Discrete Symmetries And Cp Violation


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Discrete Symmetries and CP Violation


Discrete Symmetries and CP Violation

Author: Marco Sozzi

language: en

Publisher: OUP Oxford

Release Date: 2012-06-14


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This book takes a fresh approach to the teaching of discrete symmetries which are central to fundamental physics: mirror symmetry, matter/anti-matter symmetry, and time reversal. It is self-contained and includes detailed discussions of relevant experiments - conveying some of the fascination and intellectual challenges of experimental physics.

Selected Topics in Discrete Symmetries and CP-violation Lectures


Selected Topics in Discrete Symmetries and CP-violation Lectures

Author: M. A. B. Beg

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1969


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CP Violation Without Strangeness


CP Violation Without Strangeness

Author: Iosif B. Khriplovich

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2012-12-06


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Electric dipole moments (EDMs) have interested physicists since 1950, when it was first suggested that there was no experimental evidence that nuclear forces are symmetric under parity (P) transformation. This question was regarded as speculative because the existence of an EDM, in addition to P violation, requires a violation of time-reversal (T) symmetry. In 1964 it was discovered that the invariance under CP transformation, which combines charge conjugation (C) with parity, is violated in K-meson decays. This provided a new incentive for EDM searches. Since the combined operations of CPT are expected to leave a system invariant, breakdown of CP invariance should be accompanied by a violation of time-reversal symmetry. Thus there is a reason to expect that EDMs should exist at some level. The original neutron EDM experiments were later supplemented with checks of T invariance in atoms and molecules. These investigations are pursued now by many groups. Over the years, the upper limit on the neutron EDM has been improved by seven orders of magnitude, and the upper limit on the electron EDM obtained in atomic experiments is even more strict.