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The three families

Fundamental particles are thought to be one of three types—leptons, quarks, or carrier particles. Each of those three types is further divided into three analogous families as illustrated in [link] . We have examined leptons and quarks in some detail. Each has six members (and their six antiparticles) divided into three analogous families. The first family is normal matter, of which most things are composed. The second is exotic, and the third more exotic and more massive than the second. The only stable particles are in the first family, which also has unstable members.

Always searching for symmetry and similarity, physicists have also divided the carrier particles into three families, omitting the graviton. Gravity is special among the four forces in that it affects the space and time in which the other forces exist and is proving most difficult to include in a Theory of Everything or TOE (to stub the pretension of such a theory). Gravity is thus often set apart. It is not certain that there is meaning in the groupings shown in [link] , but the analogies are tempting. In the past, we have been able to make significant advances by looking for analogies and patterns, and this is an example of one under current scrutiny. There are connections between the families of leptons, in that the τ size 12{τ} {} decays into the μ size 12{μ} {} and the μ size 12{μ} {} into the e . Similarly for quarks, the higher families eventually decay into the lowest, leaving only u and d quarks. We have long sought connections between the forces in nature. Since these are carried by particles, we will explore connections between gluons, W ± size 12{W rSup { size 8{ +- {}} } } {} and Z 0 size 12{Z rSup { size 8{0} } } {} , and photons as part of the search for unification of forces discussed in GUTs: The Unification of Forces ..

This figure shows three types of particles arranged in three rows. In the top row are leptons, in the middle row are quarks, and in the bottom row are carrier particles. The rows are divided into three columns, with the columns labeled family one, family two, and family three, from left to right. In family one are the electron and electron neutrino, the up and down quarks, and the photon and upsilon. In family two are the muon and muon neutrino, the strange and charmed quarks, and the W plus, W minus, and Z zero. In family three are the tau and tau neutrino, the top and bottom quarks, and gluons.
The three types of particles are leptons, quarks, and carrier particles. Each of those types is divided into three analogous families, with the graviton left out.

Summary

  • Hadrons are thought to be composed of quarks, with baryons having three quarks and mesons having a quark and an antiquark.
  • The characteristics of the six quarks and their antiquark counterparts are given in [link] , and the quark compositions of certain hadrons are given in [link] .
  • Indirect evidence for quarks is very strong, explaining all known hadrons and their quantum numbers, such as strangeness, charm, topness, and bottomness.
  • Quarks come in six flavors and three colors and occur only in combinations that produce white.
  • Fundamental particles have no further substructure, not even a size beyond their de Broglie wavelength.
  • There are three types of fundamental particles—leptons, quarks, and carrier particles. Each type is divided into three analogous families as indicated in [link] .

Conceptual questions

The quark flavor change d u size 12{d rightarrow u} {} takes place in β size 12{β rSup { size 8{ - {}} } } {} decay. Does this mean that the reverse quark flavor change u d size 12{u rightarrow d} {} takes place in β + size 12{β rSup { size 8{+{}} } } {} decay? Justify your response by writing the decay in terms of the quark constituents, noting that it looks as if a proton is converted into a neutron in β + size 12{β rSup { size 8{+{}} } } {} decay.

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Explain how the weak force can change strangeness by changing quark flavor.

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Source:  OpenStax, College physics. OpenStax CNX. Jul 27, 2015 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11406/1.9
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