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Introduction To Elementary Particles (Theory) Formula Sheet For The Exam

This document provides tables and information about elementary particles and concepts from particle physics. Table 1 lists key mathematical relations from special relativity, such as the relationship between energy and rest mass. Tables 2-5 provide details on the classification, properties and quark content of various leptons, quarks and hadrons. Tables 6-8 list relevant physical constants, conversion factors and common particle physics formulae.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
155 views4 pages

Introduction To Elementary Particles (Theory) Formula Sheet For The Exam

This document provides tables and information about elementary particles and concepts from particle physics. Table 1 lists key mathematical relations from special relativity, such as the relationship between energy and rest mass. Tables 2-5 provide details on the classification, properties and quark content of various leptons, quarks and hadrons. Tables 6-8 list relevant physical constants, conversion factors and common particle physics formulae.

Uploaded by

Ilja Meijer
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Elementary Particles (Theory)

Formula sheet for the exam

Relation between energy and rest mass E = mc2

Definition of four-momentum pµ = (E/c, px , py , pz )


2
Four-momentum squared (pµ ) = E 2 /c2 − |~p |2
p
Mass-shell condition E/c = m2 c2 + p~2
−1/2
Total energy E = 1 − v 2 /c2 mc2 = Erest + Ekin
−1/2
Linear momentum p~ = 1 − v 2 /c2 m~v

Table 1. Mathematical relations from Special Relativity.

Lepton Mass m Q (units of |e|) Le Lµ Lτ

electron e− 0.51 MeV −1 +1 0 0


First family
electron neutrino νe ≤ 2 eV 0 +1 0 0

muon µ− 106 MeV −1 0 +1 0


Second family
muon neutrino νµ ≤ 2 eV 0 0 +1 0

tau τ − 1.77 GeV −1 0 0 +1


Third family
tau neutrino ντ ≤ 2 eV 0 0 0 +1

Table 2. For each lepton, we indicate the family it belongs, its mass, its electric charge in units of |e|, and the values
of the individual leptonic numbers Le , Lµ , Lτ .
Flavour Mass m Q (units of |e|) B S C b

up ∼ 5 MeV +2/3 +1/3 0 0 0


First family
down ∼ 10 MeV −1/3 +1/3 0 0 0

charm ∼ 1.3 GeV +2/3 +1/3 0 +1 0


Second family
strange 100 MeV −1/3 +1/3 −1 0 0

top 175 GeV +2/3 +1/3 0 0 0


Third family
bottom 4.5 GeV −1/3 +1/3 0 0 −1

Table 3. For each quark, we indicate the family it belongs, its mass, its electric charge in units of |e|, and the values
of its baryonic number B, strangeness S, charmness C, and bottomness b.

ud¯

π+

π− (dū)

(uū) or dd¯

π0
Light mesons
K− (ūs)

K0 (ds̄)
0
sd¯

K

D0 (cū)
heavy mesons

B0 db̄

p (uud)

n (udd)

Light baryons Λ0 (uds)

Σ0 (uds)

∆0 (udd)

Σ+
c (udc)

Heavy baryons Λ0b (udb)

Σ+
b (uub)

Table 4. Quark content of selected hadrons.


Symbol Mass (MeV) B S C b

π+ 139.6 0 0 0 0

π0 135.0 0 0 0 0

K+ 493.7 0 +1 0 0

K0 497.7 0 +1 0 0

D+ 1869.4 0 0 +1 0

D0 1864.5 0 0 +1 0

Ds+ 1968 0 +1 +1 0

B+ 5279 0 0 0 +1

B0 5279 0 0 0 +1

Table 5. Properties of selected hadrons. In each case we indicate the symbol, its mass in MeV, and the values of
the baryonic number B, strangeness S, charmness C and bottomness b.

The speed of light in vacuum c = 2.99792458 × 108 m/s

Electron mass me = 9.11 × 10−31 kg = 0.511 MeV

Electron charge Qe = 1.6 × 10−19 C

Proton mass mp = 1.67 × 10−27 kg = 938.27 MeV

Coulomb’s constant k = 9 × 109 Nm2 C−2

Newton’s gravitational constant G = 6.673 × 10−11 Nm2 kg−2

Planck’s constant h = 6.626 × 10−34 m2 kg/s = 4.136 × 10−15 eV

Table 6. List of relevant natural constants.


From Joules to eV 1 J = 6.242 × 1018 eV

From MeV to Joules 1 MeV = 1.609 × 10−13 J

From the atomic mass unit u to kg 1 u = 1.661 × 10−27 kg

From kilograms to GeV (in natural units) 1 GeV = 1.783 × 10−27 kg

From MeV to kilograms (in natural units) 1 MeV = 1.79 × 10−30 kg

From GeV to m−1 (in natural units) 1 GeV = 5.1 × 1015 m−1

Table 7. List of useful conversion factors.

 
Lc3
Probability of neutrino oscillations P (L) = sin2 (2θ) sin2 4~E ∆m
2

Higgs potential V (φ) = −µφ2 + λφ4

Number of events in LHC collisions N = L × σ × BR

Statistical uncertainty δstat σ/σ = N −1/2



Signal significance NS / NB

Table 8. Miscellaneous formulae.

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