In
particle physics
Particle physics or high energy physics is the study of fundamental particles and forces that constitute matter and radiation. The fundamental particles in the universe are classified in the Standard Model as fermions (matter particles) and ...
, the electroweak interaction or electroweak force is the
unified description of two of the four known
fundamental interactions of nature:
electromagnetism and the
weak interaction. Although these two forces appear very different at everyday low energies, the theory models them as two different aspects of the same force. Above the
unification energy, on the order of 246
GeV GEV may refer to:
* ''G.E.V.'' (board game), a tabletop game by Steve Jackson Games
* Ashe County Airport, in North Carolina, United States
* Gällivare Lapland Airport, in Sweden
* Generalized extreme value distribution
* Gev Sella, Israeli-South ...
,
[The particular number 246 GeV is taken to be the vacuum expectation value of the Higgs field (where is the Fermi coupling constant).] they would merge into a single force. Thus, if the temperature is high enough – approximately 10
15 K – then the electromagnetic force and weak force merge into a combined electroweak force. During the
quark epoch (shortly after the
Big Bang), the electroweak force split into the electromagnetic and
weak force. It is thought that the required temperature of 10
15 K has
not been seen widely throughout the universe since before the quark epoch, and currently the highest man-made temperature in thermal equilibrium is around 5.5x10
12 K (from the
Large Hadron Collider).
Sheldon Glashow,
Abdus Salam, and
Steven Weinberg were awarded the 1979
Nobel Prize in Physics for their contributions to the unification of the weak and electromagnetic interaction between
elementary particles, known as the Weinberg–Salam theory. The existence of the electroweak interactions was experimentally established in two stages, the first being the discovery of
neutral currents in neutrino scattering by the
Gargamelle collaboration in 1973, and the second in 1983 by the
UA1 and the
UA2
UA, U-A, Ua, uA, or ua may refer to:
Arts and entertainment Gaming
* ''Unearthed Arcana'', a Dungeons & Dragons sourcebook
* ''Unknown Armies'', a role playing game
* ''Urban Assault'', a first-person shooter and real-time strategy computer gam ...
collaborations that involved the discovery of the
W and Z gauge bosons in proton–antiproton collisions at the converted
Super Proton Synchrotron
The Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) is a particle accelerator of the synchrotron type at CERN. It is housed in a circular tunnel, in circumference, straddling the border of France and Switzerland near Geneva, Switzerland.
History
The SPS was de ...
. In 1999,
Gerardus 't Hooft and
Martinus Veltman were awarded the Nobel prize for showing that the electroweak theory is
renormalizable.
History
After the
Wu experiment in 1956 discovered
parity violation in the
weak interaction, a search began for a way to relate the
weak
Weak may refer to:
Songs
* "Weak" (AJR song), 2016
* "Weak" (Melanie C song), 2011
* "Weak" (SWV song), 1993
* "Weak" (Skunk Anansie song), 1995
* "Weak", a song by Seether from '' Seether: 2002-2013''
Television episodes
* "Weak" (''Fear t ...
and
electromagnetic interactions. Extending his
doctoral advisor Julian Schwinger's work,
Sheldon Glashow first experimented with introducing two different symmetries, one
chiral and one achiral, and combined them such that their overall symmetry was unbroken. This did not yield a
renormalizable theory
A theory is a rational type of abstract thinking about a phenomenon, or the results of such thinking. The process of contemplative and rational thinking is often associated with such processes as observational study or research. Theories may ...
, and its gauge symmetry had to be broken by hand as no
spontaneous mechanism was known, but it predicted a new particle, the
Z boson
In particle physics, the W and Z bosons are vector bosons that are together known as the weak bosons or more generally as the intermediate vector bosons. These elementary particles mediate the weak interaction; the respective symbols are , , and ...
. This received little notice, as it matched no experimental finding.
In 1964,
Salam and
Ward had the same idea, but predicted a massless
photon
A photon () is an elementary particle that is a quantum of the electromagnetic field, including electromagnetic radiation such as light and radio waves, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force. Photons are Massless particle, massless ...
and three massive
gauge bosons with a manually broken symmetry. Later around 1967, while investigating
spontaneous symmetry breaking, Weinberg found a set of symmetries predicting a massless, neutral
gauge boson. Initially rejecting such a particle as useless, he later realized his symmetries produced the electroweak force, and he proceeded to predict rough masses for the
W and Z bosons. Significantly, he suggested this new theory was renormalizable.
[ In 1971, Gerard 't Hooft proved that spontaneously broken gauge symmetries are renormalizable even with massive gauge bosons.
]
Formulation
Mathematically, electromagnetism is unified with the weak interactions as a Yang–Mills field with an SU(2) × U(1) gauge group, which describes the formal operations that can be applied to the electroweak gauge fields without changing the dynamics of the system. These fields are the weak isospin fields , , and , and the weak hypercharge field .
This invariance is known as electroweak symmetry.
The generators of SU(2) and U(1) are given the name weak isospin (labeled ) and weak hypercharge (labeled ) respectively. These then give rise to the gauge bosons which mediate the electroweak interactions – the three bosons of weak isospin (, , and ), and the boson of weak hypercharge, respectively, all of which are "initially" massless. These are not physical fields yet, before spontaneous symmetry breaking and the associated Higgs mechanism.
In the Standard Model
The Standard Model of particle physics is the theory describing three of the four known fundamental forces (electromagnetism, electromagnetic, weak interaction, weak and strong interactions - excluding gravity) in the universe and classifying a ...
, the and bosons, and the photon
A photon () is an elementary particle that is a quantum of the electromagnetic field, including electromagnetic radiation such as light and radio waves, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force. Photons are Massless particle, massless ...
, are produced through the spontaneous symmetry breaking of the electroweak symmetry SU(2) × U(1) to U(1), effected by the Higgs mechanism (see also Higgs boson), an elaborate quantum field theoretic phenomenon that "spontaneously" alters the realization of the symmetry and rearranges degrees of freedom.[
]
The electric charge arises as the particular linear combination (nontrivial) of (weak hypercharge) and the component of weak isospin that does ''not'' couple to the Higgs boson. That is to say: The Higgs and the electromagnetic field have no effect on each other, at the level of the fundamental forces ("tree level"), while any ''other'' combination of the hypercharge and the weak isospin must interact with the Higgs. This causes an apparent separation between the weak force, which interacts with the Higgs, and electromagnetism, which does not. Mathematically, the electric charge is a specific combination of the hypercharge and outlined in the figure.
(the symmetry group of electromagnetism only) is defined to be the group generated by this special linear combination, and the symmetry described by the group is unbroken, since it does not ''directly'' interact with the Higgs.
The above spontaneous symmetry breaking makes the and bosons coalesce into two different physical bosons with different masses – the boson, and the photon (),
:
where is the ''weak mixing angle
The weak mixing angle or Weinberg angle is a parameter in the Weinberg– Salam theory of the electroweak interaction, part of the Standard Model of particle physics, and is usually denoted as . It is the angle by which spontaneous symmetry bre ...
''. The axes representing the particles have essentially just been rotated, in the (, ) plane, by the angle . This also introduces a mismatch between the mass of the and the mass of the particles (denoted as and , respectively),
:
The and bosons, in turn, combine to produce the charged massive bosons :
:
Lagrangian
Before electroweak symmetry breaking
The Lagrangian
Lagrangian may refer to:
Mathematics
* Lagrangian function, used to solve constrained minimization problems in optimization theory; see Lagrange multiplier
** Lagrangian relaxation, the method of approximating a difficult constrained problem with ...
for the electroweak interactions is divided into four parts before electroweak symmetry breaking becomes manifest,
:
The term describes the interaction between the three vector bosons and the vector boson,
:,
where () and are the field strength tensors for the weak isospin and weak hypercharge gauge fields.
is the kinetic term for the Standard Model fermions. The interaction of the gauge bosons and the fermions are through the gauge covariant derivative,
:,
where the subscript sums over the three generations of fermions; , , and are the left-handed doublet, right-handed singlet up, and right handed singlet down quark fields; and and are the left-handed doublet and right-handed singlet electron fields.
The Feynman slash means the contraction of the 4-gradient with the Dirac matrices, defined as
:
and the covariant derivative (excluding the gluon gauge field for the strong interaction
The strong interaction or strong force is a fundamental interaction that confines quarks into proton, neutron, and other hadron particles. The strong interaction also binds neutrons and protons to create atomic nuclei, where it is called the n ...
) is defined as
:
Here is the weak hypercharge and the are the components of the weak isospin.
The term describes the Higgs field and its interactions with itself and the gauge bosons,
:,
where is the vacuum expectation value.
The term describes the Yukawa interaction with the fermions,
:
and generates their masses, manifest when the Higgs field acquires a nonzero vacuum expectation value, discussed next. The are matrices of Yukawa couplings.
After electroweak symmetry breaking
The Lagrangian reorganizes itself as the Higgs boson acquires a non-vanishing vacuum expectation value dictated by the potential of the previous section. As a result of this rewriting, the symmetry breaking becomes manifest. In the history of the universe, this is believed to have happened shortly after the hot big bang, when the universe was at a temperature 159.5±1.5 GeV GEV may refer to:
* ''G.E.V.'' (board game), a tabletop game by Steve Jackson Games
* Ashe County Airport, in North Carolina, United States
* Gällivare Lapland Airport, in Sweden
* Generalized extreme value distribution
* Gev Sella, Israeli-South ...
(assuming the Standard Model of particle physics).
Due to its complexity, this Lagrangian is best described by breaking it up into several parts as follows.
:
The kinetic term contains all the quadratic terms of the Lagrangian, which include the dynamic terms (the partial derivatives) and the mass terms (conspicuously absent from the Lagrangian before symmetry breaking)
:
where the sum runs over all the fermions of the theory (quarks and leptons), and the fields , , , and are given as
:
with '' to be replaced by the relevant field (, , ), and by the structure constants of the appropriate gauge group.
The neutral current and charged current components of the Lagrangian contain the interactions between the fermions and gauge bosons,
:
where The electromagnetic current is
:
where is the fermions' electric charges.
The neutral weak current is
:
where is the fermions' weak isospin.
The charged current part of the Lagrangian is given by
:
where is the right-handed singlet neutrino field, and the CKM matrix determines the mixing between mass and weak eigenstates of the quarks.
contains the Higgs three-point and four-point self interaction terms,
:
contains the Higgs interactions with gauge vector bosons,
:
contains the gauge three-point self interactions,
:
contains the gauge four-point self interactions,
:
contains the Yukawa interactions between the fermions and the Higgs field,
:
See also
* Electroweak star
* Fundamental forces
* History of quantum field theory
In particle physics, the history of quantum field theory starts with its creation by Paul Dirac, when he attempted to quantize the electromagnetic field in the late 1920s. Heisenberg was awarded the 1932 Nobel Prize in Physics "for the creation o ...
* Standard Model (mathematical formulation)
This article describes the mathematics of the Standard Model of particle physics, a gauge quantum field theory containing the internal symmetries of the unitary product group . The theory is commonly viewed as describing the fundamental set ...
* Unitarity gauge
* Weinberg angle
* Yang–Mills theory
Notes
References
Further reading
General readers
* Conveys much of the Standard Model
The Standard Model of particle physics is the theory describing three of the four known fundamental forces (electromagnetism, electromagnetic, weak interaction, weak and strong interactions - excluding gravity) in the universe and classifying a ...
with no formal mathematics. Very thorough on the weak interaction.
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