Talk:Color charge/Archive 1

Latest comment: 2 years ago by Yodo9000 in topic Venn Diagram Centers
Archive 1

Out-take from the page

I've removed the following material from the page because is verbose (and wrong in some major parts). It can go back, but only after it is polished into a simple paragraph.

No, it doesn't need to go back. What you wrote is much better :) What I wrote was a late-friday-night after-several-beers ramble; someone had asked me why it was called "charge" and I tried to explain that as simply as possible. linas 05:53, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Thanks. Bambaiah
Do we now agree that its not actually wrong? linas 05:20, 13 Jun 2005 (UTC)
If you agree with my remarks of June 12 in the next subsection, then I think what we have agreed on is the following more careful statement "Charge is quantized in classical non-Abelian pure gauge theories (meaning theories without classical particles). However, there is no observed phenomenon that needs such a classical field theory. Classically observed charges (ie, the electric charge) is not quantized." From a physicist's point of view, the last sentence is crucial, from a mathematician's, the first may be sufficient. Bambaiah 08:17, Jun 13, 2005 (UTC)
Argghh. This is very frustrating; we should let this conversation drop. All I wanted to say was that the theory of Lie groups can provide insight into charge quantization. The point is that the electric charge is quantized, and one does not need to quantize the gauge field to get this result. The appearance of QM is incidental, it is only needed to get something that couples to the gauge field (the particle phase). I suppose SQUID's are another example. I suppose I now need to concoct an experiment to convince you. For what its worth, there are purely classical-mechanical systems that exhibit the so-called Berry phase; the canonical examples are robot arms and satelites in orbit around earth. The math is similar to the math here. While doing that math, the Heisenberg group shows up, and it shows up in a purely classical-mechanical context, the context is of sub-Riemannian geometry. I dunno, it just may be possible to take a classical electric dipole and spin it around on the end of a robot arm in some crazy way, and come up with the proper phase effect, in such a way that only a gauge field can explain the resulting effect. Yes, this seems far-fetched to me, and I suspect that even if we did come up with a classical experiment that required gauge theory, we'd still be arguing charge quantization. Lets stop here. linas 15:13, 13 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Hmm, it is well known that the geodesics on the Heisenberg group are identical to the motions of a classically charged particle in a uniform magnetic field (the equations of motion are identical)... linas 15:48, 13 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Dialogue concerning 3 world systems :)

It wrongly claims that charge is quantized in a classical theory. See Landau and Lifschitz for the true classical theory of electrodynamics: there is no charge quantization here. The fallacy is to take a classical field theory of coupled Dirac and Maxwell fields and to call it classical electrodynamics. A classical charged particle is not a Dirac field! — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bambaiah (talkcontribs) 16:36, 9 June 2005 (UTC)

Hmmm. Although Landau and Lifschitz were brilliant and then a bit more so, they hadn't yet heard of fiber bundles and Yang-Mills. I may be mistaken, and may be recalling/explaining this incorrectly, but if you have a fibre bundle where the fiber is a Lie group (a principal G-bundle), then the natural coupling of the field is via the root system of the Lie algebra. In this sense, one gets charge quantization; the roots are what they are, they cannot be made something else. The color charges of quarks sit on the corners of that su(3) triangle. The size of that triangle is determined by the properties of the Lie algebra, and not by any quantization that gets performed. Now there is also a coupling constant (e.g. the square root of the fine structure constant for electrodynamics), but even second quantization does not "quantize" that.
The problem with electromagentism is that its much harder to "see" that the charge is "1", because it is multiplied by the value "e" (which is just "some scalar"). Multiply "1" by anything and the "1" just sort-of vanishes :) Once you go to a non-abelian theory, the distinction becomes clear: you can't scale the three color charges independently: the shape of the triangle they're on is fixed. The size of the triangle is fixed as well. Now one can clearly distinguish the color coupling constant "g" from the color charges, which are (-1/2 - i sqrt(3)/2, etc). The color charges got quantized due to the theory of Lie algebras, and not due to a second quantization of the quark or gluon fields. The color charge is quantized even in a classical treatment of classical (non-abelian) fields on a fibre bundle.
Once one sees the non-abelian version, one can go back to the case of classical electrodynamics, and see that the charge was quantized there all along; its just that it was hidden; one didn't see the charge because it was too trivial to see.
Or are you just saying that you can't call a fiber bundle a "classical"? I don't know what else to call it; its sure not quantum. Its also unrelated to any dirac particles. The gluons have color charges too (the octet); these are quantized, even if one has a classical theory with no fermions in it. linas 05:53, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
It is classical, but it is not the classical theory of anything. The Dirac field is a classical field, but classical particles have nothing to do with spinors. L&L write the field theory which is truly the classical theory and agrees with experiments. Of course, Maxwell knew it before them. :) Bambaiah 13:33, Jun 10, 2005 (UTC)
Not sure what you mean by "its not the classical theory of anything". It is universally accepted that the SU(3) fiber bundle is the "classical" field theory behind QCD. Its universally accepted (by mainstream physics; by most professors) that the U(1) line bundle encompasses classical electrodynamics; certainly Maxwell's equations are a natural by-product of the formulation. What I found curious was that the line bundle explains not only Maxwell's equations, but it also explains the Bohm-Aharonov effect. Thus, in this certain sense, Bohm-Aharonov comes out as a by-product of geometry, and not a by-product of quantization. Thus, one can say that the line bundle is a "broader, more powerful" view of classical electrodynamics than maxwell's equations are. So, given the insight that Lie algebras provide for the notion of "charge" in non-abelian theories, I don't think its crazy to reverse that insight and apply it to the notion of "charge" in the Lie group U(1). This is not fringe theory here; as far as I know, most theoretical field-theory/string/supergravity types would know this stuff well; its not exceptionally deep, either; I picked it up as a grad student, by osmosis.
More generally, I think there's a broader understanding by mainstream physics that quantum mechanics isn't the only way to get things to happen at integer values. For example, the skyrme model provides a quantized baryon number topologically, as a soliton, without having to invoke quantum mechanics in any way. There are similar effects in solid-state physics; topological dislocations come to mind. linas 00:41, 11 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Aharonov-Bohm does not happen with classical particles. Classical field theory is not classical mechanics. The correct, experimentally verifiable, classical theory of EM is not the classical field theory of Gauge field + Dirac field. It is the theory of Gauge field + classical point particle. Classical gauge theory in the sense that you are talking of is a perfectly nice construct but cannot be used analyze any classical experiment whatsoever. It has many mathematical uses; and is useful as soon as you analyze quantum physics because of stuff like Aharonov-Bohm. So here is the actual mathematical and physical structure of these things
  1. A gauge + dirac classical field theory, whose physical reality we are discussing and is apparent in step 3.
  2. A classical gauge + classical particle theory, which accords with physical reality (experiments with classical particles and fields)
  3. A gauge + dirac quantum field theory, which accords with physical reality (experiments with quantum particles and fields). It is reached in two steps from theory 2: first by quantizing the particle into a Dirac field to get the quantum mechanics (this is the closest physical theory one has to theory 1) and next (by second quantizing) to get to the QFT. Or, in one small step from theory 1 using, for example, canonical quantization.
Bottom line: theory 1 accords with an intermediate physical reality where experiments involve a quantum particle but a classical field: this is exactly the setting of the Aharonov Bohm effect with its classical magnetic field (or the stationary energy levels of the Hydrogen atom with its classical coulomb field). Irresistible footnote: Study of transitions between energy levels of H, the particle number changes (because a photon is created or destroyed). So, strictly speaking, stationary levels are QM but transitions are QFT. Of course one usually computes transition amplitudes by sticking an operator between states in QM. When you think about it, you find this is just 1st order perturbation theory in QFT, which works because the in and out states are those you got from QM.
As you say, not deep, but sometimes confusing. I had to clear this up as a grad student myself (you might recall a wonderful RMP article on classical gauge theory, which at the same time was so deeply confusing). The thing to hold on to is the clear distinction between a classical and quantum particle.
It's been good to have this discussion because it clarifies the confusion in the article on quantization. Bambaiah 05:25, Jun 11, 2005 (UTC)
Well, I'm slightly irked, because you seem to be putting words in my mouth, words I never said, and then demonstrating that they're wrong. I never said Aharonov-Bohm happened with classical particles. I said Aharonov-Bohm is an effect explainable by a theory of the electromagnetic field that does not require the electromagnetic field to be quantized. I never said classical mechanics is about Dirac particles or fields. I'm not sure what you mean when you say "Classical gauge theory... cannot be used to analyze experiments". Classical gauge theory, that is, the U(1) line bundle, is more or less synonymous with Maxwell's equations. I agree that 19th century experiments with wires and batteries won't demonstrate the existance of a gauge field. You can neither prove nor disprove the correctness of the line-bundle formulation with 19th century experiments. However, 20th century experiments can do this, and the AB effect is one such experiment. The point I was trying to make was that not only do the experimentally verifiable Maxwell equations come from gauge theory, but in fact the gauge theory is able to provide additional results that the Maxwell equations alone are not able to provide, viz. the Bohm-Aharonov effect.
I agree with your conceptual split 1,2,3. I guess my hand-waving obscured the differences between 1&2. The argument was that theory 1 or 2, with gauge group SU(3), shows that charge is quantized. Also, theory 1, with gauge group U(1), is experimentially verified by Bohm-Aharonov. (Actually, don't need Dirac, I think a plain scalar field is enough, right?). Also, if we take away the particle field in theory 1, it is equivalent to theory 2. Therefore, we may conclude that a) gauge theories describe physical reality, and that b) gauge theories quantize charge, and that c) charge quantization does not require QFT. More precisely, charge quantization does not require even quantum mechanics, and that instead, charge quantization is a by-product of the theory of Lie groups, and not a byproduct of quantum mechanics. I don't want to quibble about the physical reality of particle fields and whether or not a particle field should be called a first-quantized particle or not. I think we are now on the same page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Linas (talkcontribs) 15:49, 11 June 2005 (UTC)
Sorry, I was mistaken about your position, and therefore the first lines of my previous posting: no offence was meant. Now we agree on the split 1,2,3; and I agree with you that if we leave out the particle, then 1 and 2 are the same: for U(1) it is nothing but Maxwell theory. Now, pure Maxwell theory is has no charge in it, so no disagreement yet. Next we look for a classical non-Abelian gauge theory of the kind 2 (even without a classical particle in the picture) which one can do experiments with. And we can't find one: not a single example of a pure glue classical non-Abelian theory in nature. It seems that you need to go to theory 3 before you encounter a non-Abelian gauge theory. I don't know whether there is anything deep in this, but it is so remarkable that there must be something to learn from here. Anyway, there is no classical experiment that one can discover charge quantization with. This is what I meant when I made the somewhat provocative statement earlier that these gauge theories are classical all right, but they are not classical theories of anything. Bambaiah 10:16, Jun 12, 2005 (UTC)
Don't know what RMP is; nor have I reviewed the WP article on quantization that carefully. I did find very recently R. Bott On some recent Interactions Between Mathematics and Physics Canad. Math. Bull. Vol 28 (2), 1985. which I haven't read (yet?) but does seem to provide a readable review of a whole slew of "semi-classical" topics of this sort. Thanks for the Yukawa potential diagram! linas 15:49, 11 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I'd first learnt about classical gauge theories from The geometrical setting of gauge theories of the Yang-Mills type by M. Daniel and C. M. Viallet in Reviews of Modern Physics, vol 52, 175, 1980. I haven't read Bott's review. One book which is kind of a favourite of mine is Solitons and Instantons, by R. Rajaraman (Elsevier, 1987) [ISBN 0444870474]. Bambaiah

Back to out-take

Furthermore, much of this material belongs to a section on mathematical aspects of classical field theories, not in an article on "color charge". So why not write this article? Bambaiah 16:36, Jun 9, 2005 (UTC)

I have no desire to write such an article. My plan for editing WP articles was to stay away from physics articles. Somehow, I've gotten drawn in. linas 05:53, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Beginning of out-take

"== Mathematics of color charge =="

Mathematically, color charge is described by the representation theory of the Lie group SU(3). A color-neutral state, such as any hadron, corresponds to the one-dimensional representation of SU(3); the quarks and antiquarks correspond to the two three-dimensional representations, and the gluons (typically for the force-carrying particles of a gauge theory) are in the adjoint representation, which in this case is eight-dimensional.

This is a completely different application of the group SU(3) from Murray Gell-Mann, Yuval Ne'eman and George Zweig's use of it to categorize the hadrons. They thought of an approximate SU(3) symmetry which, in its three-dimensional representation, acts on the flavors of the up, down, and strange quarks, which were the constituents of all the hadrons known at the time.

More precisely, the color charge corresponds to the eigenvectors of the generators of a semi-simple representation of a Lie algebra. They are essentially points on a weight lattice or root system of a Lie algebra. The reason for this is that the canonical Yang-Mills formulation of a particle (such as a quark) interacting with a vector field (such as a QCD color field) is by means of the principal bundle of the associated Lie group. The connection on such a bundle is Lie-algebra valued. The Hamiltonian mechanics of a classical (not quantum!) particle coupled to the principal bundle is such that the momentum can be written as

 

where d is the exterior derivative on the base space of the bundle (or the covariant derivative, if the base space is curved) and A is the connection on the principal G-bundle. Here q is the charge (or color charge); it is a vector in the vector space of the representation of the Lie algebra. It multiplies the Lie-algebra-valued A so that p becomes a vector in the representation space of the Lie algebra as well. It should be immediately recognized that p is the covariant derivative on the fiber bundle. Strict mathematicians may call p itself the connection, whereas physicists usually reserve the term connection for the so-called vector field A. When the underlying manifold (the base space) is physical space-time, then p can be understood to be the momentum of a particle with a given color charge, being acted on by the gauge field A.

The term charge comes from analogy to the electromagnetic field. When formulated mathematically, the electromagnetic field can be understood to be a line bundle or a principle G-bundle with G-fibre U(1). The strength of the electromagnetic field (literally, the strength of the electric field and the magnetic field) is given by the curvature   of the connection A. In Minkowski spacetime, one of the four components of A is called the electric potential and the other three are called the magnetic vector potential. The alternating product nature of the exterior derivative gives rise to the traditional divergence and curl expressions seen in, for example, Maxwell's equations. (To be more precise, the Faraday tensor is F whereas the Hodge dual *F is the Maxwell tensor. It is the Maxwell tensor that is used to form the Maxwell equations, along with the Hodge dual of the electric current.) More generally, the curvature of a principle bundle is given by   but the second term vanishes when the Lie algebra is Abelian. In the non-Abelian case, F is known as the Yang-Mills field. The traditional coupling of an electrically charged particle is given through its momentum p=d+A as above, the momentum being important as it gives the particle's motion through space, and, in the fourth component, through time. The momentum can essentially be understood to be the covariant derivative on the electromagnetic line bundle.

Although the line-bundle formulation of electrodynamics may at first seem to be a needlessly mathematically convoluted and glorified treatment of an otherwise rather simple subject, the correctness of the formulation is verified in a most peculiar and unexpected way: holonomy curves on the line bundle express themselves as the Aharonov-Bohm effect. Without the principle bundle formulation, the Aharonov-Bohm effect appears to be quite spooky and mysterious, an odd action-at-a-distance effect not inherently derivable from the Maxwell equations. It is the strength of such results that affirms the correctness of the principal bundle formulation.

The root system for U(1) is trivial: it is just the scalar 1. Thus, the fiber-bundle interpretation immediately gives some insight to the problem of the quantization of the electric charge: the charge is not just any value; it is a particular value, and that value is 1. One need not quantize either the electromagnetic field or the particle field to come to this conclusion: electric charge, as well as color charge, is essentially a classical outcome, not a quantum outcome, of coupling a particle to a gauge field by means of a principal fiber bundle.

In quantum chromodynamics, the relevant Lie group is SU(3) and the Lie algebra is the smallest irreducible representation su(3). Actually, su(3) has a pair of conjugate representations; these look identical except that they are complex conjugates. The root system can best be understood to be two pairs of three vectors each, oriented 120 degrees apart, forming a Star of David. The vectors are of length 1/2; one triangle belongs to one representation, the other to its conjugate. Quarks transform as one representation, and anti-quarks transform as the conjugate representation. That is, the color charge of a quark is thus associated with one of the three vectors, and the charge of the anti-quark is associated with one of the vectors of the conjugate representation.

Generalizations to supersymmetry and to curved base spaces follow the same pattern laid out here: one defines a principle bundle over some group, and couples fields by means of the covariant derivative on the bundle. For good measure, one recognizes that four-dimensional space-time can be represented by a pair of spinors, each spinor transforming under su(2) or its complex conjugate. Spinors naturally have an anti-symmetric algebra, by means of the Pauli exclusion principle; they essentially transform as a sub-algebra of a Clifford algebra. One fundamental problem of supersymmetry is that there are so many different Lie groups, couplings, and representations one can choose from, leading to a bewildering number of fields, charges, and particles; it is difficult to guess which of the many choices might be the one that represents physical reality.

end of out-take

Colours in diagrams

Hi there - the colours (especially the green) in the diagrams, seem to vary from one diagram to another. Can this be fixed? Cricketgirl (talk) 16:13, 31 May 2008 (UTC)

Color Charge and direct observation

I think it's important to clarify in the article if the "color charge" is something that people can observe with the eyes, or if contrary to this, is referring to other different thing. When the people think in colors, they associate fast what they can see to the naked eye, consequently thinking in the color spectrum, etc. Neophyte people in physics could confuse these concepts. I think it's important to clarify in an easy way, what is "Red"... the red I can see with my eyes, contrary to the "Red" of a colour charge.

In the first part of the article, is explained but very very briefly. I think the subject deserves more than one line. I'm editing also the article (not changing the content, just emphasizing) to bold this line, to avoid confusions for neophyte people.

I'm quoting a text from the University of Toledo, OH, that seems important to me:

In the quantum mechanical picture of the world, we can explain the forces as an exchange of force carrier particles. The carrier particles of the strong force are called gluons. The gluons interact with a property of quarks called color charge. The total color charge on any particle made of quarks must always add to zero, so we have only recently become aware of this peculiar property.

The carrier particles of the electromagnetic force are called photons. Light is composed of photons. In essence, electrons in an atom are exchanging virtual bits of light with each other and the protons in the nucleus. Atoms excited by collisions can emit photons. Hot objects like the Sun, fire, lightbulbs, etc. have rapidly moving and vibrating atoms that are continually emitting photons. Once produced, these tiny bits of electromagnetism move at 300,000 km/s on straight paths until they are either absorbed or scattered by other atoms in the same or different objects.

Some light scatters off atoms in objects and enters our eyes.

The light entering the eye is focused into an image on the retina at the back of the eye. The retina is densely packed with photo-sensitive cells that absorb the photons one by one and convert them into varying electro-chemical signals on multiplexed nerves. These signals eventually reach the visual cortex part of the brain. Everything up to the visual cortex is pretty well understood. Then, through some miracle, consciousness creates a model of the world out of these signals.

We see (perceive) objects; light itself is invisible.

When we look out at the world, we see it filled with objects of various sizes, shapes, and colors. We see red poppies in a field. We do not see the light coming from the poppies. If we could see that light, we would see redness radiating in all directions away from the poppies, all mixed up with the greenness radiating in all directions from the grasses and the blueness radiating from the sky. Even now, the room you are in is filled with light that you do not see. Photons travel right through each other without scattering off each other, so there is no way we can "see" them.

We do not even see the photons that happen to enter our eyes. If we could see those photons, we would see a blizzard of tiny bullets, not the poppies. We 'see' a vision of the world created by our conciousness. We might say we see a series of electro-chemical reactions taking place in our retinas, but even that is only the first step. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.145.72.55 (talk) 20:47, 4 June 2008 (UTC)

The "takes on 3 colors" statement needs to be revised

The correct statement, which gets to the answer about who attracts what is not that color charge takes on 3 values, but that they take on values along points on a triangular grid in a two dimensional continuum. This is the continuum given by the operators lambda 3 and 8 in the standard SU(3) representation. In fact, this furthers the analogy with color theory, with these two axes playing the analogous role of chromaticity coordinates.

The 6 cardinal points for quark charges are analogous to the 6 points along the Newton color wheel. Three correspond to matter charges (red, green, blue), the other three to anti-matter charges (anti-red, anti-green, anti-blue; which would be better termed cyan, magenta and amber). Along the 2-dimensional spectrum they are situated equal distance from 0, at 60 degrees from one another.

The charges for the colored gluons (those corresponding to combinations of lambda 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7) are situated at 30 degrees from those of the quark charges with magntitudes equal to the square root of three times larger than those of the quark.

Who attracts and who repels? The rules are the same as for electric charges: opposites attract, likes repel. However, they are generalized since this is now a 2-dimensional continuum. The generalization is that, all other things being equal, the force is proportional to the magnitude of the respective charges and to the cosine of the angle between their respective charges. Thus, red repels red at full strength, attracts cyan at full strength, while it attracts green and blue at half strength. Red, green, blue attract one another; as do cyan, magenta and amber. Opposite pairs attract (red, cyan), (green, magenta), (blue, amber). The stable bound states are therefore the baryon state (red, green, blue), anti-baryon state (cyan, magenta, amber) and meson states (red, cyan), (green, magenta), (blue, amber). The other combinations not mentioned (e.g. red and amber) repel at half strength.

In general, the spectrum for SU(n) is a simplicial grid of dimension n-1. The axes represent the weight vector for a maximal set of commuting SU(n) generators (SU(n) has rank n-1), while the remaining generators play the analogous role of "raising" nd "lowering" operators. However, instead of raising or lowering along a 1-dimensional ladder, they shift from one point on the grid to a neighboring point. They have charges that essentially correspond to the arrows that link neighboring points in the grid (which gives you n(n-1) combinations in all). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.24.186.201 (talk) 20:33, 23 September 2008 (UTC)

Color vs Colour

The three references in the article all use "color" rather than "colour" in their texts. Based on that evidence and Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(use_English) I see no justification for the edits made by User:Xerxes314 on 2006-03-02, which were justified with "britishisms reign supreme" and the false claim on User_talk:Xerxes314 that "international English is the standard for science articles." - ChrisKennedy 05:22, 22 April 2006 (UTC)

I apologize for my humourously intended justification. However, the point remains: the standard agreed-upon for science articles (at least for QCD) is International English. The "Use English" convention is fully met by the use of International English, so your criticism does not apply. If you really think it necessary, we can have another discussion of what the convention should be. It really doesn't matter as long as we pick one and stick with it. -- Xerxes 17:32, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
Okay, if it is a "standard" that is fine, but please provide a source for that rather than asserting it and not providing a way for interested parties to verify. I agree that we need to pick one standard and stick with it, because right now there is inconsistent usage, even on this page. - ChrisKennedy 20:16, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
Just passing by and noticed this. 1) I am aware of no Wikipedia standard for science articles (is that what you meant?) that dictates any particular dialect. I see nothing about it here WP:MOS. 2) There is no standard in the science community. 3) There is no such (one) thing as International English. --Cultural Freedom talk 2006-June-26 06:54 (UTC)
There's no official standard other than "use whatever is used throughout most of the article" and "be consistent". Since "International English" (you must not have read the article you linked to because it clearly states: Sometimes International English is used to refer to a general standard that is based on English as spoken in the British Isles and most Commonwealth countries (as opposed to American English).) is used throughout most of these articles, it is therefore the standard to which we must be consistent. -- Xerxes 14:28, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Agree there's no official standard. About "International English": did you read the article? "[O]thers use the term to refer to a standard based on U.S. English." As I said, the notion of International English, qua (one) standard, does not exist. Following MoS guidelines -- which, as far as I see, make no mention of International English -- on spelling is the best way to avoid conflicts, in my view.
Either way, I may have misunderstood what you meant by "the standard agreed-upon for science articles (at least for QCD) is International English." What did you mean? Where and how was it agreed upon? And what did you mean by International English? Thanks. --Cultural Freedom talk 2006-06-26 14:51 (UTC)
Honestly, I really really really don't care which spelling gets used. Back when the articles were a mishmash of different spellings because non-Americans kept throwing extra u's into it, I thought it would be easiest to just standardize on International/Commonwealth/British/whatever spelling. I thought Americans would be able to rise above the fray, swallow their spelling-patriotism and accept a standard when non-Americans would not. I guess I'm wrong. Can we just pick a spelling a stick to it? Consistency is the only thing I care about. -- Xerxes 16:29, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
The easiest thing is to stick with MoS guidelines: "use first nonstub version" to determine the spelling (in case about articles not about England, or the US, etc.) The first nonstub version used American spelling. Sticking to the guidelines eliminates the fray in the first place! :) (By the way, I've seen little evidence of spelling patriotism among Americans.)
Still curious what you meant by "the standard agreed-upon for science articles (at least for QCD) is International English." Was that about some non-WP standard? --Cultural Freedom talk 2006-06-26 16:34 (UTC)
No, just from the last time we had this argument. In my experience, the International versions have a longer half-life than American versions. -- Xerxes 22:16, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Another thing just crossed my mind: A first non-stub rule would not ensure consistency, since it would call for different spellings of the same term across different articles. Surely we want color charge, color confinement, color force, and all the uses of "color" in QCD, etc. to have the same spelling. -- Xerxes 22:19, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
What does it matter? Why does it even need to be consistant? Who cares? People who are intelligent enough to read these articles must be intelligent enough to realise that there are different, correct, ways of spelling the same word. Create redirects for alternative spellings then chill. It's trivial. Theresa Knott | Taste the Korn 22:23, 26 June 2006 (UTC)

About "color" being poor nomenclature

It's true. It sucks and confuses. It's even worse than "strange" and "charm". It's also PoV-- unless someone notable has lobbied for the change of terminology in which case we need cites. Coren 03:44, 16 April 2007 (UTC)

Quantum mechanics will be far more accessible once a realistically intuitive name is given to these three aspects of...something. The intro claims some property is described in three aspects. Gluons, anticolors, gauges, ahhhh! I wonder when this stuff will make it into high school science curriculum. The smallest thing they taught me about was an electron. A nice, single aspected, electromagnetically charged electron. Xaxafrad 03:57, 18 October 2007 (UTC)
Well, I don't think it will change, simply because it's pretty well established by now and there isn't really any way to intuitively describe interactions at a quantum level. And I can't speak for all high schools but I learned about colour, as well as strangeness and charm, at high school in 2003. 203.217.150.69 (talk) 23:26, 15 March 2010 (UTC)

Description

-> new quantum state.

color force => force which binds quarks together to form hadrons, the strong nuclear force => sort of residual of the color force which binds baryons together.

Six kinds: 'red, 'green', 'blue' & 'anti-red', 'anti-green' & 'anti-blue'

No. There are three kinds of color charge. anti-red is just "-1 * red", red multiplied by -1.
The analogy with electric charge is as follows: + and - aren't different kinds of electric charges, it's the same kind. That's why when you add electron and positron, you get zero charge, not two charges (+ and -) combined.
Therefore: red + anti-red = zero. But red + green + blue is NOT zero, but a *non-interacting*, but *non-zero* color combination. (It is non-interacting because (red+anti-red) gluons etc do not exist. If the symmetry group would be U(3) instead of SU(3), they would exist...) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.71.196.161 (talk) 22:19, 9 January 2013 (UTC)

hadrons contain quarks leptons don't contain quarks, so are always color-neutral

All observed particles are always color neutral.

when interacting, gluons & quarks must change, color resulting must be color neral example: quark(red) -> quark(blue) + gluons(red, anti-blue). => conservation of color charge

Mathematics of color charge: SU(3)

Only 8 sorts of gluons: ...

I've heard the 8 gluons assertion before from sufficiently trustworthy sources that I believe it, but could someone please explain how the various color pairs result in 8 gluons and not 6? I would expect
  • red, anti-blue
  • red, anti-green
  • blue, anti-red
  • blue, anti-green
  • green, anti-red
  • green, anti-green
What is the function of the remaining 2?
The above ("red, anti-blue" gluon etc) is a simplification.
A gluon, in essence, represents one possible transformation of colors under group SU(3). Recall that SU(3) is multiplication by 3x3 complex matrices with determinant 1. IOW: new_quark = Q * old_quark, where Q is such 3x3 matrix representing an absorbed gluon. Now, now many different linearly independent gluons there can be? As many as there linearly independent 3x3 complex matrices with determinant 1. That is, 3*3 - 1 = 8 ("The special unitary group SU(n) is a Lie group of dimension n^2 − 1"). Not 9. (Why? Because "determinant = 1" constraint removes one degree of freedom).
The choice of 8 linearly independent gluon "basis" isn't unique. See Gluon#Eight_gluon_colors for one possibility. It shows, for one, that the basis can be so that "red, anti-blue" gluon is not one of basic ones, but a superposition of, in this particular case, 1st and 5th:
1/sqrt(2) * (q1 + i*q5) = "red, anti-blue" gluon
The six gluons you described can be part of such basis (as I said, the choice of basis is not unique), but you need to add two more basic gluons to complete it. Otherwise, some valid SU(3) transformations will be non-representable. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.71.196.161 (talk) 22:11, 9 January 2013 (UTC)
--Peter Farago 03:21, 4 Apr 2005 (UTC)

For instance, a red quark combined with an antired antiquark do not form a color-neutral state, like red mixed with cyan to produce white light; only the equal quantum superposition of red-antired, green-antigreen, and blue-antiblue is color-neutral.

What is the difference between "combining" a red quark with an antired and creating an "equal quantum superposition"? red-antired, etc. is precisely the configuration of the muons (quark-antiquark pairs). I believe the red-cyan analogy holds quite well in this case.

--Peter Farago 03:17, 4 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Single aspect of electromagnetic charge

The first paragraph says:

the property it describes has three aspects (analogous to the three primary colors), as opposed to the single "aspect" of electromagnetic charge.

Shouldn't that be the binary "aspect"? Since charge exists as positive and negative? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 94.224.135.45 (talk) 13:01, 14 March 2009 (UTC)

No, because negative electric charge is just positive electric charge multiplied by an scalar, i.e. positive and negative electric charge aren't qualitatively different, they are linearly dependent. Also, positive electric charge is to negative electric charge what is red to anti-red, green to anti-green and blue to anti-blue. --193.198.17.211 (talk) 16:39, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
Turns out that the three color charges are also linearly dependent. They satisfy the equation Red+Blue+Green=zero which makes the description of the color charge as having three different aspects missleading at best. Dauto (talk) 19:02, 25 October 2009 (UTC)

Well, you could remove the redundant degree of freedom and assign the green quark the colour antired+antiblue (so a baryon is still colourless, red+blue+[antired+antiblue]=zero). But this breaks the symmetry of colour in the quarks confined in a baryon, and since symmetry is often vital to these sorts of theories it is more convenient to give each sort of quark a single colour, rather than have one with two colours which is then "different" to the other two.

No, Red+Blue+Green is not zero. It's just Red+Blue+Green. The nature of color charge is such that this combination of colors does not radiate gluons. (IOW: red+anti-red gluons do not exist). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.71.196.161 (talk) 22:39, 9 January 2013 (UTC)

Also, positive-negative and red-antired are properties of antimatter pairs of particles; a red quark and an antired quark can be created and anihilated in the vacuum, as can an electron and a positron. Whereas AFAIK a red-blue-green (or antired-antiblue-antigreen) trio can never be created or destroyed in this way. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.111.185.74 (talk) 19:42, 15 February 2012 (UTC)

Fundamental Question

As I see it, this page fails to address a fundamental question, which is: why do quarks have color charge, while leptons do not? Otherwise both are fundamentally similar (1/2 spin fermions). Why? GrimmC (talk) 19:45, 20 November 2010 (UTC)

Because this model (Standard Model) matches what we observe best. If you'd construct a model where, for example, leptons have color charges, its predictions will not match observations: atoms likely wouldn't exist. (That doesn't say that Standard Model will never be superseded by an even better model). 85.71.196.161 (talk) 14:06, 13 January 2013 (UTC)

Wrong diagram

I believe recently (15 November 2012) added diagram with text: "The pattern of strong charges for the three colors of quark, three antiquarks, and eight gluons (with two of zero charge overlapping)." is wrong. I mean, it is _completely_ incorrect. I propose that it should be removed (unless its author is going to explain and fix it). I requested author's comment at File_talk:Strong_force_charges.svg. (Note: the same diagram was added to Quark article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.71.196.161 (talk) 22:18, 12 January 2013 (UTC)

First, nobody watches File_talk pages in Wikipedia for files uploaded to Wikimedia Commons. Second, do not insert your threads out of order. Third, do not forget to type magic ~~~~. Incnis Mrsi (talk) 07:07, 13 January 2013 (UTC)
A classic reference for this diagram is the textbook by Georgi. [[1]] See pages 100 and 101. Cjean42 (talk) 04:33, 15 January 2013 (UTC)
Thanks, but I'm not asking where this diagram comes from. What this diagram depicts? For example, according to this diagram, a blue quark has something to do with -1 multiplied by eighth Gell-Mann matrix, which sounds like gibberish to me. (BTW, don't you think readers deserve ah explanation what g3 and g8 are?). 85.71.196.161 (talk) 18:47, 26 January 2013 (UTC)
A projection of a 8-dimensional Lie algebra   to a 2-dimensional plane of the picture is a gibberish. How these physicists may distort facts so blatantly?! These are infinitesimal rotation of 3-dimensional complex vector space, so a CP2-based picture must be shown on my monitor in the case that 8 real dimensions are not accessible. Incnis Mrsi (talk) 19:32, 26 January 2013 (UTC)

Red, Yellow, and Blue

Did you know that the color charges of quarks used to be represented with yellow instead of green?--67.10.200.101 19:07, 30 June 2007 (UTC)

Does this explain why the introduction paragraph attributes the selection of "color" to the fact that there are three charges just as there are three primary colors? The primary colors are red, yellow, and blue, not red, green, and blue as the sentence states. The sentence should be changed either to explain that the original three colors were primary, or to remove the explanation that the current three are primary (since green is a secondary color). --Togetmesomepants (talk) 15:57, 8 January 2014 (UTC)

The primary colours of light are red, green, and blue, with respective compliments cyan, magenta, and yellow, see primary color and additive color, and this is standard usage. Nevertheless the sentence in the lead can be changed, citing Penrose who suggests some people use red, yellow, blue. I'll do it now. M∧Ŝc2ħεИτlk 16:29, 8 January 2014 (UTC)
In doing so, I made tweaks to the lead to make it less wordy when explaining the analogy between the charge and light, more to the point, and include other interesting/important points which were not mentioned. M∧Ŝc2ħεИτlk 17:10, 8 January 2014 (UTC)
Sorry, I was thinking from a subtractive color standpoint, coming as I do from a visual art background. Of course, this includes the CMYK color model, as well as the RYB color model, which I know about, so I should have realized that there are other valid models. My mistake. Togetmesomepants (talk) 15:40, 23 April 2015 (UTC)

Three-sided interaction graph - depicted wrong?

Hi

On the picture "Fields due to color changes" top section with three quarks interacting , the gluon exchange goes over a triangular pattern, forming three independent gluon flux tubes. However, on this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ztc6QPNUqls the expert explains that this picture is "totaly wrong" as according to current views the gluon tubes do not make a triangle, but rather they form up a Y letter pattern.

br Rafal — Preceding unsigned comment added by 37.47.128.143 (talk) 12:28, 7 August 2017 (UTC)

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Do all colours attract?

Which statement is correct? "Like colour charges repel, opposite colour charges attract, red-green-blue colour charges attract, and antired-antigreen-antiblue colour charges attract." or "All colour charges attract."?--67.10.200.101 00:56, 1 July 2007 (UTC)

My opinion is that the 3 primary colours do not "repel" or "attract". In reality they create superpositions of states in an abelian group, which can be viewed as a quantized (countable) restriction of a vectorial space: just like 1 and i dont not attract or repel in the complex number plane.
It's true that you theoretically could represent the 3 primary colours in a 2D vector space as eiτn/3 with n being an integer. In which you also represent anticolors as 'eiτn/6 with n being an odd integer. But n here is effectively creates an abelian group (modulo 6), and it's the quantification of fields that "forces" the group to not take arbitrary arbitrary values. You still have the choice of the base for the complex plane (just add any rotation angle by multiplying it by any unitary complex, this just creates a permutation of the 6 colors/anticolors); you can as well mirror the complex plane, which is the same as computing the inverse of each base vector you chose, or multiplying the angle by -1: it also creates a valid base of the complex plane in which the 6 colours/anticolours are still preserved and quantified: they form the Abelian group which effectively has 3 **quantified** dimensions, even if you can view it as a subset of a linear vector space of dimension 2.
It's the quantification of fields that causes the Abelian group and causes the fact that arbitrary values in the 2D compelx plane are not possible.
And then in this group (which forms an unitary hexagon), you really have 3 quantified axis instead of 2 linear axis (you can choose the 3 axis arbitrarily, and reverse their direction: on each axis there's a colour and an anticolour: the superposition of a colour and anticoluor instantly creates a null field, the 2 quarks will annihilate their colour charge; but this will ever happen). All that can exist is pairs of quarks whose color of one is not the anticolor of the other; or triples of quarks: you cannot have a situation where there are two quarks associated on the same quantum axis. With triples of quarks, when you get is not anhilated: R+G+B, or antiR+antiG+antiB are possible (they are "white": they form "leptons" for the color charge space) but "R+antiR" is simple zero (i.e. "black"); the 6 possible pairs form "gluons" for the colour charge space.
the leptons do not interact in the colour charge space, the gluons however can interact and their collusion will annihilate one pair of quarks in the colour space (the rest may dissipate an energetic particle, but it will also be "white" or "black" in the colour space, and its energy cannot be color-charged (for example it can still have a gravitation charge, or an electromagnetic charge: experiences have easily found "white" colour particles with electromagnetic charges, but they try to find particles that would have a gravitation charge and would not be electromagnetically charged: these are researches for Higgs boson, notably the hypothetic "graviton": if we can find a graviton, then quarks have other charges as well: either we say that quarks are superpositions of other states, i.e. we model them as two "subquarks", or we augment the number of quarks and assign them another charge; for gravitons, this would create another kind of colors which would not be symetric as its charge can only be 0 or 1, not -1 and 1... unless we then try to find "antigravitons"!)
For now the total number of interaction charges (i.e. maximum number of states) is still not known. We only know 4 kinds of charges. May be there's another one for gravitation (but if it exists, then the Einstein equation E=mc² is no longer true for all quarks (only for hadrons, leptons, fermions, baryons, and photons which are still viewed as a equivalent form of "matter" or "antimatter" where mass and energy are "soluble" into each other, simply by changing the base of observation in the general relativity mechanic; but in quantum mechanic, such progressive "solubility" is not possible, it is quantified, meaning that our space-time is also quantified and not universally isotropic as suggested by the concept of "duality" between waves and corpuscules: this does not contradict Einstein model, but gives sense to the Eisenberg's principle of uncertainty which is intimately linked to the quantification of fields and the fact that they create Abelian groups in quantified spaces, where we can experiment measurable effects). The unidirectionality of time (and then the principle of causality) may in fact also be the result of the chirality which is inherent to the Abelian groups which are founding the principles of quantum dynamics! Our local perception of the universe may be wrong: we already know that this space-time has a negative curvature, quantification of fields and the fact they can only exist in limited combinations is just enough to explain this observed curvature (and then the concept of general relativity observable at high scale; if we go to lower scales, this concepts vanishes under the limit of Plank constants and Eisengerg principles: classical measures are no longer observable because they are no longer relevant in terms of probabilities which is the terms by which "waves" are defined but not directly observable; in reality we only observe the quanta forming statistical patterns upon which we try to reconstruct the effective wave forms).
Do we really know the number of dimensions of the universe? We can see 4 apparent dimensions (with a curvature), but nothing forbids the universe to be quantified, and then be effectively a single unidimensional and static field (of energy? or gravitation?), but with a "fractal" structure by which it is quantified in our observed measurements. This could also explain the possibility of "black holes" and "white holes" and "worm holes": it's possible to model these apparent sigularities as shortcut paths between arcs of a fractal line, notably if the universe is just a single stationary field (this field could also be modeled as a single closed line: it has no separable "infinites". verdy_p (talk) 12:46, 23 November 2018 (UTC)

color charge of quarks

Should it be speciefied that each kind of quark (i.e. up, down, etc ...) can exist in each kind of color (i.e. up-red, up-blue, etc ... )? Davide Sangalli 17:06, 8 August 2021 (UTC)

Venn Diagram Centers


It seems to me that the Venn diagrams in "Red, green, and blue" should have the same color in the center in both the Quark_Colors and Quark_Anticolors pictures. Unless I'm misunderstanding and the 'Colorless/White' that anticolors produce is DIFFERENT than normal colors, it is confusing to have one central area be grey and one be white. 173.168.110.116 (talk) 02:34, 31 December 2015 (UTC)

You're talking about the diagrams at the top, right? If so, I agree the centre's should both be white, and the overlapped areas could be coloured appropriately also. Out of courtesy let's contact the author User:Jlcooke. If no response after a week or so, I'll just tweak the images since the change is trivial. MŜc2ħεИτlk 09:53, 31 December 2015 (UTC)
I have uploaded a tweaked version of the image File:Quark_Colors_with_white.svg and replaced the image in the article. Yodo9000 (talk) 12:17, 5 May 2022 (UTC)