Everything about the Muon totally explained
The
muon (from the letter
mu (μ)--used to represent it) is an
elementary particle with negative
electric charge and a
spin of 1/2. It has a
mean lifetime of 2.2μs, longer than any other unstable
lepton,
meson, or
baryon except for the
neutron. Together with the
electron, the
tau, and the
neutrinos, it's classified as a
lepton. Like all fundamental particles, the muon has an
antimatter partner of opposite charge but equal
mass and spin: the
antimuon, also called a
positive muon. Muons are denoted by μ
− and antimuons by μ
+.
For historical reasons, muons are sometimes referred to as
mu mesons, even though they're not classified as
mesons by modern particle physicists (
see History). Muons have a
mass of 105.7
MeV/
c2, which is 206.7 times the electron mass. Since their interactions are very similar to those of the electron, a muon can be thought of as a much heavier version of the electron. Due to their greater mass, muons don't emit as much
bremsstrahlung radiation; consequently, they're highly penetrating, much more so than electrons.
As with the case of the other charged leptons, there's a
muon-neutrino which has the same
flavor as the muon. Muon-neutrinos are denoted by ν
μ.
Muon sources
Since the production of muons requires an available
center of momentum frame energy of over 105 MeV, neither ordinary
radioactive decay events nor nuclear fission and fusion events (such as those occurring in
nuclear reactors and
nuclear weapons) are energetic enough to produce muons. Only nuclear fission produces single-nuclear-event energies in this range, but due to conservation constraints, muons are not produced.
On earth, all naturally occurring muons are apparently created by
cosmic rays, which consist mostly of protons, many arriving from deep space at very high energy.
When a cosmic ray proton impacts atomic nuclei of air atoms in the upper atmosphere,
pions are created. These decay within a relatively short distance (meters) into muons (the pion's preferred decay product), and
neutrinos. The muons from these high energy cosmic rays, generally continuing essentially in the same direction as the original proton, do so at very high velocities. Although their lifetime
without relativistic effects would allow a half-survival distance of only about 0.66 km at most, the
time dilation effect of
special relativity allows cosmic ray secondary muons to survive the flight to the earth's surface. Indeed, since muons are unusually penetrative of ordinary matter, like neutrinos, they're also detectable deep underground and underwater, where they form a major part of the natural background ionizing radiation. Like cosmic rays, as noted, this secondary muon radiation is also directional. See the illustration above of the moon's cosmic ray shadow, detected when 700 m of soil and rock filters secondary radiation, but allows enough muons to form a crude image of the moon, in a directional detector.
The same nuclear reaction described above (for example, hadron-hadron impacts to produce pion beams, which then quickly decay to muon beams over short distances) is used by particle physicists to produce muon beams, such as the beam used for the muon
g-2
gyromagnetic ratio experiment (see link below). In naturally-produced muons, the very high-energy protons to begin the process are thought to originate from acceleration by electromagnetic fields over long distances between stars or galaxies, in a manner somewhat analogous to the mechanism of proton acceleration used in laboratory
particle accelerators.
Muon decays
Muons are unstable elementary particles and are heavier than the electron and neutrinos but lighter than all other matter particles. They decay via the weak interaction to an electron, two neutrinos and possibly other particles with a net charge of zero. Nearly all of the time, they decay into an electron, an electron-antineutrino, and a muon-neutrino. Antimuons decay to a
positron, an electron-neutrino, and a muon-antineutrino:
» .
The tree level muon decay width is
»
where the first errors are statistical and the second systematic.
The difference between the
g-factors of the muon and the electron is due to their difference in mass. Because of the muon's larger mass, contributions to the theoretical calculation of its anomalous magnetic dipole moment from
Standard Model weak interactions and from contributions involving
hadrons are important at the current level of precision, whereas these effects are not important for the electron. The muon's anomalous magnetic dipole moment is also sensitive to contributions from new physics
beyond the Standard Model, such as
supersymmetry. For this reason, the muon's anomalous magnetic moment is normally used as a probe for new physics beyond the Standard Model rather than as a test of QED (
Phys.Lett. B649, 173 (2007)
).
History
Muons were discovered by
Carl D. Anderson in
1936 while he studied
cosmic radiation. He had noticed particles that curved in a manner distinct from that of electrons and other known particles, when passed through a
magnetic field. In particular, these new particles were negatively charged but curved to a smaller degree than electrons, but more sharply than
protons, for particles of the same velocity. It was assumed that the magnitude of their negative electric charge was equal to that of the electron, and so to account for the difference in curvature, it was supposed that these particles were of intermediate mass (lying somewhere between that of an electron and that of a proton).
For this reason, Anderson initially called the new particle a
mesotron, adopting the prefix
meso- from the Greek word for "mid-". Shortly thereafter, additional particles of intermediate mass were discovered, and the more general term
meson was adopted to refer to any such particle. Faced with the need to differentiate between different types of mesons, the mesotron was in 1947 renamed the
mu meson (with the Greek letter
μ (
mu) used to approximate the sound of the Latin letter
m).
However, it was soon found that the mu meson significantly differed from other mesons; for example, its decay products included a
neutrino and an
antineutrino, rather than just one or the other, as was observed in other mesons. Other mesons were eventually understood to be
hadrons—that is, particles made of
quarks—and thus subject to the
residual strong force. In the quark model, a
meson is composed of exactly two quarks (a quark and antiquark), unlike baryons which are composed of three quarks. Mu mesons, however, were found to be fundamental particles (leptons) like electrons, with no quark structure. Thus, mu mesons were not
mesons at all (in the new sense and use of the term
meson), and so the term
mu meson was abandoned, and replaced with the modern term
muon.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Muon'.
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