Funny Quarks

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A little bit of quark history:

In 1964 Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig suggested that 100's of the particles known at the time could be explained as combinations of just 3 fundmental particles.

Gell-Mann chose the whimsical name of "quarks" for these constituents. This word appears in the phrase "three quarks for Muster Mark" in James Joyce's novel, Finnegan's Wake .

The revolutionary part of their idea was that they had to assign the quarks electric charges of 2/3 and -1/3 in units of the proton charge: such charges had never been observed. At first the quarks were regarded as mathematical fiction, but experiments have convinced physicists that quarks do exist.



How did quarks get their silly names?

There are six flavors of quarks. "Flavors" simply means different kinds.

The two lightest are called UP and DOWN.

The third quark is called STRANGE. That name had already been associated with the K mesons because their long lifetimes seemed a "strange" or unexpected property. (K mesons contain strange quarks.)

CHARM, the fourth quark type, was named on a whimsy. It was discovered in 1974 at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in the particle they called (psi) and simultaneously at Brookhaven National Laboratory in what they called "J". The is a charm-anticharm combination ().

The fifth and sixth quarks were originally called truth and beauty, but even physicists thought that was too cute. Now they are called TOP and BOTTOM (still t and b.)

The BOTTOM quark, in a bottom-antibottom () combination called Upsilon (), was first observed at Fermi National Laboratory in 1977.

The sixth flavor of quark, TOP, is the most massive quark. It is about 35,000 times more massive than the up and down quarks that make up most of the matter we see around us. On March 2, 1995 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory announced the discovery of the top quark. Of the six quarks predicted to exist by current scientific theory the top quark was the last to be discovered.


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