- #1
Cody Livengood
- 31
- 2
- TL;DR Summary
- I understand how the existence of quarks is inferred from the three particle-emitting cones or jets and by the quarks’ ability to deflect particles passing through the composite particle, but I don’t see how the existence of gluons is conclusively demonstrated by this rather than just being an interpretation of the observation.
I understand how the existence of quarks is inferred from the three particle-emitting cones or jets and by the quarks’ ability to deflect particles passing through the composite particle, but I don’t see how the existence of gluons is conclusively demonstrated by this rather than just being an interpretation of the observation. How do we know that two of the jets were produced by quark-antiquark pairs that fragmented into hadrons and the third was produced by a gluon that fragmented into hadrons? How can we tell the difference?