixing below.)
An experimental observation made in 1964 that K-longs rarely decay into two pions was the discovery of CP violation (see below).
Main decay modes for
K+
:
Results | Mode | Branching ratio |
---|---|---|
μ+ ν μ | leptonic | 63.55±0.11% |
π+ π0 | hadronic | 20.66±0.08% |
π+ π+ π− | hadronic | 5.59±0.04% |
π+ π0 π0 | hadronic | 1.761±0.022% |
π0 e+ ν e | semileptonic | 5.07±0.04% |
π0 μ+ ν μ | semileptonic | 3.353±0.034% |
Decay modes for the
K−
are charge conjugates of the ones above.
Two different decays were found for charged strange mesons into pions:
Θ+ | → | π+ + π0 |
τ+ | → | π+ + π+ + π− |
The intrinsic parity of the pion is P = −1 (since the pion is a bound state of a quark and an antiquark, which have opposite parities, with zero angular momentum), and parity is a multiplicative quantum number. Therefore, assuming the parent particle has zero spin, the two-pion and the three-pion final states have different parities (P = +1 and P = −1, respectively). It was thought that the initial states should also have different parities, and hence be two distinct particles. However, with increasingly precise measurements, no difference was found between the masses and lifetimes of each, respectively, indicating that they are the same particle. This was known as the τ–θ puzzle. It was resolved only by the discovery of parity violation in weak interactions (most importantly, by the Wu experiment). Since the mesons decay through weak interactions, parity is not conserved, and the two decays are actually decays of the same particle, [7] now called the
K+
.
The discovery of hadrons with the internal quantum number "strangeness" marks the beginning of a most exciting epoch in particle physics that even now, fifty years later, has not yet found its conclusion ... by and large experiments have driven the development, and that major discoveries came unexpectedly or even against expectations expressed by theorists. — Bigi & Sanda (2016) [8]
While looking for the hypothetical nuclear meson, Louis Leprince-Ringuet found evidence for the existence of a positively charged heavier particle in 1944. [9] [10]
In 1947, G.D. Rochester and C.C. Butler of the University of Manchester published two cloud chamber photographs of cosmic ray-induced events, one showing what appeared to be a neutral particle decaying into two charged pions, and one which appeared to be a charged particle decaying into a charged pion and something neutral. The estimated mass of the new particles was very rough, about half a proton's mass. More examples of these "V-particles" were slow in coming.
In 1949, Rosemary Brown (later Rosemary Fowler), a research student of Cecil Powell of the University of Bristol, spotted her 'k' track, made by a particle of very similar mass that decayed to three pions. [11] [12] (p82)
I knew at once that it was new and would be very important. We were seeing things that hadn't been seen before - that's what research in particle physics was. It was very exciting. — Fowler (2024) [11]
This led to the so-called 'tau–theta' problem: [13] what seemed to be the same particle (now called
K+
) decayed in two different modes, Theta to two pions (parity +1), Tau to three pions (parity −1). [12] The solution to this puzzle turned out to be that weak interactions do not conserve parity. [7]
The first breakthrough was obtained at Caltech, where a cloud chamber was taken up Mount Wilson, for greater cosmic ray exposure. In 1950, 30 charged and 4 neutral "V-particles" were reported. Inspired by this, numerous mountaintop observations were made over the next several years, and by 1953, the following terminology was being used: "L meson" for either a muon or charged pion; "K meson" meant a particle intermediate in mass between the pion and nucleon.
Leprince-Rinquet coined the still-used term "hyperon" to mean any particle heavier than a nucleon. [9] [10] The Leprince-Ringuet particle turned out to be the K+ meson. [9] [10]
The decays were extremely slow; typical lifetimes are of the order of 10−10 s. However, production in pion–proton reactions proceeds much faster, with a time scale of 10−23 s. The problem of this mismatch was solved by Abraham Pais who postulated the new quantum number called "strangeness" which is conserved in strong interactions but violated by the weak interactions. Strange particles appear copiously due to "associated production" of a strange and an antistrange particle together. It was soon shown that this could not be a multiplicative quantum number, because that would allow reactions which were never seen in the new synchrotrons which were commissioned in Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1953 and in the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in 1955.
Initially it was thought that although parity was violated, CP (charge parity) symmetry was conserved. In order to understand the discovery of CP violation, it is necessary to understand the mixing of neutral kaons; this phenomenon does not require CP violation, but it is the context in which CP violation was first observed.
Since neutral kaons carry strangeness, they cannot be their own antiparticles. There must be then two different neutral kaons, differing by two units of strangeness. The question was then how to establish the presence of these two mesons. The solution used a phenomenon called neutral particle oscillations , by which these two kinds of mesons can turn from one into another through the weak interactions, which cause them to decay into pions (see the adjacent figure).
These oscillations were first investigated by Murray Gell-Mann and Abraham Pais together. They considered the CP-invariant time evolution of states with opposite strangeness. In matrix notation one can write
where ψ is a quantum state of the system specified by the amplitudes of being in each of the two basis states (which are a and b at time t = 0). The diagonal elements (M) of the Hamiltonian are due to strong interaction physics which conserves strangeness. The two diagonal elements must be equal, since the particle and antiparticle have equal masses in the absence of the weak interactions. The off-diagonal elements, which mix opposite strangeness particles, are due to weak interactions; CP symmetry requires them to be real.
The consequence of the matrix H being real is that the probabilities of the two states will forever oscillate back and forth. However, if any part of the matrix were imaginary, as is forbidden by CP symmetry, then part of the combination will diminish over time. The diminishing part can be either one component (a) or the other (b), or a mixture of the two.
The eigenstates are obtained by diagonalizing this matrix. This gives new eigenvectors, which we can call K1 which is the difference of the two states of opposite strangeness, and K2, which is the sum. The two are eigenstates of CP with opposite eigenvalues; K1 has CP = +1, and K2 has CP = −1 Since the two-pion final state also has CP = +1, only the K1 can decay this way. The K2 must decay into three pions. [14]
Since the mass of K2 is just a little larger than the sum of the masses of three pions, this decay proceeds very slowly, about 600 times slower than the decay of K1 into two pions. These two different modes of decay were observed by Leon Lederman and his coworkers in 1956, establishing the existence of the two weak eigenstates (states with definite lifetimes under decays via the weak force) of the neutral kaons.
These two weak eigenstates are called the
K
L (K-long, τ) and
K
S (K-short, θ). CP symmetry, which was assumed at the time, implies that
K
S = K1 and
K
L = K2.
An initially pure beam of
K0
will turn into its antiparticle,
K0
, while propagating, which will turn back into the original particle,
K0
, and so on. This is called particle oscillation. On observing the weak decay into leptons, it was found that a
K0
always decayed into a positron, whereas the antiparticle
K0
decayed into the electron. The earlier analysis yielded a relation between the rate of electron and positron production from sources of pure
K0
and its antiparticle
K0
. Analysis of the time dependence of this semileptonic decay showed the phenomenon of oscillation, and allowed the extraction of the mass splitting between the
K
S and
K
L. Since this is due to weak interactions it is very small, 10−15 times the mass of each state, namely ∆MK = M(KL) − M(KS) = 3.484(6)×10−12 MeV . [15]
A beam of neutral kaons decays in flight so that the short-lived
K
S disappears, leaving a beam of pure long-lived
K
L. If this beam is shot into matter, then the
K0
and its antiparticle
K0
interact differently with the nuclei. The
K0
undergoes quasi-elastic scattering with nucleons, whereas its antiparticle can create hyperons. Quantum coherence between the two particles is lost due to the different interactions that the two components separately engage in. The emerging beam then contains different linear superpositions of the
K0
and
K0
. Such a superposition is a mixture of
K
L and
K
S; the
K
S is regenerated by passing a neutral kaon beam through matter. [16] Regeneration was observed by Oreste Piccioni and his collaborators at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. [17] Soon thereafter, Robert Adair and his coworkers reported excess
K
S regeneration, thus opening a new chapter in this history.
While trying to verify Adair's results, J. Christenson, James Cronin, Val Fitch and Rene Turlay of Princeton University found decays of
K
L into two pions (CP = +1) in an experiment performed in 1964 at the Alternating Gradient Synchrotron at the Brookhaven laboratory. [18] As explained in an earlier section, this required the assumed initial and final states to have different values of CP, and hence immediately suggested CP violation. Alternative explanations such as nonlinear quantum mechanics and a new unobserved particle (hyperphoton) were soon ruled out, leaving CP violation as the only possibility. Cronin and Fitch received the Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery in 1980.
It turns out that although the
K
L and
K
S are weak eigenstates (because they have definite lifetimes for decay by way of the weak force), they are not quite CP eigenstates. Instead, for small ε (and up to normalization),
and similarly for
K
S. Thus occasionally the
K
L decays as a K1 with CP = +1, and likewise the
K
S can decay with CP = −1. This is known as indirect CP violation, CP violation due to mixing of
K0
and its antiparticle. There is also a direct CP violation effect, in which the CP violation occurs during the decay itself. Both are present, because both mixing and decay arise from the same interaction with the W boson and thus have CP violation predicted by the CKM matrix. Direct CP violation was discovered in the kaon decays in the early 2000s by the NA48 and KTeV experiments at CERN and Fermilab. [19]
In particle physics, a hadron is a composite subatomic particle made of two or more quarks held together by the strong interaction. They are analogous to molecules, which are held together by the electric force. Most of the mass of ordinary matter comes from two hadrons: the proton and the neutron, while most of the mass of the protons and neutrons is in turn due to the binding energy of their constituent quarks, due to the strong force.
In particle physics, a meson is a type of hadronic subatomic particle composed of an equal number of quarks and antiquarks, usually one of each, bound together by the strong interaction. Because mesons are composed of quark subparticles, they have a meaningful physical size, a diameter of roughly one femtometre (10−15 m), which is about 0.6 times the size of a proton or neutron. All mesons are unstable, with the longest-lived lasting for only a few tenths of a nanosecond. Heavier mesons decay to lighter mesons and ultimately to stable electrons, neutrinos and photons.
In nuclear physics and particle physics, the weak interaction, also called the weak force, is one of the four known fundamental interactions, with the others being electromagnetism, the strong interaction, and gravitation. It is the mechanism of interaction between subatomic particles that is responsible for the radioactive decay of atoms: The weak interaction participates in nuclear fission and nuclear fusion. The theory describing its behaviour and effects is sometimes called quantum flavordynamics (QFD); however, the term QFD is rarely used, because the weak force is better understood by electroweak theory (EWT).
In particle physics, a pion or pi meson, denoted with the Greek letter pi, is any of three subatomic particles:
π0
,
π+
, and
π−
. Each pion consists of a quark and an antiquark and is therefore a meson. Pions are the lightest mesons and, more generally, the lightest hadrons. They are unstable, with the charged pions
π+
and
π−
decaying after a mean lifetime of 26.033 nanoseconds, and the neutral pion
π0
decaying after a much shorter lifetime of 85 attoseconds. Charged pions most often decay into muons and muon neutrinos, while neutral pions generally decay into gamma rays.
The charm quark, charmed quark, or c quark is an elementary particle found in composite subatomic particles called hadrons such as the J/psi meson and the charmed baryons created in particle accelerator collisions. Several bosons, including the W and Z bosons and the Higgs boson, can decay into charm quarks. All charm quarks carry charm, a quantum number. This second-generation particle is the third-most-massive quark, with a mass of 1.27±0.02 GeV/c2 as measured in 2022, and a charge of +2/3 e.
In particle physics, annihilation is the process that occurs when a subatomic particle collides with its respective antiparticle to produce other particles, such as an electron colliding with a positron to produce two photons. The total energy and momentum of the initial pair are conserved in the process and distributed among a set of other particles in the final state. Antiparticles have exactly opposite additive quantum numbers from particles, so the sums of all quantum numbers of such an original pair are zero. Hence, any set of particles may be produced whose total quantum numbers are also zero as long as conservation of energy, conservation of momentum, and conservation of spin are obeyed.
In particle physics, strangeness is a property of particles, expressed as a quantum number, for describing decay of particles in strong and electromagnetic interactions that occur in a short period of time. The strangeness of a particle is defined as: where n
s
represents the number of strange quarks and n
s
represents the number of strange antiquarks. Evaluation of strangeness production has become an important tool in search, discovery, observation and interpretation of quark–gluon plasma (QGP). Strangeness is an excited state of matter and its decay is governed by CKM mixing.
The BaBar experiment, or simply BaBar, is an international collaboration of more than 500 physicists and engineers studying the subatomic world at energies of approximately ten times the rest mass of a proton (~10 GeV). Its design was motivated by the investigation of charge-parity violation. BaBar is located at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, which is operated by Stanford University for the Department of Energy in California.
Jack Steinberger was a German-born American physicist noted for his work with neutrinos, the subatomic particles considered to be elementary constituents of matter. He was a recipient of the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physics, along with Leon M. Lederman and Melvin Schwartz, for the discovery of the muon neutrino. Through his career as an experimental particle physicist, he held positions at the University of California, Berkeley, Columbia University (1950–68), and the CERN (1968–86). He was also a recipient of the United States National Medal of Science in 1988, and the Matteucci Medal from the Italian Academy of Sciences in 1990.
The
J/ψ
(J/psi) meson is a subatomic particle, a flavor-neutral meson consisting of a charm quark and a charm antiquark. Mesons formed by a bound state of a charm quark and a charm anti-quark are generally known as "charmonium" or psions. The
J/ψ
is the most common form of charmonium, due to its spin of 1 and its low rest mass. The
J/ψ
has a rest mass of 3.0969 GeV/c2, just above that of the
η
c, and a mean lifetime of 7.2×10−21 s. This lifetime was about a thousand times longer than expected.
In particle physics, flavour or flavor refers to the species of an elementary particle. The Standard Model counts six flavours of quarks and six flavours of leptons. They are conventionally parameterized with flavour quantum numbers that are assigned to all subatomic particles. They can also be described by some of the family symmetries proposed for the quark-lepton generations.
In particle physics, neutral particle oscillation is the transmutation of a particle with zero electric charge into another neutral particle due to a change of a non-zero internal quantum number, via an interaction that does not conserve that quantum number. Neutral particle oscillations were first investigated in 1954 by Murray Gell-mann and Abraham Pais.
In particle physics, B mesons are mesons composed of a bottom antiquark and either an up, down, strange or charm quark. The combination of a bottom antiquark and a top quark is not thought to be possible because of the top quark's short lifetime. The combination of a bottom antiquark and a bottom quark is not a B meson, but rather bottomonium, which is something else entirely.
The D mesons are the lightest particle containing charm quarks. They are often studied to gain knowledge on the weak interaction. The strange D mesons (Ds) were called "F mesons" prior to 1986.
In particle physics, CP violation is a violation of CP-symmetry : the combination of C-symmetry and P-symmetry. CP-symmetry states that the laws of physics should be the same if a particle is interchanged with its antiparticle (C-symmetry) while its spatial coordinates are inverted. The discovery of CP violation in 1964 in the decays of neutral kaons resulted in the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1980 for its discoverers James Cronin and Val Fitch.
In particle physics, the phi meson or
ϕ
meson is a vector meson formed of a strange quark and a strange antiquark. It was the
ϕ
meson's unusual propensity to decay into
K0
and
K0
that led to the discovery of the OZI rule. It has a mass of 1019.461±0.020 MeV/c2 and a mean lifetime of 1.55±0.01 × 10−22s.
NA31 is a CERN experiment which was proposed in 1982 as a measurement of |η00 /η+-|2 by the CERN-Edinburgh-Mainz-Pisa-Siegen collaboration. It took data between 1986 and 1989, using a proton beam from the SPS through the K4 neutral beam-line. Its aim was to experimentally prove direct CP-violation.
The CPLEAR experiment used the antiproton beam of the LEAR facility – Low-Energy Antiproton Ring which operated at CERN from 1982 to 1996 – to produce neutral kaons through proton-antiproton annihilation in order to study CP, T and CPT violation in the neutral kaon system.
One way out of the difficulty is to assume that parity is not strictly conserved, so that
Θ+
and
τ+
are two different decay modes of the same particle, which necessarily has a single mass value and a single lifetime.