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ratings:
Length:
4 minutes
Released:
Oct 2, 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 Charged PionsQuarks make up more than big, triplet particles like protons and neutrons. Sometimes they come in pairs. A pair of up and down down quarks is called a pion.There are three kinds of pions: pi plus, pi minus and pi zero. Compared to the proton, they’re quite small and a little quirky. They’re certainly unstable. Today we’ll talk about those charged pions, π±.Like the proton, pions are mostly comprised of nuclear goo. Unlike the proton, that goo surrounds only two quarks. Or, really, a quark/antiquark pair. A π+ has an up quark together with an antidown quark. That gives is an electric charge of 2/3 + 1/3 = 1, That is to say, π+ has exactly the same charge as the proton. Being the antiparticle, π− is made up of a down quark, with an anti up quark. And of course all that nuclear goo. Its electric charge is precisely the opposite.The charged pions have a mass of 139.6 MeV, making them just a tiny bit heavier than the muon. They are unstable particles, and given their mass typically decay into such muon, emitting a neutrino in the process. The muon, of course, is also unstable. It too decays to an electron and a pair of neutrinos. That’s pretty typical. Pion to muon to electron. A π+ will decay to an antimuon, who has a positive charge, and an antimuon decays to a positron.When cosmic rays smash into the molecules of the upper atmosphere, creating the showers of muons we deal with on a day to day basis, pions are the first on the scene. They're some of the first particles produced, and they don't have around for too long. Charged pions decay within about 30 nanoseconds.Pions belong to a class of nuclear particles called mesons, which were originally thought up by Hideki Yukawa way back in 1934. To some extent, the play the role of communicating between the protons and neutrons. In that way, they are partially responsible for the residual nuclear force that binds atomic nuclei together. You can kind of think of them like photons, only for the nuclear force.Occasionally a bunch of pions are created together, and you can see little pion atoms - pionium - where pi plus and pi minus orbit each other for a short time. Curiously, the pionium atom typically decays not to the pair π+ π-, but to a pair of π0’s. This is a kind of of matter/antimatter annihilation. Less frequently, pionium annihilates into a pair of photons.
Released:
Oct 2, 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.