Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
m Cleaned up citation name format. |
||
Line 5:
According to the current mathematical formulation of quantum chromodynamics, a violation of [[CP-symmetry]] in [[strong interaction]]s could occur. However, no violation of the CP-symmetry has ever been seen in any experiment involving only the strong interaction. As there is no known reason in QCD for it to necessarily be conserved, this is a "[[fine tuning]]" problem known as the '''strong CP problem'''.
The strong CP problem is sometimes regarded as an [[List of unsolved problems in physics|unsolved problem in physics]], and has been referred to as "the most underrated puzzle in all of physics."<ref>{{cite conference |first=
|volume=167 |pages=170–174 |publisher=Elsevier |conference=The 7th International Conference on Hyperons, Charm, and Beauty Hadrons (BEACH 2006) |date=2–8 July 2006 |___location=Lancaster |url=https://indico.cern.ch/event/427023/session/6/contribution/43/attachments/912026/1288208/Lancester-Mannel-Proc.pdf |doi=10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2006.12.083 |access-date=15 Aug 2015 |bibcode=2007NuPhS.167..170M}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2019/11/19/the-strong-cp-problem-is-the-most-underrated-puzzle-in-all-of-physics |title = The 'Strong CP Problem' is the Most Underrated Puzzle in All of Physics}}</ref> There are several proposed solutions to solve the strong CP problem. The most well-known is [[Peccei–Quinn theory]],<ref>{{Cite journal|
==Theory==
Line 12:
CP-symmetry states that physics should be unchanged if particles were swapped with their antiparticles and then left-handed and right-handed particles were also interchanged. This corresponds to performing a charge conjugation transformation and then a parity transformation. The symmetry is known to be broken in the [[Standard Model]] through [[weak interaction|weak interactions]], but it is generically also expect it to be broken through [[strong interaction|strong interactions]] which govern [[quantum chromodynamics]] (QCD), something that has not been found.
To illustrate how the CP violation can come about in QCD, consider a [[Yang-Mills theory]] with a single massive [[quark]].<ref>{{cite conference|url=https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/6260191|title=A Brief Introduction to the Strong CP Problem|last1=Wu|first1=
:<math>
Line 30:
The theory would be CP invariant if one could eliminate both sources of CP violation through such a field redefinition. But this cannot be done unless <math>\theta = -\theta'</math>. This is because even under such field redefinitions, the combination <math>\theta'+ \theta \rightarrow (\theta'-\alpha) + (\theta + \alpha) = \theta'+\theta</math> remains unchanged. For example, the CP violation due to the mass term can be eliminated by picking <math>\alpha = \theta'</math>, but then all the CP violation goes to the θ-term which is now proportional to <math>\bar \theta</math>. If instead the θ-term is eliminated through a chiral transformation, then there will be a CP violating complex mass with a phase <math>\bar \theta</math>. Practically, it is usually useful to put all the CP violation into the θ-term and thus only deal with real masses.
In the Standard Model where one deals with six quarks whose masses are described by the [[Yukawa interaction|Yukawa matrices]] <math>Y_u</math> and <math>Y_d</math>, the physical CP violating angle is <math>\bar \theta = \theta - \arg \det(Y_u Y_d)</math>. Since the θ-term has no contributions to perturbation theory, all effects from strong CP violation is entirely non-perturbative. Notably, it gives rise to an [[neutron electric dipole moment]]<ref>{{cite book|first=
:<math>
Line 40:
==Proposed solutions==
The strong CP problem is solved automatically if one of the quarks is massless.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hook|first1=
The most popular solution to the problem is through the Peccei-Quinn mechanism.<ref>{{Cite book|author=Peccei, R. D. |year=2008 |chapter=The Strong CP Problem and Axions |title=Axions: Theory, Cosmology, and Experimental Searches |editor1-last=Kuster |editor1-first=
Other less popular proposed solutions exist such as Nelson-Barr models.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Nelson|first=
==See also==
|