Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| J/ψ meson | |
|---|---|
| Name | J/ψ meson |
| Composition | Charm quark and charm antiquark (cc) |
| Statistics | Boson |
| Family | Meson |
| Interaction | Strong interaction, electromagnetic interaction, weak interaction |
| Status | Confirmed |
| Discovered | 1974 |
| Discoverer | Burton Richter (SLAC) and Samuel Ting (BNL) independently |
| Mass | 3096.900, 0.006 |
| Mean lifetime | 7.2, 0.1 |
| Decays to | Primarily electron–positron pair or muon–antimuon pair |
| Electric charge | 0 e |
| Parity | -1 |
| C parity | -1 |
| G parity | -1 |
J/ψ meson. The J/ψ meson is a subatomic particle, specifically a vector meson composed of a charm quark and its antiparticle, the charm antiquark. Its independent and nearly simultaneous discovery in 1974, known as the "November Revolution," provided the first direct evidence for the existence of the charm quark, a crucial confirmation of the quark model and the Standard Model of particle physics. This discovery was so pivotal that it led to the immediate awarding of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1976 to its discoverers.
The J/ψ meson was discovered independently in November 1974 by two research teams. At the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), a group led by Burton Richter used the SPEAR collider to observe an enormous spike in the production rate of electron–positron pairs at a specific energy, naming the new particle ψ. Almost simultaneously, a team at Brookhaven National Laboratory led by Samuel Ting, using a proton beam fixed-target experiment, detected a sharp peak in the mass of muon–antimuon pairs and named it J. The dual naming convention J/ψ was adopted to honor both discoveries. This event, often called the November Revolution, conclusively validated the predicted charm quark, a cornerstone of the Standard Model proposed by Sheldon Glashow, John Iliopoulos, and Luciano Maiani to explain the absence of certain weak interaction decays. The discovery resolved the crisis of confidence in the quark model and initiated the field of charmonium physics.
The J/ψ is the lightest and most well-known bound state of charm quark and charm antiquark, a system termed charmonium. It has a mass of approximately 3.1 GeV/c², which is about three times heavier than the proton. Its quantum numbers are spin J = 1, parity P = -1, and charge conjugation parity C = -1, classifying it as a vector meson. A defining property is its remarkably long lifetime for a particle that decays via the strong interaction; it lives about 1000 times longer than typical mesons with similar mass. This longevity, explained by the OZI rule, results from the difficulty of its constituent heavy quarks to annihilate into the lighter up, down, or strange quarks that mediate most strong decays.
The J/ψ can be produced in high-energy collisions, such as in electron–positron annihilations at facilities like SPEAR, BEPC, and modern B factories like KEKB and PEP-II. It is also copiously generated in proton–proton and proton–antiproton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and formerly at the Tevatron. Its primary and cleanest decay modes are into lepton pairs, specifically electron–positron or muon–antimuon pairs, which occur via the electromagnetic interaction and provide a clear experimental signature. Hadronic decays, though suppressed, proceed through mechanisms involving gluon emission and include final states with pions, kaons, and other light mesons.
The existence of the J/ψ was anticipated within the framework of the quark model developed by Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig. The specific need for a fourth quark, charm, was highlighted in the GIM mechanism proposed by Sheldon Glashow, John Iliopoulos, and Luciano Maiani to suppress unobserved flavor-changing neutral current processes. The J/ψ itself is modeled as a non-relativistic bound system of heavy quarks, analogous to positronium in quantum electrodynamics, but within quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Its spectrum and properties are successfully described by potential models like the Cornell potential, and its suppressed decays are explained by the OZI rule, a consequence of QCD's color confinement.
Following the landmark 1974 discovery at SPEAR and BNL, extensive studies of the J/ψ and the broader charmonium family commenced. Subsequent experiments at DORIS and CESR colliders mapped out higher mass charmonium states like the ψ(2S). The 1990s saw precision measurements at the Beijing Electron–Positron Collider (BEPC). In the 21st century, the J/ψ became a vital probe in heavy-ion collision experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to study the quark–gluon plasma. Furthermore, dedicated experiments like LHCb, CMS, and ATLAS at CERN study its production to test quantum chromodynamics and search for new physics beyond the Standard Model.
Category:Mesons Category:Elementary particle physics Category:Subatomic particles