Omega baryon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Script error: No such module "Distinguish". Template:Use dmy dates

File:Omega Baryon.svg
Bubble chamber trace of the first observed Ω baryon event at Brookhaven National Laboratory, adapted from original tracing. The tracks of neutral particles (dashed lines) are not visible in the bubble chamber. The collision of a K meson with a proton creates an Ω, a K0 and a K+. The Ω decays into a π and a Ξ0, which in turn decays into a Λ0 and a π0. The Λ0 decays into a proton and a π. The π0, invisible due to its short lifetime, decays into two photons (γ), which in turn each create an electron-positron pair.

Omega baryons (often called simply omega particles) are a family of subatomic hadrons which are represented by the symbol

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh and are either charge neutral or have a +2, +1 or −1 elementary charge. Additionally, they contain no up or down quarks.[1] Omega baryons containing top quarks are also not expected to be observed. This is because the Standard Model predicts the mean lifetime of top quarks to be roughly Script error: No such module "val".,[2] which is about a twentieth of the timescale necessary for the strong interactions required for hadronization, the process by which hadrons form from quarks and gluons.

The earliest observed omega baryon was the

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh, made of three strange quarks. It was first observed in 1964.[3] The discovery was a great triumph in the study of quarks, since it was found only after its existence, mass, and decay products had been predicted in 1961 by the American physicist Murray Gell-Mann and, independently, by the Israeli physicist Yuval Ne'eman. A charmed omega particle (

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh) was discovered in 1985, in which a strange quark is replaced by a charm quark. The

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh decays only via the weak interaction and therefore has a relatively long lifetime.[4] Spin (J) and parity (P) values for unobserved baryons are predicted by the quark model.[5]

Since omega baryons do not have any up or down quarks, they all have isospin 0.

The naming convention of baryons has become such that those with no light (i.e. up or down) valence quarks are called omega baryons. By default, the quarks are strange quarks, but those with one or more the strange quarks replaced by charm or bottom quarks have a subscript c or b, respectively.

Omega baryons

File:Quark structure omega.svg
Quark structure of omega baryon ( #redirect Template:Subatomic particle Template:Rcatsh)
Omega
Particle Symbol Quark
content
Rest mass
(MeV/c2)
JP Q
(e)
S C B' Mean lifetime
(s)
Decays to
Omega[6]
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Script error: No such module "val". Template:Sfrac+ −1 −3 0 0 Script error: No such module "val".
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh +

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh or

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh +

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh or

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh +

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Charmed omega[7]
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Script error: No such module "val". Template:Sfrac+ 0 −2 +1 0 Script error: No such module "val". See [https://pdg.lbl.gov/2022/listings/contents_listings.html
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh Decay Modes]

Bottom omega[8]
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Script error: No such module "val". Template:Sfrac+ −1 −2 0 −1 Script error: No such module "val".
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh +

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh (seen)

Double charmed omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ +1 −1 +2 0
Charmed bottom omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ 0 −1 +1 −1
Double bottom omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ −1 −1 0 −2
Triple charmed omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ +2 0 +3 0
Double charmed bottom omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ +1 0 +2 −1
Charmed double bottom omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ 0 0 +1 −2
Triple bottom omega†
  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

Template:Sfrac+ −1 0 0 −3

† Particle (or quantity, i.e. spin) has neither been observed nor indicated.

Recent discoveries

The

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh particle is a "doubly strange" baryon containing two strange quarks and a bottom quark. A discovery of this particle was first claimed in September 2008 by physicists working on the experiment at the Tevatron facility of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.[9][10] However, the reported mass of Script error: No such module "val". was significantly higher than expected in the quark model. The apparent discrepancy from the Standard Model has since been dubbed the "

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh puzzle". In May 2009, the CDF collaboration made public their results on the search for the

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh based on analysis of a data sample roughly four times the size of the one used by the DØ experiment.[8] CDF measured the mass to be Script error: No such module "val"., which was in excellent agreement with the Standard Model prediction. No signal has been observed at the DØ reported value. The two results differ by Script error: No such module "val"., which is equivalent to 6.2 standard deviations and are therefore inconsistent. Excellent agreement between the CDF measured mass and theoretical expectations is a strong indication that the particle discovered by CDF is indeed the

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh. In February 2013 the LHCb collaboration published a measurement of the

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh mass that is consistent with, but more precise than, the CDF result.[11]

In March 2017, the LHCb collaboration announced the observation of five new narrow

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh states decaying to

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh, where the

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh was reconstructed in the decay mode

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh.[12][13] The states are named

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh(3000)0,

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh(3050)0,

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh(3066)0,

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh(3090)0 and

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh(3119)0. Their masses and widths were reported, but their quantum numbers could not be determined due to the large background present in the sample.

See also

References

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  6. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  8. a b Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  10. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  11. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  12. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  13. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

External links

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh, which happens to contain the complete decay chain of the

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh].

  1. redirect Template:Subatomic particle

Template:Rcatsh]

Script error: No such module "Navbox".