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Weak isospin
Weak isospin
from Wikipedia

In particle physics, weak isospin is a quantum number relating to the electrically charged part of the weak interaction: Particles with half-integer weak isospin can interact with the W±
bosons; particles with zero weak isospin do not. Weak isospin is a construct parallel to the idea of isospin under the strong interaction. Weak isospin is usually given the symbol T or I, with the third component written as T3 or I3 . T3 is more important than T; typically "weak isospin" is used as short form of the proper term "3rd component of weak isospin". It can be understood as the eigenvalue of a charge operator.

Notation

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This article uses T and T3 for weak isospin and its projection. Regarding ambiguous notation, I is also used to represent the 'normal' (strong force) isospin, same for its third component I3 a.k.a. T3 or Tz . Aggravating the confusion, T is also used as the symbol for the Topness quantum number.

Conservation law

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The weak isospin conservation law relates to the conservation of weak interactions conserve T3. It is also conserved by the electromagnetic and strong interactions. However, interaction with the Higgs field does not conserve T3, as directly seen in propagating fermions, which mix their chiralities by the mass terms that result from their Higgs couplings. Since the Higgs field vacuum expectation value is nonzero, particles interact with this field all the time, even in vacuum. Interaction with the Higgs field changes particles' weak isospin (and weak hypercharge). Only a specific combination of electric charge is conserved. The electric charge, is related to weak isospin, and weak hypercharge, by

In 1961 Sheldon Glashow proposed this relation by analogy to the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula for charge to isospin.[1][2]: 152 

Relation with chirality

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Fermions with negative chirality (also called "left-handed" fermions) have and can be grouped into doublets with that behave the same way under the weak interaction. By convention, electrically charged fermions are assigned with the same sign as their electric charge. For example, up-type quarks (u, c, t) have and always transform into down-type quarks (d, s, b), which have and vice versa. On the other hand, a quark never decays weakly into a quark of the same Something similar happens with left-handed leptons, which exist as doublets containing a charged lepton (e
, μ
, τ
) with and a neutrino (ν
e
, ν
μ
, ν
τ
) with In all cases, the corresponding anti-fermion has reversed chirality ("right-handed" antifermion) and reversed sign

Fermions with positive chirality ("right-handed" fermions) and anti-fermions with negative chirality ("left-handed" anti-fermions) have and form singlets that do not undergo charged weak interactions. Particles with do not interact with W±
bosons
; however, they do all interact with the Z0
boson
.

Neutrinos

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Lacking any distinguishing electric charge, neutrinos and antineutrinos are assigned the opposite their corresponding charged lepton; hence, all left-handed neutrinos are paired with negatively charged left-handed leptons with so those neutrinos have Since right-handed antineutrinos are paired with positively charged right-handed anti-leptons with those antineutrinos are assigned The same result follows from particle-antiparticle charge & parity reversal, between left-handed neutrinos () and right-handed antineutrinos ().


Left-handed fermions in the Standard Model[3]
Generation 1 Generation 2 Generation 3
Fermion Electric
charge
Symbol Weak
isospin
Fermion Electric
charge
Symbol Weak
isospin
Fermion Electric
charge
Symbol Weak
isospin
Electron Muon Tauon
Up quark Charm quark Top quark
Down quark Strange quark Bottom quark
Electron neutrino Muon neutrino Tau neutrino
All of the above left-handed (regular) particles have corresponding right-handed anti-particles with equal and opposite weak isospin.
All right-handed (regular) particles and left-handed anti-particles have weak isospin of 0.

Weak isospin and the W bosons

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The symmetry associated with weak isospin is SU(2) and requires gauge bosons with ( W+
, W
, and W0
) to mediate transformations between fermions with half-integer weak isospin charges. [4] implies that W bosons have three different values of

  • W+
    boson is emitted in transitions
  • W0
    boson would be emitted in weak interactions where does not change, such as neutrino scattering.
  • W
    boson is emitted in transitions .

Under electroweak unification, the W0
boson mixes with the weak hypercharge gauge boson B0
; both have weak isospin = 0 . This results in the observed Z0
boson and the photon of quantum electrodynamics; the resulting Z0
and γ0
likewise have zero weak isospin.

See also

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Footnotes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Weak isospin is a in that characterizes the internal symmetry of elementary particles under the SU(2)L gauge group of the , analogous to ordinary in the strong force but specific to the weak force's chiral structure. It applies primarily to left-handed fermions, which are grouped into doublets with total weak isospin T = 1/2, such as the lepton doublet (νeL, eL) and the quark doublet (uL, dL), while right-handed fermions are weak isospin singlets (T = 0). The third component of weak isospin, T3, takes values of +1/2 for the upper member of each doublet (e.g., neutrinos and up-type quarks) and -1/2 for the lower member (e.g., charged leptons and down-type quarks), enabling the charged-current weak interactions mediated by W± bosons through raising (T+) and lowering (T-) operators. Together with Y, weak isospin determines the via the relation Q = T3 + Y/2, unifying the electromagnetic and weak forces in the Glashow-Weinberg-Salam model. The W bosons themselves form a weak isospin triplet (T = 1), while the Z boson and emerge as mixtures after electroweak symmetry breaking by the . This framework explains phenomena like and neutrino oscillations, where only left-handed particles participate in weak processes, and has been experimentally verified through precision measurements at colliders such as the LHC.

Definition and Notation

Definition

Weak isospin is a fundamental in the of , associated with the SU(2)_L that underlies the gauge of weak interactions. The third component of the weak isospin vector is denoted T_3. This symmetry describes how left-handed fermions transform under the weak force, much like the third component of strong (I_3) characterizes transformations under the SU(2) subgroup of the strong interaction's flavor symmetry for up and down quarks. In the , left-handed and are grouped into doublets under SU(2)_L, each with total weak isospin T = 1/2: the upper component (e.g., left-handed or up-type ) carries T_3 = +1/2, while the lower component (e.g., left-handed charged or down-type ) has T_3 = -1/2. Right-handed and , in contrast, form singlets with T = 0 and thus do not participate in the SU(2)_L . This chiral structure distinguishes weak isospin from strong , which acts symmetrically on both left- and right-handed states without dependence and is limited to flavor among light . The foundational idea of non-Abelian gauge theories, including SU(2)-based symmetries like weak isospin, originated in the 1954 work of Yang and Mills, who developed isotopic gauge invariance to extend local principles beyond while preserving isotopic spin conservation. This approach was adapted for weak interactions in Glashow's 1961 model, which proposed an SU(2) × U(1) gauge structure to unify weak and electromagnetic forces, assigning weak isospin specifically to left-handed currents.

Notation

In , weak isospin is denoted by the TT, representing the total weak isospin, while its third component, corresponding to the z-direction in the isospin space, is denoted T3T_3. These operators act within the SU(2)_L gauge group of the electroweak theory, distinct from the strong isospin denoted by II and I3I_3, which pertains to the SU(2) flavor symmetry in . Left-handed fields are arranged in SU(2) doublets with T=1/2T = 1/2, where the upper component has T3=+1/2T_3 = +1/2 and the lower has T3=1/2T_3 = -1/2. For the sector, this is represented as the doublet (νe)L\begin{pmatrix} \nu \\ e \end{pmatrix}_L, and for the first generation quarks, (ud)L\begin{pmatrix} u \\ d \end{pmatrix}_L, with analogous forms for higher generations. In contrast, right-handed fields transform as SU(2) singlets with T=0T = 0 and T3=0T_3 = 0. The generators of the SU(2)_L group are given by τa/2\tau^a / 2, where a=1,2,3a = 1, 2, 3 and τa\tau^a are the : τ1=(0110)\tau^1 = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}, τ2=(0ii0)\tau^2 = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & -i \\ i & 0 \end{pmatrix}, τ3=(1001)\tau^3 = \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{pmatrix}. These satisfy the [τa/2,τb/2]=iϵabcτc/2[\tau^a / 2, \tau^b / 2] = i \epsilon^{abc} \tau^c / 2, with τ3/2\tau^3 / 2 corresponding to the T3T_3 operator. The YY is related to the QQ and T3T_3 by the convention Y=2(QT3)Y = 2(Q - T_3). In mathematical expressions, the weak isospin vector is often denoted using boldface or an arrow, such as T\vec{T}
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