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The Up and Down Quarks

The Up and Down Quarks

FromThe Field Guide to Particle Physics


The Up and Down Quarks

FromThe Field Guide to Particle Physics

ratings:
Length:
4 minutes
Released:
Sep 29, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

The Field Guide to Particle Physics https://pasayten.org/the-field-guide-to-particle-physics©2021 The Pasayten Institute cc by-sa-4.0The definitive resource for all data in particle physics is the Particle Data Group: https://pdg.lbl.gov.The Pasayten Institute is on a mission to build and share physics knowledge, without barriers! Get in touch.The Up and Down QuarksThe nuclei of atoms are made up of protons and neutrons, which you can think of as tiny bags of nuclear junk: heavy, condensed slimeballs that are hard to describe mathematically. All that said, those nucleons do have structure: they each are comprised of three subatomic particles known as quarks.There are all kinds of quarks, but the two most relevant for everyday life are the up and the down quarks. The proton has two up quarks and one down quark. The neutron has two down quarks and and up quark. Don’t read too much into those names.It’s probably silly to assign electric charges to quarks because they’re never found alone. They’re always found in clumps of two or three or sometime five. But if you insist on the bean counting, you can give the up quark 2/3 of the proton’s positive charge. By that accounting, the bottom quark must have an electric charge of −1/3. The neutron, having two down quarks and an up, has a total electric charge of zero.Unlike the heavy nucleons, these quarks are rather light, with far smaller masses than even the electron. The mass of the up quark is somewhere around 2 MeV, and the mass of the down quark is closer to 5 MeV. This presents a mystery, as the mass of the three quarks in the proton and the neutron sum only to 9 and 12 MeV, respectively. Considering how both nucleons weigh in as almost 1000 MeV, we’ve got some serious accounting left to do.Quarks are surrounded by - and constantly buzzing around with - all sorts of other particles. Heavier stuff. The reason for all that heavier junk - the reason the quarks are surrounded by all that nuclear goo is that they are strongly attracted to one another. The aptly named strong nuclear force - the fundamental force of nature that binds quarks into bigger particles - is very strong indeed.The rest of proton’s mass is all that subnuclear slime, all that buzzing around and other odd quantum effects. It’s kind of like a bit of wild internal, kinetic energy, like a beehive in a box.This odd feature of nucleon masses is noteworthy because almost 99% of the mass of the nucleus is that subnuclear goo, and the nucleus itself makes up well over 99% fo the mass of the atom. In other words, the mass we experience in day to day life comes from that quantum, nuclear slime.
Released:
Sep 29, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (49)

This is your informal guide to the subatomic ecosystem we’re all immersed in. In this series, we explore the taxa of particle species and how they interact with one another. Our aim is give us all a better foundation for understanding our place in the universe. The guide starts with a host of different particle species. We’ll talk about their masses, charges and interactions with other particles. We’ll talk about how they are created, how they decay, and what other particles they might be made of.