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Quark model

In particle physics, the quark model is a classification scheme for hadrons in terms of their valence quarks—the quarks and antiquarks that give rise to the quantum numbers of the hadrons. The quark model underlies "flavor SU(3)", or the Eightfold Way, the successful classification scheme organizing the large number of lighter hadrons that were being discovered starting in the 1950s and continuing through the 1960s. It received experimental verification beginning in the late 1960s and is a valid effective classification of them to date. The model was independently proposed by physicists Murray Gell-Mann,[1] who dubbed them "quarks" in a concise paper, and George Zweig,[2][3] who suggested "aces" in a longer manuscript. André Petermann also touched upon the central ideas from 1963 to 1965, without as much quantitative substantiation.[4][5] Today, the model has essentially been absorbed as a component of the established quantum field theory of strong and electroweak particle interactions, dubbed the Standard Model.

Figure 1: The pseudoscalar meson nonet. Members of the original meson "octet" are shown in green, the singlet in magenta. Although these mesons are now grouped into a nonet, the Eightfold Way name derives from the patterns of eight for the mesons and baryons in the original classification scheme.

Hadrons are not really "elementary", and can be regarded as bound states of their "valence quarks" and antiquarks, which give rise to the quantum numbers of the hadrons. These quantum numbers are labels identifying the hadrons, and are of two kinds. One set comes from the Poincaré symmetryJPC, where J, P and C stand for the total angular momentum, P-symmetry, and C-symmetry, respectively.

The other set is the flavor quantum numbers such as the isospin, strangeness, charm, and so on. The strong interactions binding the quarks together are insensitive to these quantum numbers, so variation of them leads to systematic mass and coupling relationships among the hadrons in the same flavor multiplet.

All quarks are assigned a baryon number of 1/3. Up, charm and top quarks have an electric charge of +2/3, while the down, strange, and bottom quarks have an electric charge of −1/3. Antiquarks have the opposite quantum numbers. Quarks are spin-1/2 particles, and thus fermions. Each quark or antiquark obeys the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula individually, so any additive assembly of them will as well.

Mesons are made of a valence quark–antiquark pair (thus have a baryon number of 0), while baryons are made of three quarks (thus have a baryon number of 1). This article discusses the quark model for the up, down, and strange flavors of quark (which form an approximate flavor SU(3) symmetry). There are generalizations to larger number of flavors.

History edit

Developing classification schemes for hadrons became a timely question after new experimental techniques uncovered so many of them that it became clear that they could not all be elementary. These discoveries led Wolfgang Pauli to exclaim "Had I foreseen that, I would have gone into botany." and Enrico Fermi to advise his student Leon Lederman: "Young man, if I could remember the names of these particles, I would have been a botanist." These new schemes earned Nobel prizes for experimental particle physicists, including Luis Alvarez, who was at the forefront of many of these developments. Constructing hadrons as bound states of fewer constituents would thus organize the "zoo" at hand. Several early proposals, such as the ones by Enrico Fermi and Chen-Ning Yang (1949), and the Sakata model (1956), ended up satisfactorily covering the mesons, but failed with baryons, and so were unable to explain all the data.

The Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula, developed by Murray Gell-Mann and Kazuhiko Nishijima, led to the Eightfold Way classification, invented by Gell-Mann, with important independent contributions from Yuval Ne'eman, in 1961. The hadrons were organized into SU(3) representation multiplets, octets and decuplets, of roughly the same mass, due to the strong interactions; and smaller mass differences linked to the flavor quantum numbers, invisible to the strong interactions. The Gell-Mann–Okubo mass formula systematized the quantification of these small mass differences among members of a hadronic multiplet, controlled by the explicit symmetry breaking of SU(3).

The spin-3/2
Ω
baryon
, a member of the ground-state decuplet, was a crucial prediction of that classification. After it was discovered in an experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory, Gell-Mann received a Nobel prize in physics for his work on the Eightfold Way, in 1969.

Finally, in 1964, Gell-Mann, and, independently, George Zweig, discerned what the Eightfold Way picture encodes: They posited three elementary fermionic constituents—the "up", "down", and "strange" quarks—which are unobserved, and possibly unobservable in a free form. Simple pairwise or triplet combinations of these three constituents and their antiparticles underlie and elegantly encode the Eightfold Way classification, in an economical, tight structure, resulting in further simplicity. Hadronic mass differences were now linked to the different masses of the constituent quarks.

It would take about a decade for the unexpected nature—and physical reality—of these quarks to be appreciated more fully (See Quarks). Counter-intuitively, they cannot ever be observed in isolation (color confinement), but instead always combine with other quarks to form full hadrons, which then furnish ample indirect information on the trapped quarks themselves. Conversely, the quarks serve in the definition of quantum chromodynamics, the fundamental theory fully describing the strong interactions; and the Eightfold Way is now understood to be a consequence of the flavor symmetry structure of the lightest three of them.

Mesons edit

 
Figure 2: Pseudoscalar mesons of spin-0 form a nonet
 
Figure 3: Mesons of spin-1 form a nonet

The Eightfold Way classification is named after the following fact: If we take three flavors of quarks, then the quarks lie in the fundamental representation, 3 (called the triplet) of flavor SU(3). The antiquarks lie in the complex conjugate representation 3. The nine states (nonet) made out of a pair can be decomposed into the trivial representation, 1 (called the singlet), and the adjoint representation, 8 (called the octet). The notation for this decomposition is

 

Figure 1 shows the application of this decomposition to the mesons. If the flavor symmetry were exact (as in the limit that only the strong interactions operate, but the electroweak interactions are notionally switched off), then all nine mesons would have the same mass. However, the physical content of the full theory[clarification needed] includes consideration of the symmetry breaking induced by the quark mass differences, and considerations of mixing between various multiplets (such as the octet and the singlet).

N.B. Nevertheless, the mass splitting between the
η
and the
η′
is larger than the quark model can accommodate, and this "
η

η′
puzzle
" has its origin in topological peculiarities of the strong interaction vacuum, such as instanton configurations.

Mesons are hadrons with zero baryon number. If the quark–antiquark pair are in an orbital angular momentum L state, and have spin S, then

  • |LS| ≤ JL + S, where S = 0 or 1,
  • P = (−1)L+1, where the 1 in the exponent arises from the intrinsic parity of the quark–antiquark pair.
  • C = (−1)L+S for mesons which have no flavor. Flavored mesons have indefinite value of C.
  • For isospin I = 1 and 0 states, one can define a new multiplicative quantum number called the G-parity such that G = (−1)I+L+S.

If P = (−1)J, then it follows that S = 1, thus PC = 1. States with these quantum numbers are called natural parity states; while all other quantum numbers are thus called exotic (for example, the state JPC = 0−−).

Baryons edit

 
Figure 4. The S = 1/2 ground state baryon octet
 
Figure 5. The S = 3/2 baryon decuplet

Since quarks are fermions, the spin–statistics theorem implies that the wavefunction of a baryon must be antisymmetric under exchange of any two quarks. This antisymmetric wavefunction is obtained by making it fully antisymmetric in color, discussed below, and symmetric in flavor, spin and space put together. With three flavors, the decomposition in flavor is

 
The decuplet is symmetric in flavor, the singlet antisymmetric and the two octets have mixed symmetry. The space and spin parts of the states are thereby fixed once the orbital angular momentum is given.

It is sometimes useful to think of the basis states of quarks as the six states of three flavors and two spins per flavor. This approximate symmetry is called spin-flavor SU(6). In terms of this, the decomposition is

 

The 56 states with symmetric combination of spin and flavour decompose under flavor SU(3) into

 
where the superscript denotes the spin, S, of the baryon. Since these states are symmetric in spin and flavor, they should also be symmetric in space—a condition that is easily satisfied by making the orbital angular momentum L = 0. These are the ground state baryons.

The S = 1/2 octet baryons are the two nucleons (
p+
,
n0
), the three Sigmas (
Σ+
,
Σ0
,
Σ
), the two Xis (
Ξ0
,
Ξ
), and the Lambda (
Λ0
). The S = 3/2 decuplet baryons are the four Deltas (
Δ++
,
Δ+
,
Δ0
,
Δ
), three Sigmas (
Σ∗+
,
Σ∗0
,
Σ∗−
), two Xis (
Ξ∗0
,
Ξ∗−
), and the Omega (
Ω
).

For example, the constituent quark model wavefunction for the proton is

 

Mixing of baryons, mass splittings within and between multiplets, and magnetic moments are some of the other quantities that the model predicts successfully.

The group theory approach described above assumes that the quarks are eight components of a single particle, so the anti-symmetrization applies to all the quarks. A simpler approach is to consider the eight flavored quarks as eight separate, distinguishable, non-identical particles. Then the anti-symmetrization applies only to two identical quarks (like uu, for instance).[6]

Then the proton wave function can be written in the simpler form,

 

and the

 

If quark–quark interactions are limited to two-body interactions, then all the successful quark model predictions, including sum rules for baryon masses and magnetic moments, can be derived.

Discovery of color edit

Color quantum numbers are the characteristic charges of the strong force, and are completely uninvolved in electroweak interactions. They were discovered as a consequence of the quark model classification, when it was appreciated that the spin S = 3/2 baryon, the
Δ++
, required three up quarks with parallel spins and vanishing orbital angular momentum. Therefore, it could not have an antisymmetric wave function, (required by the Pauli exclusion principle). Oscar Greenberg noted this problem in 1964, suggesting that quarks should be para-fermions.[7]

Instead, six months later, Moo-Young Han and Yoichiro Nambu suggested the existence of a hidden degree of freedom, they labeled as the group SU(3)' (but later called 'color). This led to three triplets of quarks whose wave function was anti-symmetric in the color degree of freedom. Flavor and color were intertwined in that model: They did not commute.[8]

The modern concept of color completely commuting with all other charges and providing the strong force charge was articulated in 1973, by William Bardeen, Harald Fritzsch, and Murray Gell-Mann.[9][10]

States outside the quark model edit

While the quark model is derivable from the theory of quantum chromodynamics, the structure of hadrons is more complicated than this model allows. The full quantum mechanical wave function of any hadron must include virtual quark pairs as well as virtual gluons, and allows for a variety of mixings. There may be hadrons which lie outside the quark model. Among these are the glueballs (which contain only valence gluons), hybrids (which contain valence quarks as well as gluons) and exotic hadrons (such as tetraquarks or pentaquarks).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gell-Mann, M. (4 January 1964). "A Schematic Model of Baryons and Mesons". Physics Letters. 8 (3): 214–215. Bibcode:1964PhL.....8..214G. doi:10.1016/S0031-9163(64)92001-3.
  2. ^ Zweig, G. (17 January 1964). An SU(3) Model for Strong Interaction Symmetry and its Breaking (PDF) (Report). CERN Report No.8182/TH.401.
  3. ^ Zweig, G. (1964). An SU(3) Model for Strong Interaction Symmetry and its Breaking: II (PDF) (Report). CERN Report No.8419/TH.412.
  4. ^ Petermann, A. (1965). "Propriétés de l'étrangeté et une formule de masse pour les mésons vectoriels" [Strangeness properties and a mass formula for vector meson]. Nuclear Physics. 63 (2): 349–352. arXiv:1412.8681. Bibcode:1965NucPh..63..349P. doi:10.1016/0029-5582(65)90348-2.
  5. ^ Petrov, Vladimir A. (June 23–27, 2014). Half a Century with QUARKS. XXX-th International Workshop on High Energy Physics. Protvino, Moscow Oblast, Russia. arXiv:1412.8681.
  6. ^ Franklin, J. (1968). "A Model of Baryons Made of Quarks with Hidden Spin". Physical Review. 172 (3): 1807–1817. Bibcode:1968PhRv..172.1807F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.172.1807.
  7. ^ Greenberg, O.W. (1964). "Spin and unitary-spin independence in a paraquark model of baryons and mesons". Physical Review Letters. 13 (20): 598–602. Bibcode:1964PhRvL..13..598G. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.13.598.
  8. ^ Han, M.Y.; Nambu, Y. (1965). "Three-triplet model with double SU(3) symmetry". Physical Review B. 139 (4B): 1006. Bibcode:1965PhRv..139.1006H. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.139.B1006.
  9. ^ Bardeen, W.; Fritzsch, H.; Gell-Mann, M. (1973). "Light cone current algebra, π0 decay, and e+ e annihilation". In Gatto, R. (ed.). Scale and conformal symmetry in hadron physics. John Wiley & Sons. p. 139. arXiv:hep-ph/0211388. Bibcode:2002hep.ph...11388B. ISBN 0-471-29292-3.
  10. ^ Fritzsch, H.; Gell-Mann, M.; Leutwyler, H. (1973). "Advantages of the color octet gluon picture". Physics Letters B. 47 (4): 365. Bibcode:1973PhLB...47..365F. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.453.4712. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(73)90625-4.

References edit

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In particle physics the quark model is a classification scheme for hadrons in terms of their valence quarks the quarks and antiquarks that give rise to the quantum numbers of the hadrons The quark model underlies flavor SU 3 or the Eightfold Way the successful classification scheme organizing the large number of lighter hadrons that were being discovered starting in the 1950s and continuing through the 1960s It received experimental verification beginning in the late 1960s and is a valid effective classification of them to date The model was independently proposed by physicists Murray Gell Mann 1 who dubbed them quarks in a concise paper and George Zweig 2 3 who suggested aces in a longer manuscript Andre Petermann also touched upon the central ideas from 1963 to 1965 without as much quantitative substantiation 4 5 Today the model has essentially been absorbed as a component of the established quantum field theory of strong and electroweak particle interactions dubbed the Standard Model Figure 1 The pseudoscalar meson nonet Members of the original meson octet are shown in green the singlet in magenta Although these mesons are now grouped into a nonet the Eightfold Way name derives from the patterns of eight for the mesons and baryons in the original classification scheme Hadrons are not really elementary and can be regarded as bound states of their valence quarks and antiquarks which give rise to the quantum numbers of the hadrons These quantum numbers are labels identifying the hadrons and are of two kinds One set comes from the Poincare symmetry JPC where J P and C stand for the total angular momentum P symmetry and C symmetry respectively The other set is the flavor quantum numbers such as the isospin strangeness charm and so on The strong interactions binding the quarks together are insensitive to these quantum numbers so variation of them leads to systematic mass and coupling relationships among the hadrons in the same flavor multiplet All quarks are assigned a baryon number of 1 3 Up charm and top quarks have an electric charge of 2 3 while the down strange and bottom quarks have an electric charge of 1 3 Antiquarks have the opposite quantum numbers Quarks are spin 1 2 particles and thus fermions Each quark or antiquark obeys the Gell Mann Nishijima formula individually so any additive assembly of them will as well Mesons are made of a valence quark antiquark pair thus have a baryon number of 0 while baryons are made of three quarks thus have a baryon number of 1 This article discusses the quark model for the up down and strange flavors of quark which form an approximate flavor SU 3 symmetry There are generalizations to larger number of flavors Contents 1 History 2 Mesons 3 Baryons 3 1 Discovery of color 4 States outside the quark model 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesHistory editDeveloping classification schemes for hadrons became a timely question after new experimental techniques uncovered so many of them that it became clear that they could not all be elementary These discoveries led Wolfgang Pauli to exclaim Had I foreseen that I would have gone into botany and Enrico Fermi to advise his student Leon Lederman Young man if I could remember the names of these particles I would have been a botanist These new schemes earned Nobel prizes for experimental particle physicists including Luis Alvarez who was at the forefront of many of these developments Constructing hadrons as bound states of fewer constituents would thus organize the zoo at hand Several early proposals such as the ones by Enrico Fermi and Chen Ning Yang 1949 and the Sakata model 1956 ended up satisfactorily covering the mesons but failed with baryons and so were unable to explain all the data The Gell Mann Nishijima formula developed by Murray Gell Mann and Kazuhiko Nishijima led to the Eightfold Way classification invented by Gell Mann with important independent contributions from Yuval Ne eman in 1961 The hadrons were organized into SU 3 representation multiplets octets and decuplets of roughly the same mass due to the strong interactions and smaller mass differences linked to the flavor quantum numbers invisible to the strong interactions The Gell Mann Okubo mass formula systematized the quantification of these small mass differences among members of a hadronic multiplet controlled by the explicit symmetry breaking of SU 3 The spin 3 2 W baryon a member of the ground state decuplet was a crucial prediction of that classification After it was discovered in an experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory Gell Mann received a Nobel prize in physics for his work on the Eightfold Way in 1969 Finally in 1964 Gell Mann and independently George Zweig discerned what the Eightfold Way picture encodes They posited three elementary fermionic constituents the up down and strange quarks which are unobserved and possibly unobservable in a free form Simple pairwise or triplet combinations of these three constituents and their antiparticles underlie and elegantly encode the Eightfold Way classification in an economical tight structure resulting in further simplicity Hadronic mass differences were now linked to the different masses of the constituent quarks It would take about a decade for the unexpected nature and physical reality of these quarks to be appreciated more fully See Quarks Counter intuitively they cannot ever be observed in isolation color confinement but instead always combine with other quarks to form full hadrons which then furnish ample indirect information on the trapped quarks themselves Conversely the quarks serve in the definition of quantum chromodynamics the fundamental theory fully describing the strong interactions and the Eightfold Way is now understood to be a consequence of the flavor symmetry structure of the lightest three of them Mesons editSee also Meson and List of mesons nbsp Figure 2 Pseudoscalar mesons of spin 0 form a nonet nbsp Figure 3 Mesons of spin 1 form a nonetThe Eightfold Way classification is named after the following fact If we take three flavors of quarks then the quarks lie in the fundamental representation 3 called the triplet of flavor SU 3 The antiquarks lie in the complex conjugate representation 3 The nine states nonet made out of a pair can be decomposed into the trivial representation 1 called the singlet and the adjoint representation 8 called the octet The notation for this decomposition is 3 3 8 1 displaystyle mathbf 3 otimes mathbf overline 3 mathbf 8 oplus mathbf 1 nbsp Figure 1 shows the application of this decomposition to the mesons If the flavor symmetry were exact as in the limit that only the strong interactions operate but the electroweak interactions are notionally switched off then all nine mesons would have the same mass However the physical content of the full theory clarification needed includes consideration of the symmetry breaking induced by the quark mass differences and considerations of mixing between various multiplets such as the octet and the singlet N B Nevertheless the mass splitting between the h and the h is larger than the quark model can accommodate and this h h puzzle has its origin in topological peculiarities of the strong interaction vacuum such as instanton configurations Mesons are hadrons with zero baryon number If the quark antiquark pair are in an orbital angular momentum L state and have spin S then L S J L S where S 0 or 1 P 1 L 1 where the 1 in the exponent arises from the intrinsic parity of the quark antiquark pair C 1 L S for mesons which have no flavor Flavored mesons have indefinite value of C For isospin I 1 and 0 states one can define a new multiplicative quantum number called the G parity such that G 1 I L S If P 1 J then it follows that S 1 thus PC 1 States with these quantum numbers are called natural parity states while all other quantum numbers are thus called exotic for example the state JPC 0 Baryons editMain article Baryon See also List of baryons nbsp Figure 4 The S 1 2 ground state baryon octet nbsp Figure 5 The S 3 2 baryon decupletSince quarks are fermions the spin statistics theorem implies that the wavefunction of a baryon must be antisymmetric under exchange of any two quarks This antisymmetric wavefunction is obtained by making it fully antisymmetric in color discussed below and symmetric in flavor spin and space put together With three flavors the decomposition in flavor is3 3 3 10 S 8 M 8 M 1 A displaystyle mathbf 3 otimes mathbf 3 otimes mathbf 3 mathbf 10 S oplus mathbf 8 M oplus mathbf 8 M oplus mathbf 1 A nbsp The decuplet is symmetric in flavor the singlet antisymmetric and the two octets have mixed symmetry The space and spin parts of the states are thereby fixed once the orbital angular momentum is given It is sometimes useful to think of the basis states of quarks as the six states of three flavors and two spins per flavor This approximate symmetry is called spin flavor SU 6 In terms of this the decomposition is6 6 6 56 S 70 M 70 M 20 A displaystyle mathbf 6 otimes mathbf 6 otimes mathbf 6 mathbf 56 S oplus mathbf 70 M oplus mathbf 70 M oplus mathbf 20 A nbsp The 56 states with symmetric combination of spin and flavour decompose under flavor SU 3 into56 10 3 2 8 1 2 displaystyle mathbf 56 mathbf 10 frac 3 2 oplus mathbf 8 frac 1 2 nbsp where the superscript denotes the spin S of the baryon Since these states are symmetric in spin and flavor they should also be symmetric in space a condition that is easily satisfied by making the orbital angular momentum L 0 These are the ground state baryons The S 1 2 octet baryons are the two nucleons p n0 the three Sigmas S S0 S the two Xis 30 3 and the Lambda L0 The S 3 2 decuplet baryons are the four Deltas D D D0 D three Sigmas S S 0 S two Xis 3 0 3 and the Omega W For example the constituent quark model wavefunction for the proton is p 1 18 2 u d u 2 u u d 2 d u u u u d u d u u d u d u u d u u u u d displaystyle text p uparrow rangle frac 1 sqrt 18 2 text u uparrow text d downarrow text u uparrow rangle 2 text u uparrow text u uparrow text d downarrow rangle 2 text d downarrow text u uparrow text u uparrow rangle text u uparrow text u downarrow text d uparrow rangle text u uparrow text d uparrow text u downarrow rangle text u downarrow text d uparrow text u uparrow rangle text d uparrow text u downarrow text u uparrow rangle text d uparrow text u uparrow text u downarrow rangle text u downarrow text u uparrow text d uparrow rangle nbsp Mixing of baryons mass splittings within and between multiplets and magnetic moments are some of the other quantities that the model predicts successfully The group theory approach described above assumes that the quarks are eight components of a single particle so the anti symmetrization applies to all the quarks A simpler approach is to consider the eight flavored quarks as eight separate distinguishable non identical particles Then the anti symmetrization applies only to two identical quarks like uu for instance 6 Then the proton wave function can be written in the simpler form p 1 2 1 2 u u d 6 2 displaystyle text p left frac 1 2 frac 1 2 right frac text u text u text d sqrt 6 2 uparrow uparrow downarrow uparrow downarrow uparrow downarrow uparrow uparrow nbsp and the D 3 3 3 2 u u d displaystyle Delta left frac 3 3 frac 3 2 right text u text u text d uparrow uparrow uparrow nbsp If quark quark interactions are limited to two body interactions then all the successful quark model predictions including sum rules for baryon masses and magnetic moments can be derived Discovery of color edit Main article Color charge Color quantum numbers are the characteristic charges of the strong force and are completely uninvolved in electroweak interactions They were discovered as a consequence of the quark model classification when it was appreciated that the spin S 3 2 baryon the D required three up quarks with parallel spins and vanishing orbital angular momentum Therefore it could not have an antisymmetric wave function required by the Pauli exclusion principle Oscar Greenberg noted this problem in 1964 suggesting that quarks should be para fermions 7 Instead six months later Moo Young Han and Yoichiro Nambu suggested the existence of a hidden degree of freedom they labeled as the group SU 3 but later called color This led to three triplets of quarks whose wave function was anti symmetric in the color degree of freedom Flavor and color were intertwined in that model They did not commute 8 The modern concept of color completely commuting with all other charges and providing the strong force charge was articulated in 1973 by William Bardeen Harald Fritzsch and Murray Gell Mann 9 10 States outside the quark model editWhile the quark model is derivable from the theory of quantum chromodynamics the structure of hadrons is more complicated than this model allows The full quantum mechanical wave function of any hadron must include virtual quark pairs as well as virtual gluons and allows for a variety of mixings There may be hadrons which lie outside the quark model Among these are the glueballs which contain only valence gluons hybrids which contain valence quarks as well as gluons and exotic hadrons such as tetraquarks or pentaquarks See also editSubatomic particles Hadrons baryons mesons and quarks Exotic hadrons exotic mesons and exotic baryons Quantum chromodynamics flavor the QCD vacuumNotes edit Gell Mann M 4 January 1964 A Schematic Model of Baryons and Mesons Physics Letters 8 3 214 215 Bibcode 1964PhL 8 214G doi 10 1016 S0031 9163 64 92001 3 Zweig G 17 January 1964 An SU 3 Model for Strong Interaction Symmetry and its Breaking PDF Report CERN Report No 8182 TH 401 Zweig G 1964 An SU 3 Model for Strong Interaction Symmetry and its Breaking II PDF Report CERN Report No 8419 TH 412 Petermann A 1965 Proprietes de l etrangete et une formule de masse pour les mesons vectoriels Strangeness properties and a mass formula for vector meson Nuclear Physics 63 2 349 352 arXiv 1412 8681 Bibcode 1965NucPh 63 349P doi 10 1016 0029 5582 65 90348 2 Petrov Vladimir A June 23 27 2014 Half a Century with QUARKS XXX th International Workshop on High Energy Physics Protvino Moscow Oblast Russia arXiv 1412 8681 Franklin J 1968 A Model of Baryons Made of Quarks with Hidden Spin Physical Review 172 3 1807 1817 Bibcode 1968PhRv 172 1807F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 172 1807 Greenberg O W 1964 Spin and unitary spin independence in a paraquark model of baryons and mesons Physical Review Letters 13 20 598 602 Bibcode 1964PhRvL 13 598G doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 13 598 Han M Y Nambu Y 1965 Three triplet model with double SU 3 symmetry Physical Review B 139 4B 1006 Bibcode 1965PhRv 139 1006H doi 10 1103 PhysRev 139 B1006 Bardeen W Fritzsch H Gell Mann M 1973 Light cone current algebra p0 decay and e e annihilation In Gatto R ed Scale and conformal symmetry in hadron physics John Wiley amp Sons p 139 arXiv hep ph 0211388 Bibcode 2002hep ph 11388B ISBN 0 471 29292 3 Fritzsch H Gell Mann M Leutwyler H 1973 Advantages of the color octet gluon picture Physics Letters B 47 4 365 Bibcode 1973PhLB 47 365F CiteSeerX 10 1 1 453 4712 doi 10 1016 0370 2693 73 90625 4 References editS Eidelman et al Particle Data Group 2004 Review of Particle Physics PDF Physics Letters B 592 1 4 1 arXiv astro ph 0406663 Bibcode 2004PhLB 592 1P doi 10 1016 j physletb 2004 06 001 S2CID 118588567 Lichtenberg D B 1970 Unitary Symmetry and Elementary Particles Academic Press ISBN 978 1483242729 Thomson M A 2011 Lecture notes J J J Kokkedee 1969 The quark model W A Benjamin ASIN B001RAVDIA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quark model amp oldid 1175798143, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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