CP Symmetry Violation

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CP SYMMETRY VIOLATION

The symmetry known as CP is a fundamental relation between matter and antimatter. The discovery of its violation by James Christenson, James Cronin, Val Fitch, and René Turlay (1964) has given us important insights into the structure of particle interactions and into why the universe appears to contain more matter than antimatter.

In 1928, Paul Dirac predicted that every particle has a corresponding antiparticle. If the particle has quantum numbers (intrinsic properties), such as electric charge, the antiparticle will have opposite quantum numbers. Thus, an electron, with charge -|e |, has as its antiparticle a positron with charge +|e | and the same mass and spin. Some neutral particles, such as the photon, the quantum of radiation, are their own antiparticles. Others, like the neutron, have distinct antiparticles; the neutron carries a quantum number known as baryon number B = 1, and the antineutron has B = -1. (The prefix baryis Greek for heavy.) The operation of charge reversal, or C, carries a particle into its antiparticle.

Many laws of physics are invariant under the C operation; that is, they do not change their form, and, consequently, one cannot tell whether one lives in a world made of matter or one made of antimatter. Many equations are also invariant under two other important symmetries: space reflection, or parity, denoted by P, which reverses the direction of all spatial coordinates, and time reversal, denoted by T, which reverses the arrow of time. By observing systems governed by these equations, one cannot tell whether the world is reflected in a mirror or in which direction its clock is running. Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism and the equations of classical mechanics, for example, are invariant separately under P and T.

Originally it was thought that all elementary particle interactions were unchanged by C, P, and T individually. In 1957, however, it was discovered that a certain class known as the weak interactions (for example, those governing the decay of the neutron) were not invariant under P or C. However, they appeared to be invariant under the product CP and also under T. (Invariance under the product CPT is a very general feature of elementary particle theories.) Thus, it was thought that one could not distinguish between our world and a mirror reflected world made of antimatter, or our world and one in which clocks ran backward.

Murray Gell-Mann and Abraham Pais (1955) used an argument based on C invariance (recast in 1957 in terms of CP invariance) to discuss the production and decay of a particle known as the neutral K meson, or κ. This particle, according to a theory by Gell-Mann and Kazuo Nishijima, carried a quantum number called strangeness, with S(κ) = +1, and so there should exist a neutral anti-K meson, called 0 , with S(0) , = -1. The theory demanded that strangeness by conserved in K meson production but violated in its decay. Both the K0; and the 0 should be able to decay to a pair of mesons (e.g., π+π-). How, then, would one tell them apart?

Gell-Mann and Pais solved this problem by applying a basic idea of quantum mechanics: The particle decaying π+π- would have to have the same behavior under C (in 1957, under CP) as the final π+π- combination, which has CP = +1. (That is, its quantum-mechanical state is taken into itself under the CP operation.) A quantum-mechanical combination of κ and 0 with this property was called κ1. There should then exist another combination of κ and 0 with CP = -1 (i.e., its quantum-mechanical state is changed in sign under the CP operation). This particle was called κ2. (The subscripts 1 and 2 were used simply to distinguish the two particles from one another.) The κ would be forbidden by CP invariance from decaying to π+π- and thus, being required to decay to three-body final states, would be much longer-lived. This predicted particle was discovered in 1956.

Christenson, Cronin, Fitch, and Turlay performed their historic experiment in the early 1960s at Brookhaven National Laboratory to see if the long-lived neutral K meson could occasionally decay to π+π-. They found that indeed it did but only once every 500 decays. For this discovery Cronin and Fitch were awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics.

The short-lived neutral K meson was renamed KS and the long-lived one KL. The KL lives nearly 600 times as long as the KS. The discovery of its decay to was the first evidence for violation of CP symmetry. The KS is mainly CP-even, while the KL is mainly CP-odd. Within any of the current interaction theories, which conserve the product CPT, the violation of CP invariance then also implies T-invariance violation.

Shortly after CP violation was detected, Andrei Sakharov (1967) proposed that it was a key ingredient in understanding why the universe is composed of more matter than antimatter. Another ingredient in his theory was the need for baryon number (the quantum number possessed by neutrons and protons) to be violated, implying that the proton should not live forever. The search for proton decay is an ongoing topic of current experiments.

CP violation can also occur in quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of the strong interactions, through solutions that violate both P and T. However, this form of CP violation appears to be extremely feeble, less than a part in ten billion; otherwise it would have contributed to detectable effects such as electric dipole moments of neutrons. It is not known why this form of CP violation is so weak; proposed solutions to the puzzle include the existence of a light neutral particle known as the axion.

The leading theory of CP violation was posed by Makoto Kobayashi and Toshihide Maskawa in 1973. Weak coupling constants of quarks (the subunits of matter first postulated in 1964 by Gell-Mann and George Zweig) can have both real and imaginary parts. These complex phases lead not only to the observed magnitude of CP violation discovered by Christenson et al., but also to small differences in the ratios of KS and KL decays to pairs of charged and neutral mesons (confirmed by experiments at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics [CERN] and Fermilab), and to differences in decays of neutral B mesons and their antiparticles. Experiments at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) using the BaBar detector (named after the character in the children's book) and at the National Laboratory for High Energy Physics in Japan (KEK) using the Belle detector have recently reported convincing evidence for this last effect (Aubert et al., 2001; Abe et al., 2001). At a deeper level, however, both the origin of the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe discussed by Sakharov and the source of the complex phases of Kobayashi and Maskawa remain a mystery, perhaps stemming from some common source.

See also:Big Bang Nucleosynthesis; CKM Matrix; Standard Model; Symmetry Principles

Bibliography

Abe, K., et al. "Observation of Large CP Violation in the Neutral B Meson System." Physical Review Letters87 , 091802-1-7 (2001).

Aubert, B., et al. "Observation of CP Violation in the B0 Meson System." Physical Review Letters87 , 091801-1-8 (2001).

Bigi, I. I., and Sanda, A. I. CP Violation (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000).

Branco, G. C.; Lavoura, L; and Silva, J. P. CP Violation (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1999).

Christenson, J. H.; Cronin, J. W., Vitch, V. L., and Turlay, R. E. "Evidence for the 2 Decay of the K02 Meson." Physical Review Letters13 , 138–140 (1964).

Cronin, J. W. "CP Symmetry Violation: The Search for its Origin." Reviews of Modern Physics53 , 373–383 (1981).

Fitch, V. L. "The Discovery of Charge Conjugation Parity Asymmetry." Reviews of Modern Physics53 , 367–371 (1981).

Gell-Mann, M., and Pais, A. "Behavior of Neutral Particles Under Charge Conjugation." Physical Review97 , 1387–1389(1955).

Kobayashi, M., and Maskawa, T. "CP Violation in the Renormalizable Theory of Weak Interaction." Progress of Theoretical Physics49 , 652–657 (1973).

Sakharov, A. D. "Violation of CP Invariance, C Asymmetry, and Baryon Asymmetry of the Universe." Soviet Physics—JETP Letters5 , 24–27 (1967).

Jonathan L. Rosner