Some questions on Invariant Mass Spectrum

In summary, the invariant mass spectrum is a unique way to identify particles, particularly in the case of particle resonances. It measures the cross section of a particle decay as a function of the invariant mass of the decay products. The spectral function is given by the relativistic Breit-Wigner distribution, which has a peak at the particle's mass and a width related to its inverse lifetime. This spectrum is useful in distinguishing particles from background in experiments. However, it should be noted that in some cases, such as in LHC experiments, it may be difficult to determine the "parent particle's" rest frame and the spectrum may be affected by radiative corrections.
  • #1
zhangyang
58
0
What can we learn from Invariant Mass Spectrum?How to measure it?So,how to read it?

Mass measurement is converted into energy measurement,but how could we make the quantity change continuously in order to form the horizontal axis?

How to divide different particles to measure them respectively?Is the invariant mass spectrum the unique way to identify a particle?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
The invariant-mass spectrum of what?

One example are particle resonances. In the most simple case the particle decays into two other particles, e.g., a ##Z## boson into an ##e^+ e^-## pair (dilepton). Then you measure the cross section as a function of the invariant mass of the pair. Then you get the ##Z## boson's mass spectrum independent of its motion, because invariant mass is invariant under Lorentz transformations (that's where it's name comes from).

If ##p_1## and ##p_2## are the four-momenta of the two electrons, the invariant mass is given by
$$M^2=(p_1+p_2)^2=p_1^2 + p_2^2 +2 p_1 \dots p_2 = 2 m_e^2 + 2 p_1 \cdot p_2,$$
where the square and the dot product is to be understood as the Minkowski product with the +--- convention (west-coast metric). I also set ##c=\hbar=1## (natural units).

If you plot this spectrum you'll find a peak around the ##Z##-boson mass.
 
  • #3
vanhees71 said:
The invariant-mass spectrum of what?

One example are particle resonances. In the most simple case the particle decays into two other particles, e.g., a ##Z## boson into an ##e^+ e^-## pair (dilepton). Then you measure the cross section as a function of the invariant mass of the pair. Then you get the ##Z## boson's mass spectrum independent of its motion, because invariant mass is invariant under Lorentz transformations (that's where it's name comes from).

If ##p_1## and ##p_2## are the four-momenta of the two electrons, the invariant mass is given by
$$M^2=(p_1+p_2)^2=p_1^2 + p_2^2 +2 p_1 \dots p_2 = 2 m_e^2 + 2 p_1 \cdot p_2,$$
where the square and the dot product is to be understood as the Minkowski product with the +--- convention (west-coast metric). I also set ##c=\hbar=1## (natural units).

If you plot this spectrum you'll find a peak around the ##Z##-boson mass.

Thank you.

Maybe I haven't considered some aspects,but if it is a two-body-product decay ,in the parent rest frame,the electrons must be back to back,and have same momentum,so how could it generate a spectrum? The inner product would be a constant,right?
 
  • #4
An unstable particle has a finite width in its mass distribution. Otherwise it couldn't decay.

Strictly speaking an "unstable particle" is not a particle in the strict sense, because it cannot be described as an asymptotically free state. So in reality it's the pole of a propagator in a scattering diagram. The spectral distribution is given by the imaginary part of the corresponding retarded propagator (which in vacuum QFT is the same as the usual Feynman propagator for ##p^0>0##).

For a scalar particle the propagator takes the general form
$$D(p)=\frac{1}{p^2-m^2-\Pi(p^2)}.$$
If there's a pole in the complex ##p^0## plane and the imaginary part of the self-energy ##\Pi## is not too large, you can write in the neighbourhood of the pole
$$D(p) \simeq \frac{1}{p^2-m^2+m \mathrm{i} \Gamma}.$$
The spectral function then is given by the relativistic Breit-Wigner distribution
$$A(p)=-2 \mathrm{im} D(p)=\frac{2m \mathrm{i} \Gamma}{(p^2-m^2)^2+m^2 \Gamma^2}.$$
This function takes its maximum at ##p^2=m^2## and the distribution falls to half of this value for ##p^2-m^2=m \Gamma##. This implies that ##\Gamma=1/\tau## is the inverse lifetime of the particle (measured in inverse MeV, which you can reevaluate to fm with the conversion factor ##\hbar c=197 \mathrm{MeV} \; \mathrm{fm}##.
 
  • #5
zhangyang said:
Thank you.

Maybe I haven't considered some aspects,but if it is a two-body-product decay ,in the parent rest frame,the electrons must be back to back,and have same momentum,so how could it generate a spectrum? The inner product would be a constant,right?

And do you think that your machine/detector is at the "parent particles rest frame"?
And in general there are many ways this thing cannot help you... For example in LHC where you have parton interactions, you can't possibly know the full momentum of the parton ... also in that case, a Z boson could come from particles that have received radiative correction maybe by the exchange of a gluon (in which case it is even worse to define a rest frame)...
and many other reasons... for example the intermediate particle could not be real... In which case the relation:
[itex] (p_1 + p_2)^2= M_{inv}^2[/itex] is not necessarily taking the value [itex]M_z^2[/itex]
 
  • #6
Most of the time, mass spectra are looked at to distinguish particles (which usually form a peak at their mass, with a finite width due to detector effects and the particle lifetime) from background (sets of particles that do not come from the same decay process and do not show a peak).
 
  • #7
vanhees71 said:
An unstable particle has a finite width in its mass distribution. Otherwise it couldn't decay.

Strictly speaking an "unstable particle" is not a particle in the strict sense, because it cannot be described as an asymptotically free state. So in reality it's the pole of a propagator in a scattering diagram. The spectral distribution is given by the imaginary part of the corresponding retarded propagator (which in vacuum QFT is the same as the usual Feynman propagator for ##p^0>0##).

For a scalar particle the propagator takes the general form
$$D(p)=\frac{1}{p^2-m^2-\Pi(p^2)}.$$
If there's a pole in the complex ##p^0## plane and the imaginary part of the self-energy ##\Pi## is not too large, you can write in the neighbourhood of the pole
$$D(p) \simeq \frac{1}{p^2-m^2+m \mathrm{i} \Gamma}.$$
The spectral function then is given by the relativistic Breit-Wigner distribution
$$A(p)=-2 \mathrm{im} D(p)=\frac{2m \mathrm{i} \Gamma}{(p^2-m^2)^2+m^2 \Gamma^2}.$$
This function takes its maximum at ##p^2=m^2## and the distribution falls to half of this value for ##p^2-m^2=m \Gamma##. This implies that ##\Gamma=1/\tau## is the inverse lifetime of the particle (measured in inverse MeV, which you can reevaluate to fm with the conversion factor ##\hbar c=197 \mathrm{MeV} \; \mathrm{fm}##.

For example, a decay J/psi →p, anti-p,gamma; An article analyze the invariant mass of p bar p as a whole,
"Observation of a Near-Threshold Enhancement in thepp¯Mass Spectrum from RadiativeJ/ψ→γpp¯Decays"(http://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.91.022001),
but they treat the whole as a resonance who has a width.What the product of the resonance decay is?And the "whole" is called p bar p ,only because the mass peak is 2mp?If it is a bound state of p bar p,the static mass would be much smaller because of the bind energy,and particle structure is always not the decay product,because the produce is generated just at the decay time.

How could we change the mass parameter as the horizontal axis in the invariant mass spectrum?
 
  • #8
I don't understand your questions.
zhangyang said:
How could we change the mass parameter as the horizontal axis in the invariant mass spectrum?
Which mass parameter do you want to change?
The invariant mass of the p/pbar system is a measurement. For each decay, you calculate that mass, and increase the corresponding bin by 1.
 
  • #9
Again also in this case, you measure the momenta of the outgoing proton and antiproton. Then you know their energies ##E_1=\sqrt{m_p^2+\vec{p}_1^2}## and ##E_2 = \sqrt{m_p^2 + \vec{p}_2^2}##. Then you calculate the invariant mass ##M^2=(E_1+E_2)^2-(\vec{p}_1+\vec{p}_2)^2##. Since you have an additional particle (a ##\gamma## quantum in that case), you get a broad invariant-mass distribution rather than a sharp peak in this case as you can see in Fig. 3.
 

Related to Some questions on Invariant Mass Spectrum

What is an invariant mass spectrum?

An invariant mass spectrum is a graph that shows the distribution of the invariant mass of particles produced in a collision.

What is the significance of the invariant mass spectrum in particle physics?

The invariant mass spectrum is an important tool in particle physics as it allows scientists to identify and study the properties of particles produced in high-energy collisions.

How is the invariant mass spectrum calculated?

The invariant mass spectrum is calculated by using the energy and momentum of particles produced in a collision. The invariant mass is the mass of a system of particles calculated using the energy and momentum of the individual particles.

What information can be obtained from an invariant mass spectrum?

An invariant mass spectrum can provide information about the mass and decay products of particles produced in a collision. It can also reveal the presence of new particles that may have been created during the collision.

What factors can affect the shape of an invariant mass spectrum?

The shape of an invariant mass spectrum can be affected by various factors such as the energy and type of particles involved in the collision, the detector used to measure the particles, and the background noise present in the data.

Similar threads

  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
16
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
12
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
19
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
4
Views
910
  • Special and General Relativity
5
Replies
144
Views
6K
Replies
10
Views
1K
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
11
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
7
Views
1K
Back
Top