Weak hypercharge


In the Standard Model of electroweak interactions of particle physics, the weak hypercharge is a quantum number relating the electric charge and the third component of weak isospin. It is frequently denoted and corresponds to the gauge symmetry U.
It is conserved. However, one of the interactions is with the Higgs field. Since the Higgs field vacuum expectation value is nonzero, particles interact with this field all the time even in vacuum. This changes their weak hypercharge. Only a specific combination of them, , is conserved.
Mathematically, weak hypercharge appears similar to the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula for the hypercharge of strong interactions.

Definition

Weak hypercharge is the generator of the U component of the electroweak gauge group, and its associated quantum field B mixes with the W 3 electroweak quantum field to produce the observed gauge boson and the photon of quantum electrodynamics.
The Weak hypercharge satisfies the relation
where is the electric charge and 3 is the third component of weak isospin.
Rearranging, the weak hypercharge can be explicitly defined as:
where "left"- and "right"-handed here are left and right chirality, respectively.
, T3, and weak hypercharge, YW, of the known elementary particles, showing electric charge, Q, along the Weinberg angle. The neutral Higgs field breaks the electroweak symmetry and interacts with other particles to give them mass. Three components of the Higgs field become part of the massive W and Z bosons.
Hypercharge assignments in the Standard Model are determined up to a twofold ambiguity by requiring cancellation of all anomalies.
;Alternative scale:
For convenience, weak hypercharge is often represented at half-scale, so that
which is equal to just the average electric charge of the particles in the isospin multiplet.

Baryon and lepton number

Weak hypercharge is related to baryon number minus lepton number via:
where X is a conserved quantum number in GUT. Since weak hypercharge is always conserved this implies that baryon number minus lepton number is also always conserved, within the Standard Model and most extensions.

Neutron decay

Hence neutron decay conserves baryon number B and lepton number L separately, so also the difference BL is conserved.

Proton decay

is a prediction of many grand unification theories.
Hence proton decay conserves BL, even though it violates both lepton number and baryon number conservation.