Leptons
Fundamental particles without strong interaction
Introduction to Leptons
Leptons are elementary fermions with spin \( \dfrac{1}{2}\). They do not participate in strong interactions.Theyt do not participate in strong nuclear interaction. They are point-like particles with no internal structure (as far as we know). Examples include electrons, muons, taus and neutrinos.
| Generation | Lepton | Symbol | Charge | Spin | Mass | Interaction | Stability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Electron | e⁻ | −1 | \(\dfrac{1}{2}\) | 0.511 MeV/c² | Strong ✗, Electromagnetic ✓, Weak ✓, Gravitational ✓ | Stable |
| Electron Neutrino | νe | 0 | \(\dfrac{1}{2}\) | < 2 eV/c² (very small) | Strong ✗, Electromagnetic ✗, Weak ✓, Gravitational ✓ | Stable | |
| 2nd | Muon | μ⁻ | −1 | \(\dfrac{1}{2}\) | 105.66 MeV/c² | Strong ✗, Electromagnetic ✓, Weak ✓, Gravitational ✓ | Unstable (τ ≈ 2.2 × 10⁻⁶ s) |
| Muon Neutrino | νμ | 0 | \(\dfrac{1}{2}\) | < 0.17 MeV/c² (very small) | Strong ✗, Electromagnetic ✗, Weak ✓, Gravitational ✓ | Stable | |
| 3rd | Tau | τ⁻ | −1 | \(\dfrac{1}{2}\) | 1776.86 MeV/c² | Strong ✗, Electromagnetic ✓, Weak ✓, Gravitational ✓ | Unstable (τ ≈ 2.9 × 10⁻¹³ s) |
| Tau Neutrino | ντ | 0 | \(\dfrac{1}{2}\) | < 18.2 MeV/c² (very small) | Strong ✗, Electromagnetic ✗, Weak ✓, Gravitational ✓ | Stable |
Interactions of Leptons
| Interaction | Participate? |
|---|---|
| Gravitational | Yes |
| Electromagnetic | Only charged leptons |
| Weak | Yes (all leptons) |
| Strong | No |
Lepton Number
Each lepton family conserves a quantum number called lepton number.
Example:
β-decay conserves lepton number:
n → p + e⁻ + ν̄e
Chirality of Leptons
Chirality is a fundamental property of fermions defined by the eigenstates of the operator γ5.
PL = (1 − γ5)/2
PR = (1 + γ5)/2
Using these operators, a lepton field ψ can be decomposed into:
- Left-handed leptons (ψL)
- Right-handed leptons (ψR)
Chirality vs Helicity
Although often confused, chirality and helicity are distinct concepts.
| Chirality | Helicity |
|---|---|
| Intrinsic quantum property | Depends on direction of motion |
| Lorentz invariant | Frame dependent (except for massless particles) |
| Defined using γ5 | Defined using spin and momentum |
Role of Chirality in Weak Interaction
The weak interaction is chiral: it couples only to left-handed leptons and right-handed antileptons.
Right-handed neutrinos do not participate in weak interactions in the Standard Model.
Flavour and Chirality in the Standard Model
- Left-handed leptons form SU(2)L doublets
- Right-handed charged leptons are SU(2)L singlets
- Neutrinos are only left-handed
Summary
- Lepton flavour distinguishes electron, muon, and tau families
- Chirality separates left- and right-handed components
- Weak interactions violate parity due to chiral coupling
- Neutrino oscillations imply flavour mixing
Neutrino Masses and Flavor Oscillations
Introduction
Neutrinos are electrically neutral, weakly interacting elementary particles. Originally assumed to be massless in the Standard Model, experimental evidence now confirms that neutrinos possess non-zero but extremely small masses. This discovery has profound implications for particle physics and cosmology.
Neutrino Flavours
There are three known neutrino flavours, each associated with a charged lepton:
| Flavour | Symbol | Associated Lepton |
|---|---|---|
| Electron neutrino | νe | Electron (e⁻) |
| Muon neutrino | νμ | Muon (μ⁻) |
| Tau neutrino | ντ | Tau (τ⁻) |
Evidence for Neutrino Mass
The existence of neutrino mass is established through the observation of neutrino flavour oscillations. Key experimental confirmations include:
- Solar neutrino experiments (Homestake, SNO)
- Atmospheric neutrino experiments (Super-Kamiokande)
- Reactor neutrino experiments (KamLAND)
- Accelerator-based neutrino experiments
Neutrino Mass Eigenstates and Flavor Eigenstates
Neutrinos are produced and detected in flavour eigenstates, but propagate as mass eigenstates.
where:
- α = e, μ, τ (flavour index)
- i = 1, 2, 3 (mass index)
- U is the PMNS mixing matrix
PMNS Mixing Matrix
The Pontecorvo–Maki–Nakagawa–Sakata (PMNS) matrix describes the mixing between flavour and mass eigenstates:
It is parameterized by three mixing angles and one CP-violating phase.
Neutrino Oscillation Phenomenon
As neutrinos propagate, quantum interference between mass eigenstates causes the flavour content to change with time and distance. This phenomenon is called neutrino oscillation.
where:
- θ = mixing angle
- Δm² = difference of squared masses
- L = distance traveled
- E = neutrino energy
Mass-Squared Differences
Oscillation experiments measure only mass-squared differences, not absolute masses.
| Parameter | Approximate Value |
|---|---|
| Δm212 | ~ 7.4 × 10−5 eV² |
| |Δm312| | ~ 2.5 × 10−3 eV² |
Neutrino Mass Hierarchy
The ordering of neutrino masses is not yet fully determined. Two possible schemes exist:
- Normal hierarchy: m1 < m2 < m3
- Inverted hierarchy: m3 < m1 < m2
Dirac and Majorana Neutrinos
Neutrinos may be either:
- Dirac particles (distinct antiparticles)
- Majorana particles (particle is its own antiparticle)
Summary
- Neutrinos have tiny but non-zero masses
- Flavour eigenstates differ from mass eigenstates
- Neutrino oscillations arise due to mass differences and mixing
- PMNS matrix governs flavour mixing
- Neutrino physics points beyond the Standard Model
Importance of Leptons
- Electrons form atomic structure
- Neutrinos play a key role in nuclear reactions
- Muon and tau confirm particle generations
- Essential to the Standard Model of particle physics