Standard Model Feynman Diagrams

In summary, the conversation is about constructing Feynman diagrams and the rules and building blocks involved. The speaker is new to drawing these diagrams and seeks guidance from others. They discuss specific diagrams and the rules for identifying interactions, such as weak and electromagnetic interactions. The conversation also touches upon the importance of flavor conservation laws and the role of gluons in interactions. Ultimately, the speaker receives helpful tips and feedback on their diagrams.
  • #1
HairyFish
2
0
I have spent a while trying to get to grips with the building blocks used for constructing feynman diagrams, below is my attempt at a set of reactions, how am I doing so far?

jigtg8.jpg


I don't think [tex]e^{+}e^{-}\rightarrow\mu^{+}\mu^{-}[/tex] can happen since a gluon only interacts on particles with a colour charge, but am unsure :confused:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
I only looked at the top two so far, but they're both wrong. In the first one, you're changing the flavor of the neutrinos and the other leptons at each vertex, but the Z can't do that. The Z only couples to a particle and its antiparticle. In the second one, you have a photon coupling to a neutrino and a Z, neither of which has electric charge. Also, on the righthand side, you have four particles coming into a single vertex. You should only have three.
 
  • #3
There's a certain amount of intuition involved when drawing out these diagrams - for starters, you really have to know well which elementary vertices are allowed, and only work with those. In most of your diagrams I see vertices which aren't allowed, so I'm guessing you're new to learning this stuff? (It took me a while to get used to this too)

The first thing I would suggest that you do when trying to draw the diagram for a reaction is figure out what kind of a process it is. For instance, any time neutrinos are involved, you know it's a weak interaction and there will most likely - no, wait, definitely - be a W boson exchanged. (Whenever you have a neutrino, it must go into or come out of a vertex that also has the corresponding lepton and a W boson.) Any time a quark changes flavor, or any time you produce (or destroy) two quarks with different flavors, again, there will be a W boson exchanged. As a matter of fact, weak interactions are the only ones that violate flavor conservation laws - that means they're the only ones that can turn a neutrino into a lepton or vice-versa, or that can turn a quark from one flavor into another, so they're often pretty easy to recognize.

If it isn't a weak interaction, or if it is but you think there's more going on than that, next consider electromagnetic interactions. Any time you have a particle and its antiparticle annihilating, they produce a photon. (Well, unless they're different-colored quarks, then you get a gluon) Also, if you have elastic scattering of charged particles, a photon is responsible for that.

Other than that, I guess you just have to get used to the rules... for what it's worth, the more practice like this you get, the better you'll know what is allowed and what isn't.
 
  • #4
I couldn't resist checking :wink: so: beyond what vela said, your [itex]d\nu_e \to u e^-[/itex] is wrong - remember what I said about neutrinos. [itex]gg\to W^+W^-[/itex] I'm not sure about... I think I might have figured out a diagram for it, but it's more complicated than what you've got. I had to make some assumptions about the colors of the gluons involved since they're not specified. Remember that gluons only interact with colored particles, and the W bosons carry no color charge. And finally, for [itex]K^+\to\pi^0e^+\nu_e[/itex], there is a diagram for that one. (Strangeness is indeed not conserved, so what kind of interaction is it?)

The rest of them, as far as I can tell, seem right (or at least, I can't identify anything wrong with what you did).
 
  • #5
Thank You for taking the time to respond, its really appreciated!

I am completely new to drawing Feynman diagrams and have spent ages trying to gather all the necessary rules/building blocks. I could not find a straight forward list of rules anywhere and what you guys have said is the best I have come across!

I have had another go at the ones you said I got wrong. Something I am unsure about is:

diazona said:
Whenever you have a neutrino, it must go into or come out of a vertex that also has the corresponding lepton and a W boson.

Does this mean you cannot have a W boson, an electron-neutrino and a positron all at the same vertex (as I have drawn in the second diagram but with a muon particles instead)

Also, I still don't know how to go about the bottom left one, should I be creating some quarks then destroying them forming the W bosons?

And the bottom right one, it is incomplete because I don't know how to form the pion or even what I have done is the right idea.

14tlyzb.png
 
  • #6
HairyFish said:
Does this mean you cannot have a W boson, an electron-neutrino and a positron all at the same vertex (as I have drawn in the second diagram but with a muon particles instead)
That's what Diazona said you must have: a lepton, its corresponding neutrino, and the W. I don't see a contradiction between your drawing and what he said.
Also, I still don't know how to go about the bottom left one, should I be creating some quarks then destroying them forming the W bosons?
Yes. Gluons only couple to quarks, and quarks will couple to the W. You can probably draw it as a box diagram. You'll have a square loop with quarks along the edges, and the gluons and W connected at the corners.
And the bottom right one, it is incomplete because I don't know how to form the pion or even what I have done is the right idea.
You have the right idea. The strange antiquark turns into an up antiquark when it emits the W. The up quark and antiquark then join to form the pion.
 
  • #7
vela said:
That's what Diazona said you must have: a lepton, its corresponding neutrino, and the W. I don't see a contradiction between your drawing and what he said.
Yep, your second drawing looks correct. Keep in mind that in Feynman diagrams, the only difference between an electron and a positron (or generally, between any particle and its antiparticle) is which way the line points. So if you had a vertex involving an electron neutrino, the associated lepton could be either an electron or a positron depending on how the vertex is oriented. Similarly, the W boson could have either charge depending on the orientation.
 

Related to Standard Model Feynman Diagrams

1. What is the Standard Model of particle physics?

The Standard Model is a theory that describes the fundamental particles and their interactions that make up the universe. It explains how the building blocks of matter interact through four fundamental forces.

2. What are Feynman diagrams?

Feynman diagrams are a visual representation of particle interactions in the Standard Model. They use lines and vertices to show the exchange of particles and their corresponding energies.

3. How are Feynman diagrams used in the Standard Model?

Feynman diagrams are used to calculate the probability of particle interactions in the Standard Model. They are essential for understanding and predicting the behavior of subatomic particles.

4. What is the significance of the different types of Feynman diagrams in the Standard Model?

The different types of Feynman diagrams represent different types of particle interactions in the Standard Model, such as the strong, weak, electromagnetic, and gravitational forces. They also help scientists identify and study new particles and their properties.

5. How are Standard Model Feynman diagrams verified experimentally?

Scientists use particle accelerators and detectors to conduct experiments and verify the predictions made by the Standard Model Feynman diagrams. By comparing the experimental results to the theoretical predictions, scientists can confirm the accuracy of the Standard Model.

Similar threads

  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
729
Replies
1
Views
821
  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
16
Views
3K
  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • Beyond the Standard Models
Replies
0
Views
615
  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
3
Views
5K
  • Advanced Physics Homework Help
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
2K
Back
Top