College Physics
OER 2016 Edition
ISBN: 9781947172173
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax College
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Textbook Question
Chapter 33, Problem 20CQ
Discuss how we know that (−mesons are not fundamental particles and are not the basic earners of the strong force.
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Chapter 33 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 33 - The total energy in the beam of an accelerator is...Ch. 33 - Synchrotron radiation takes energy from an...Ch. 33 - What two major limitations prevent us from...Ch. 33 - What are the advantages of collidingbeam...Ch. 33 - Large quanti?es of antimatter isolated from normal...Ch. 33 - Massless particles are not only neutral, they are...Ch. 33 - Massless particles must travel at the speed of...Ch. 33 - When a stat erupts in a supernova explosion, huge...Ch. 33 - Theorists have had spectacular success in...Ch. 33 - What lifetime do you expect for an antineutron...
Ch. 33 - Why does the meson have such a short lifetime...Ch. 33 - (a) Is a hadron always a baryon? (b) Is a baryon...Ch. 33 - Explain how conservation of baryon number is...Ch. 33 - The quark ?avor change it takes place in decay....Ch. 33 - Explain how the weak force can change strangeness...Ch. 33 - Beta decay is caused by the weak force, as are all...Ch. 33 - Why is it easier to see the properties of the c,...Ch. 33 - How can quarks, which are fermions, combine to...Ch. 33 - What evidence is cited is support the contention...Ch. 33 - Discuss how we know that (mesons are not...Ch. 33 - An antibaryon has three antiquarks with colors...Ch. 33 - Suppose leptons are created in a reaction. Does...Ch. 33 - How can the lifetime of a particle indicate that...Ch. 33 - (a) Do all particles having strangeness also have...Ch. 33 - The sigmazero particle decays mostly via the...Ch. 33 - What do the quark compositions and other quantum...Ch. 33 - Discuss the similarities and differences between...Ch. 33 - Identity evidence for electroweak unification.Ch. 33 - The quarks in a particle are con?ned, meaning...Ch. 33 - If a GUT is proven, and the four forces are...Ch. 33 - If the Higgs boson is discovered and found to have...Ch. 33 - Gluons and the photon are massless. Does this...Ch. 33 - A virtual particle having an approximate mass of...Ch. 33 - Calculate the mass in of a virtual carrier...Ch. 33 - Another component of the strong nuclear force is...Ch. 33 - (a) Find the ratio of the strengths the weak and...Ch. 33 - We ratio of the strong to the weak force and the...Ch. 33 - At full energy, protons in the 2.00kmdiameter...Ch. 33 - Suppose a W created in a bubble chamber lives for...Ch. 33 - What length track does a (+ traveling at 0.100 c...Ch. 33 - The 3.20kmlong SLAC produces a beam of 50.0GeV...Ch. 33 - Because of energy loss due to synchrotron...Ch. 33 - A proton and an antiproton collide headon, with...Ch. 33 - When an electron and positron collide at the SLAC...Ch. 33 - The is its own antiparticle and decays in the...Ch. 33 - The primary decay mode for the negative pion is...Ch. 33 - The mass of a theoretical particle that may be...Ch. 33 - The decay mode of the negative muon is (a) Find...Ch. 33 - The decay mode of the positive tau is (a) What...Ch. 33 - The principal decay mode at the sigma zero is (a)...Ch. 33 - (a) What is the uncertainty in the energy released...Ch. 33 - (a) What is the uncertainty in the energy released...Ch. 33 - (a) Verify from its quark composition that the...Ch. 33 - Accelerators such as the Triangle Universities...Ch. 33 - The reaction (described in the preceding problem)...Ch. 33 - One of the decay modes of the omega minus is (a)...Ch. 33 - Repeat the previous problem for the decay modeCh. 33 - One decay mode for the etazero meson is (a) Find...Ch. 33 - One decay mode for the etazero meson is (a) Write...Ch. 33 - Is the decay possible considering the appropriate...Ch. 33 - Is the decay possible considering the appropriate...Ch. 33 - (a) Is the decay possible considering the...Ch. 33 - (a) Is the decay possible considering the...Ch. 33 - The only combination of quark colors that produces...Ch. 33 - (a) Three quarks form a baryon. How many...Ch. 33 - (a) Show that the conjectured decay of the proton,...Ch. 33 - Verify the quantum numbers given for the + in...Ch. 33 - Verify the quantum numbers given for the proton...Ch. 33 - (a) How much energy would be released if the...Ch. 33 - (a) Find the charge, baryon number, strangeness,...Ch. 33 - There are particles called Dmesons. One of them is...Ch. 33 - There are particles called bottom mesons or...Ch. 33 - (a) What particle has the quark composition u-u-d?...Ch. 33 - (a) Show than all combinations of three quarks...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts The intensity of cosmic ray...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts Assuming conservation of...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts What is the wavelength of a...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts Calculate the relativistic...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts The primary decay mode for the...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts Plans for an accelerator that...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts Suppose you are designing a...Ch. 33 - Integrated Concepts In supernovas, neutrinos are...Ch. 33 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider an...Ch. 33 - Construct Your Own Problem Consider a detector...Ch. 33 - Prob. 1TPCh. 33 - Prob. 2TPCh. 33 - Prob. 3TPCh. 33 - Prob. 4TPCh. 33 - Prob. 5TPCh. 33 - Prob. 6TPCh. 33 - Prob. 7TPCh. 33 - Prob. 8TPCh. 33 - Prob. 9TPCh. 33 - Prob. 10TPCh. 33 - Prob. 11TPCh. 33 - Prob. 12TPCh. 33 - Prob. 13TPCh. 33 - Prob. 14TPCh. 33 - Prob. 15TPCh. 33 - Prob. 16TPCh. 33 - Prob. 17TPCh. 33 - Prob. 18TP
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- The range of the nuclear strong force is believed to be about 1.2 x 10-15 m. An early theory of nuclear physics proposed that the particle that “mediates” the strong force (similar to the photon mediating the electromagnetic force) is the pion. Assume that the pion moves at the speed of light in the nucleus, and calculate the time ∆t it takes to travel between nucleons. Assume that the distance between nucleons is also about 1.2 x 10-15 m. Use this time ∆t to calculate the energy ∆E for which energy conservation is violated during the time ∆t. This ∆E has been used to estimate the mass of the pion. What value do you determine for the mass? Compare this value with the measured value of 135 MeV/c2 for the neutral pion.arrow_forwardI am asked this question about the LHC but I keep on getting it wrong how should I really be doing this?arrow_forward(b) A K+ meson composed of a up-quark and a strange-antiquark has the following major decay modes: i. K+ → µtvµ ii. K+ + 7°e+e iii. K+ + n+0 iv. K+ → n+°7° Draw a Feynman diagram for cach of these decays and indicate whether these procced via the clectromagnetic, strong or weak interaction, or a combination thereof?arrow_forward
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- (b) Indicate how a GAL is programmed for the following expression: XYZ + XYZ + XYZ + XYZ + XYZarrow_forwardAbout 10,000 cosmic-ray protons, each with hundreds of MeV of energy, impinge on each square meter of our upper atmosphere each second. They collide with atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen to produce secondary showers of newly created particles, including many muons. Muons have a mass of 105.7 MeV/c2 and an average lifetime of 2.197 µs. Consider a secondary cosmic muon produced at an altitude of 15.00 km aimed directly downward with an energy of 6.000 GeV. With such high energy, the muon can travel a great distance into the earth without slowing down. (a) Determine the speed of this muon. (b) How far would this muon travel in one lifetime if there were no relativistic effects? (c) In the frame of the muon, what distance separates its creation position from the earth’s surface? (d) If one lifetime passes in the frame of the muon, how much time passes in the frame of the earth? (e) How far does a muon travel in this time as seen from the earth? (f) Does the muon survive its trip to the…arrow_forwardTwo protons collide and form a neutral pion through this interaction: Proton + proton --> proton + proton + pion. Protons have a mass of 938 MeV/c2 and the pion 135 MeV/c2. In the scenario where both incident protons are moving with the same speed, in opposite directions, what is the minimum kinetic energy for the protons to have to be able to produce the neutral pion as described above? Thanksarrow_forward
- (a) A beam of highly energetic protons emerges from a cyclotron. Can you assume that there is a magnetic field associated with these particles? Justify your answer. (b) When a current travels through the coils of a coil spring, the coil contracts as if it were compressed. What is your explanation for the fact?arrow_forward) Draw two lowest-order Feynman diagrams of the process μμμμ, one for the neutral current interaction and one for the charged current interaction.arrow_forwardAssume that CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is perfectly circular with a radius of 4.25km, and has a magnetic field of 8T (acting vertically). Without taking relativistic effects into account, what would the speed of a proton be if it were going around the LHC? [In fact it turns out if you correctly include relativity, the speed of the protons is less than the speed of light, but only around jogging pace less!]arrow_forward
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