Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Λ baryon | |
|---|---|
| Name | Λ0 baryon |
| Caption | Quark structure of the Λ0 (uds) |
| Statistics | Fermionic |
| Family | Baryon |
| Group | Hadron |
| Interaction | Strong, Weak, Electromagnetic, Gravity |
| Status | Confirmed |
| Theorized | Murray Gell-Mann, Kazuhiko Nishijima (early 1950s) |
| Discovered | University of Chicago, Cosmic ray cloud chamber (1950) |
| Mass | 1115.683, 0.006 |
| Decay time | 2.632, 0.020 |
| Decay particle | Proton or Neutron + Pion |
| Electric charge | 0 e |
| Spin | 1⁄2 |
| Strangeness | −1 |
| Parity | +1 |
| Composition | u d s |
Λ baryon. The Lambda baryon (Λ0) is a subatomic particle belonging to the baryon family, specifically a light, uncharged hyperon with strangeness −1. Its discovery in cosmic ray experiments provided the first direct evidence for the strange quark and was pivotal in the development of the quark model. As the lightest strange baryon, it serves as a fundamental benchmark in studies of the strong interaction and weak interaction.
The Λ baryon is classified within the spin-½ baryon octet in the Eightfold Way classification scheme developed by Murray Gell-Mann and Yuval Ne'eman. It is composed of one up quark, one down quark, and one strange quark, making it an isospin singlet. Its existence was crucial for establishing the concept of strangeness as a conserved quantum number in strong interactions, proposed by Murray Gell-Mann and Kazuhiko Nishijima. The particle's lifetime, on the order of a nanosecond, is characteristic of decays mediated by the weak force.
The Λ0 has a mass of approximately 1116 MeV/c², making it heavier than the nucleons (proton and neutron) but lighter than other hyperons like the Σ. Its quantum numbers include zero electric charge, positive parity, and zero isospin, distinguishing it from the charged Σ<sup>±</sup> states. The magnetic moment of the Λ has been measured precisely in experiments at facilities like Fermilab and CERN, providing tests for lattice QCD calculations. Its mean lifetime is about 2.6×10−10 seconds.
The primary decay channel for the Λ baryon is via the weak interaction into a nucleon and a pion, with the branching fraction for Λ → proton + π<sup>−</sup> being about 64% and for Λ → neutron + π<sup>0</sup> about 36%. These pionic decays violate strangeness conservation. Rare leptonic decay modes, such as Λ → proton + muon + antineutrino, are also allowed but highly suppressed, studied in experiments like Hyper-Kamiokande. The decay asymmetry parameters from these processes have been instrumental in testing CP violation models and the Cabibbo–Kobayashi–Maskawa matrix.
Λ baryons are commonly produced in high-energy collisions involving hadrons or leptons. They were first observed in interactions of cosmic rays with matter in a cloud chamber at the University of Chicago. In modern particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, they are copiously generated in proton–proton collisions and heavy-ion collisions, such as those studied by the ALICE experiment and STAR experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory. They are also produced in fixed-target experiments at facilities like J-PARC and in electron–positron annihilation at B factories like KEKB.
The Λ particle was discovered in 1950 by a team led by Melvin Schwartz and Jack Steinberger analyzing cloud chamber photographs from cosmic ray exposures at the University of Chicago. This observation, alongside the concurrent discovery of the kaon, initiated the "strange particle" era. The long lifetime relative to the strong interaction timescale posed a major theoretical puzzle, resolved by the introduction of strangeness by Murray Gell-Mann and Kazuhiko Nishijima. Its identification was a cornerstone for the subsequent development of the quark model by Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig.
The Λ baryon is a critical probe for multiple areas of fundamental physics. Its production and polarization in deep inelastic scattering experiments at DESY and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have provided insights into spin structure functions and parton distribution functions. As a major component of hypernuclei, studied at facilities like J-PARC and Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, it informs research on strange matter and neutron star interiors. Furthermore, its decay parameters are used in precision tests of the Standard Model, searching for new physics beyond it, notably in experiments like LHCb and BESIII.
Category:Baryons Category:Strange matter Category:Subatomic particles