Fixing the global symmetries Applying the parity operator twice leaves the coordinates unchanged, meaning that must act as one of the internal symmetries of the theory, at most changing the phase of a state. For example, the
Standard Model has three global
U(1) symmetries with charges equal to the
baryon number , the
lepton number , and the
electric charge . Therefore, the parity operator satisfies for some choice of , , and . This operator is also not unique in that a new parity operator can always be constructed by multiplying it by an internal symmetry such as for some . To see if the parity operator can always be defined to satisfy , consider the general case when for some internal symmetry present in the theory. The desired parity operator would be . If is part of a continuous symmetry group then exists, but if it is part of a
discrete symmetry then this element need not exist and such a redefinition may not be possible. The Standard Model exhibits a symmetry, where is the
fermion number operator counting how many fermions are in a state. Since all particles in the Standard Model satisfy , the discrete symmetry is also part of the continuous symmetry group. If the parity operator satisfied , then it can be redefined to give a new parity operator satisfying . But if the Standard Model is extended by incorporating
Majorana neutrinos, which have and , then the discrete symmetry is no longer part of the continuous symmetry group and the desired redefinition of the parity operator cannot be performed. Instead it satisfies so the Majorana neutrinos would have intrinsic parities of .
Parity of the pion In 1954, a paper by
William Chinowsky and
Jack Steinberger demonstrated that the
pion has negative parity. They studied the decay of an "atom" made from a
deuteron () and a negatively charged pion () in a state with zero orbital
angular momentum ~ \mathbf L = \boldsymbol 0 ~ into two
neutrons (n). Neutrons are
fermions and so obey
Fermi–Dirac statistics, which implies that the final state is antisymmetric. Using the fact that the deuteron has spin one and the pion spin zero together with the antisymmetry of the final state they concluded that the two neutrons must have orbital angular momentum ~ L = 1 ~. The total parity is the product of the intrinsic parities of the particles and the extrinsic parity of the spherical harmonic function ~ \left( -1 \right)^L ~. Since the orbital momentum changes from zero to one in this process, if the process is to conserve the total parity then the products of the intrinsic parities of the initial and final particles must have opposite sign. A deuteron nucleus is made from a proton and a neutron, and so using the aforementioned convention that protons and neutrons have intrinsic parities equal to ~+1~ they argued that the parity of the pion is equal to minus the product of the parities of the two neutrons divided by that of the proton and neutron in the deuteron, explicitly \frac{(-1)(1)^2}{(1)^2} = -1 ~, from which they concluded that the pion is a
pseudoscalar particle.
Parity violation Although parity is conserved in
electromagnetism and
gravity, it is violated in weak interactions, and perhaps, to some degree, in
strong interactions. In 1929,
Hermann Weyl explored, without any evidence, the existence of a two-component massless particle of spin one-half. This idea was rejected by
Pauli, because it implied parity violation. By the mid-20th century, it had been suggested by several scientists that parity might not be conserved (in different contexts), but without solid evidence these suggestions were not considered important. Then, in 1956, a careful review and analysis by theoretical physicists
Tsung-Dao Lee and
Chen-Ning Yang went further, showing that while parity conservation had been verified in decays by the strong or
electromagnetic interactions, it was untested in the
weak interaction. They proposed several possible direct experimental tests. They were mostly ignored, but Lee was able to convince his Columbia colleague
Chien-Shiung Wu to try it. She needed special
cryogenic facilities and expertise, so the experiment was done at the
National Bureau of Standards.
Wu,
Ambler, Hayward, Hoppes, and Hudson (1957) found a clear violation of parity conservation in the beta decay of
cobalt-60. As the experiment was winding down, with double-checking in progress, Wu informed Lee and Yang of their positive results, and saying the results need further examination, she asked them not to publicize the results first. However, Lee revealed the results to his Columbia colleagues on 4 January 1957 at a "Friday lunch" gathering of the Physics Department of Columbia. Three of them,
R. L. Garwin,
L. M. Lederman, and R. M. Weinrich, modified an existing cyclotron experiment, and immediately verified the parity violation. They delayed publication of their results until after Wu's group was ready, and the two papers appeared back-to-back in the same physics journal. The discovery of parity violation explained the outstanding
puzzle in the physics of
kaons. In 2010, it was reported that physicists working with the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider had created a short-lived parity symmetry-breaking bubble in
quark–gluon plasmas. An experiment conducted by several physicists in the
STAR collaboration, suggested that parity may also be violated in the strong interaction. It is predicted that this local parity violation manifests itself by the
chiral magnetic effect.
Intrinsic parity of hadrons To every particle one can assign an intrinsic parity as long as nature preserves parity. Although weak interactions do not, one can still assign a parity to any
hadron by examining the strong interaction reaction that produces it, or through decays not involving the weak interaction, such as
rho meson decay to
pions. ==See also==