Tau (particle)


The tau, also called the tau lepton, tau particle, or tauon, is an elementary particle similar to the electron, with negative electric charge and a spin of. Like the electron, the muon, and the three neutrinos, the tau is a lepton, and like all elementary particles with half-integer spin, the tau has a corresponding antiparticle of opposite charge but equal mass and spin. In the tau's case, this is the “antitau”. Tau particles are denoted by and the antitau by.
Tau leptons have a lifetime of and a mass of . Since their interactions are very similar to those of the electron, a tau can be thought of as a much heavier version of the electron. Because of their greater mass, tau particles do not emit as much bremsstrahlung radiation as electrons; consequently they are potentially highly penetrating, much more so than electrons.
Because of their short lifetime, the range of the tau is mainly set by their decay length, which is too small for bremsstrahlung to be noticeable. Their penetrating power appears only at ultra-high velocity and energy, when time dilation extends their path-length.
As with the case of the other charged leptons, the tau has an associated tau neutrino, denoted by.

History

The tau was anticipated in a 1971 paper by Yung-su Tsai. Providing the theory for this discovery, the tau was detected in a series of experiments between 1974 and 1977 by Martin Lewis Perl with his and Tsai's colleagues at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory group. Their equipment consisted of SLAC's then-new – colliding ring, called SPEAR, and the LBL magnetic detector. They could detect and distinguish between leptons, hadrons and photons. They did not detect the tau directly, but rather discovered anomalous events:
The need for at least two undetected particles was shown by the inability to conserve energy and momentum with only one. However, no other muons, electrons, photons, or hadrons were detected. It was proposed that this event was the production and subsequent decay of a new particle pair:
This was difficult to verify, because the energy to produce the pair is similar to the threshold for D meson production. The mass and spin of the tau was subsequently established by work done at DESY-Hamburg with the Double Arm Spectrometer, and at SLAC-Stanford with the SPEAR Direct Electron Counter,
The symbol τ was derived from the Greek τρίτον, since it was the third charged lepton discovered.
Martin Lewis Perl shared the 1995 Nobel Prize in Physics with Frederick Reines. The latter was awarded his share of the prize for experimental discovery of the neutrino.

Tau decay

The tau is the only lepton that can decay into hadrons – the other leptons do not have the necessary mass. Like the other decay modes of the tau, the hadronic decay is through the weak interaction.
The branching ratio of the dominant hadronic tau decays are:
In total, the tau lepton will decay hadronically approximately 64.79% of the time.
The branching ratio of the common purely leptonic tau decays are:
The similarity of values of the two branching ratios is a consequence of lepton universality.

Exotic atoms

The tau lepton is predicted to form exotic atoms like other charged subatomic particles. One of such, called tauonium by the analogy to muonium, consists of an antitauon and an electron:.
Another one is an onium atom called true tauonium and is difficult to detect due to tau's extremely short lifetime at low energies needed to form this atom. Its detection is important for quantum electrodynamics.

Footnotes