In
particle physics, 'gluons' (from ''glue'' + ''-on'') are
elementary particles that cause
quarks to interact, and are indirectly responsible for the binding of
protons and
neutrons together in
atomic nuclei.
In technical terms, they are
vector gauge bosons that mediate
strong color charge interactions of
quarks in
quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Unlike the neutral
photon of
quantum electrodynamics (QED), gluons themselves participate in strong interactions. The gluon has the ability to do this as it carries the color charge and so interacts with itself, making QCD significantly harder to analyse than QED.
Properties
The gluon is a vector boson; like the
photon, it has a
spin of 1. While massive spin-1 particles have three polarization states, massless gauge bosons like the gluon have only two polarization states because
gauge invariance requires the polarization to be transverse.
In
quantum field theory, unbroken gauge invariance requires that gauge bosons have zero mass (experiment limits the gluon's mass to less than a few MeV).
The gluon has negative intrinsic
parity and zero
isospin. It is its own
antiparticle.
Numerology of gluons
Unlike the single
photon of QED or the three
W and Z bosons of the
weak interaction, there are eight independent types of gluon in QCD.
This may be difficult to understand intuitively.
Quarks may carry three types of
color charge; antiquarks carry three types of anticolor. Gluons may be thought of as carrying both color and anticolor or as describing how quark color changes during interactions, so because gluons carry nonzero color charge it may be thought that there are only six gluons.
Technically, QCD is a
gauge theory with
SU(3) gauge symmetry. Quarks are introduced as
spinor fields in N
f flavours, each in the
fundamental representation (triplet, denoted '3') of the colour gauge group, SU(3). The gluons are vector fields in the
adjoint representation (octets, denoted '8') of colour SU(3). For a general
gauge group, the number of force-carriers (like photons or gluons) is always equal to the dimension of the adjoint representation. For the simple case of SU(N), the dimension of this representation is N
2−1.
Confinement
Main articles: Colour confinement
Since gluons themselves carry color charge (again, unlike the
photon which is electrically neutral), they participate in strong interactions. These gluon-gluon interactions constrain color fields to string-like objects called "flux tubes", which exert constant force when stretched. Due to this force,
quarks are
confined within
composite particles called
hadrons. This effectively limits the range of the strong interaction to 10
-15 meters, roughly the size of an
atomic nucleus.
Gluons also share this property of being confined within hadrons. One consequence is that gluons are not directly involved in the
nuclear forces. The force mediators for these are other hadrons called
mesons.
Although in the
normal phase of QCD single gluons may not travel freely, it is predicted that there exist
hadrons which are formed entirely of gluons — called '
glueballs'. There are also conjectures about other '
exotic hadrons' in which real gluons (as opposed to
virtual ones found in ordinary hadrons) would be primary constituents. Beyond the normal phase of QCD (at extreme temperatures and pressures),
quark gluon plasma forms. In such a plasma there are no hadrons; quarks and gluons become free particles.
Experimental observations
The first direct experimental evidence of gluons was found in
1979 when
three-jet events were observed at the electron-positron collider called
PETRA at
DESY in
Hamburg. Quantitative studies of
deep inelastic scattering at the
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center had established their existence a decade before that.
Experimentally, confinement is verified by the failure of
free quark searches. Neither free quarks nor free gluons have ever been observed. Although there have been hints of exotic hadrons, no glueball has been observed either. Quark-gluon plasma has been found recently at the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at
Brookhaven National Laboratories (BNL).
See also
★
Quark
★
Hadron
★
Gauge boson
★
Glueball
★
Exotic hadrons
★
Quark model
★
Quantum chromodynamics
★
Standard model
★
Three-jet events
★
Deep inelastic scattering
References and external links
★
Introduction to Elementary Particles, , David J., Griffiths, Wiley, John & Sons, Inc, 1987, ISBN 0-471-60386-4
★ Kaufmann(ed), Scientific American: Particles & Fields (special edition), 1980
★
Summary tables in the "Review of particle physics"
★
DESY glossary
★
Logbook of gluon discovery
★
Why are there eight gluons and not nine?