'''Quantum chromodynamics''' (QCD) is the theory describing one of the fundamental forces, the
strong interaction. It describes the interactions of
quarks and
gluons and takes the form of a
quantum field theory of a special kind called a non-abelian
gauge theory. QCD forms an important part of the
standard model of
particle physics.
QCD enjoys two peculiar properties:
- asymptotic freedom, which means that in very high-energy reactions, quarks and gluons interact very weakly. That QCD predicts this behavior was first discovered in the early 1970s by David Politzer and by Frank Wilczek and David Gross. For this work they were awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics. A huge body of experimental evidence for QCD has been gathered over the years.
- confinement, which means that the force between quarks does not diminish as they are separated. Because of this, it would take an infinite amount of energy to separate two quarks; they are forever bound into hadrons such as the proton and the neutron. Although analytically unproven, confinement is widely believed to be true because it explains the consistent failure of free quark searches, and it is easy to demonstrate in lattice QCD.
Names
The word
quark was coined by
Murray Gell-Mann in its present sense. He claims to have taken it from the phrase "Three quarks for Muster Mark" in
Finnegan's Wake by
James Joyce.
The three kinds of
charge in QCD (as opposed to one in
QED) are usually referred to as "
color charge" by loose analogy to the three kinds of
color (red, green and blue)
perceived by humans. Since the theory of electric charge is dubbed "electrodynamics", the Greek word "chroma" Χρώμα (meaning color) is applied to the theory of color charge, "chromodynamics".
History
With the invention of
bubble chambers and spark chambers in the 1950s, experimental
particle physics discovered a large and ever-growing number of particles called hadrons. It seemed that such a large number of particles could not all be fundamental. First, the particles were classified by charge and
isospin; then (in 1953) according to
strangeness by
Murray Gell-Mann and Kazuhiko Nishijima. To gain greater insight, the hadrons were sorted into groups having similar properties and masses using the
Eightfold way invented in 1961 by Gell-Mann and
Yuval Ne'eman. Gell-Mann and
George Zweig went on to propose in 1963 that the structure of the groups could be explained by the existence of three flavors of smaller particles inside the hadrons: the
quarks.
At this stage, one particle, the Δ
++ remained mysterious; in the quark model, it is composed of three up quarks with parallel spins. However, since quarks are
fermions, this combination is forbidden by the
Pauli exclusion principle. In 1965, Moo-Young Han and
Yoichiro Nambu resolved the problem by proposing that quarks possess an additional
SU(3) gauge degree of freedom, later called color charge. They noted that quarks would interact via an octet of vector
gauge bosons: the
gluons.
Since free quark searches consistently failed to turn up any evidence for the new particles, it was then believed that quarks were merely convenient mathematical constructs, not real particles.
Richard Feynman argued that high energy experiments showed quarks to be real: he called them
partons (since they were parts of hadrons). James Bjorken proposed that certain relations should then hold in deep inelastic scattering of
electrons and protons, which were spectacularly verified in experiments at SLAC in 1969.
Although the study of the strong interaction remained daunting, the discovery of
asymptotic freedom by
David Gross, David Politzer and
Frank Wilczek allowed people to make precise predictions of the results of many high energy experiments using the techniques of
perturbation theory (quantum mechanics). Evidence of
gluons was discovered in three-jet events at
HERA in 1979. These experiments became more and more precise, culminating in the verification of
perturbative QCD at the level of a few percent at the LEP in
CERN.
The other side of asymptotic freedom is
confinement. Since the force between color charges does not decrease with distance, it is believed that quarks and gluons can never be liberated from hadrons. This aspect of the theory is verified within
lattice QCD computations, but is not mathematically proven. One of the
Millennium Prizes announced by the
Clay Mathematics Institute requires a claimant to produce such a proof. Other aspects of non-perturbative QCD are the exploration of phases of
quark matter, including the
quark-gluon plasma.
The theory
Some definitions
Every field theory of
particle physics is based on certain symmetries of nature whose existence is deduced from observations. These can be
- local symmetries, that is the symmetry acts independently at each point in space-time. Each such symmetry is the basis of a gauge theory and requires the introduction of its own gauge bosons.
- global symmetries, which are symmetries whose operations must be simultaneously applied to all points of space-time.
QCD is a gauge theory of the
SU(3) gauge group obtained by taking the
color charge to define a local symmetry.
Since the strong interaction does not discriminate between different flavors of quark, QCD has approximate
flavor symmetry, which is broken by the differing masses of the quarks.
There are additional global symmetries whose definitions require the notion of
chirality, discrimination between left and right-handed. If the
spin of a particle has a positive
projection on its direction of motion then it is called left-handed; otherwise, it is right-handed.
- Chiral symmetries involve independent transformations of these two types of particle.
- Vector symmetries (also called diagonal symmetries) mean the same transformation is applied on the two chiralities.
- Axial symmetries are those in which one transformation is applied on left-handed particles and the inverse on the right-handed particles.
The symmetry groups
The color group SU(3) corresponds to the local symmetry whose gauging gives rise to QCD. The electric charge labels a representation of the local symmetry group U(1) which is gauged to give
QED: this is an
Abelian group. If one considers a version of QCD with N
f flavors of massless quarks, then there is a global (chiral) flavor symmetry group
. The chiral symmetry is
spontaneously broken by the
QCD vacuum to the vector (L+R)
with the formation of a chiral condensate. The vector symmetry,
corresponds to the baryon number of quarks and is an exact symmetry. The axial symmetry
is exact in the classical theory, but broken in the quantum theory, an occurrence called an
anomaly. Gluon field configurations called
instantons are closely related to this anomaly.
Cautionary note
In many applications of QCD one can ignore the heavy flavors (charm, bottom and top). In this case the effective flavor group is often SU(3), which should not be confused with the color group. In QCD the color group belongs to a local symmetry and hence is gauged. The flavor group is not gauged. The Eightfold way is based on the flavor group and ignores the local symmetry which gives QCD.
The fields
Quarks are massive spin-1/2
fermions which carry a
color charge whose gauging is the content of QCD. Quarks are represented by
Dirac fields in the
fundamental representation 3 of the gauge group SU(3). They also carry electric charge (either -1/3 or 2/3) and participate in weak interactions as part of isospin doublets. They carry global quantum numbers including the
baryon number, which is 1/3 for each quark,
hypercharge and one of the flavor quantum numbers.
Gluons are spin-1
bosons which also carry
color charges, since they lie in the
adjoint representation 8 of SU(3). They have no electric charge, do not participate in the weak interactions, and have no flavor. They lie in the
singlet representation 1 of all these symmetry groups.
Every quark has its own antiquark. The charge of each antiquark is exactly the opposite of the corresponding quark.
QCD
The Lagrangian of QCD (with color, flavor and spin indices suppressed) looks exactly like that of
QED:
:
where F denotes the gluon field tensor, ψ the quark field and D the covariant derivative. Part of its content lies in the Feynman rules which state that all processes which occur in the theory can be resolved into the elementary interactions (called vertices):
qqg,
ggg and
gggg. A quark may emit (or absorb) a gluon, a gluon may emit (or absorb) a gluon, and two gluons may directly interact. In QED, only the first kind of vertex occurs, since photons have no charge.
Methods
Further analysis of the content of the theory is complicated. Various techniques have been developed to work with QCD. Some of them are discussed briefly below.
Perturbative QCD
This approach is based on asymptotic freedom, which allows
perturbation theory to be used accurately in experiments performed at very high energies. Although limited in scope, this approach has resulted in the most precise tests of QCD to date.
Lattice QCD
Among non-perturbative approaches to QCD, the most well established one is
lattice QCD. This approach uses a discrete set of space-time points (called the lattice) to reduce the analytically intractible path integrals of the continuum theory to a very difficult numerical computation which is then carried out on supercomputers. While it is a slow and resource-intensive approach, it has wide applicability, giving insight into parts of the theory inaccessible by other means.
1/N expansion
A well-known approximation scheme, the
1/N expansion, starts from the premise that the number of colors is infinite, and makes a series of corrections to account for the fact that it is not. Until now it has been the source of qualitative insight rather than a method for quantitative predictions. Modern variants include the
AdS/CFT approach.
Effective theories
For specific problems some theories may be written down which seem to give qualitatively correct results. In the best of cases, these may then be obtained as systematic expansions in some parameter of the QCD Lagrangian. Among the best such effective models one should now count chiral perturbation theory (which expands around light quark masses near zero) and heavy quark effective theory (which expands around heavy quark mass near infinity).
Experimental tests
The notion of quark
flavours was prompted by the necessity of explaining the properties of
hadrons during the development of the
quark model. The notion of colour was necessiated by the puzzle of the Δ
++. This has been dealt with in the section on Quantum chromodynamics#History.
The first evidence for
quarks as real constiutent elements of
hadrons was obtained in deep inelastic scattering experiments at SLAC. The first evidence for gluons came in three-jet events at
HERA.
Good quantitative tests of perturbative QCD are
- the running of the QCD coupling as deduced from many observations
- scaling violation in polarized and unpolarized deep inelastic scattering
- vector boson production at colliders (this includes the Drell-Yan process)
- jet cross sections in colliders
- event shape observables at the LEP
- heavy-quark production in colliders
Quantitative tests of non-perturbative QCD are fewer, because the predictions are harder to make. The best is probably the the running of the QCD coupling as probed through
lattice computations of heavy-quarkonium spectra. There is a recent claim about the mass of the heavy meson B
c http://www.aip.org/pnu/2005/split/731-1.html. Other non-perturbative tests are currently at the level of 5% at best. Continuing work on masses and form factors of hadrons and their weak matrix elements are promising candidates for future quantitative tests. The whole subject of quark matter and the
quark-gluon plasma is a non-perturbative test bed for QCD which still remains to be properly exploited.
See also
- For overviews see standard model, its field theoretical formulation, strong interactions, quarks and gluons, hadrons, confinement, QCD matter, or quark-gluon plasma.
- For details see gauge theory, quantization procedure including BRST and Faddeev-Popov ghosts. A more general catergory is quantum field theory.
- For techniques see Lattice QCD, 1/N expansion, perturbative QCD, heavy quark effective theory, chiral models.
- For experiments see quark search experiments, deep inelastic scattering, jet physics, quark-gluon plasma.
References and external links
Category:Particle physics
Category:Quantum field theory
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