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Overview of Particle Physics
-- the path to the Standard Model
1
Topics
historical flashback over development of the
field
o
o
o
o
o
“prehistory” 19th century
electron, radioactivity, nucleus
cosmic rays
spectroscopy era
collider era
standard model of particle physics
2
A Century of Particle Physics
J.J Thomson
Top quark
1995
Electron – 1897
3
Sizes and
distance scales
visible light:
wavelength
≈5∙10-7m
virus 10-7m
molecule 10-9m
atom 10-10m
nucleus 10-14m
nucleon 10-15m
quark <10-18m
4
The Building Blocks of a Dew Drop
dew drop: 1021 molecules
of water.
Each molecule = one
oxygen atom and two
hydrogen atoms (H2O).
Atom: nucleus
surrounded by electrons.
Electrons bound to the
nucleus by photons
nucleus of a hydrogen
atom = single proton.
Proton: three quarks,
held together by gluons
just as photons hold the
electron to the nucleus
in the atom
5
Very early era (19th century)
chemistry, electromagnetism
discharge tubes, “canal rays”, “cathode rays”
photoelectric effect (Hertz, 1887)
radioactivity (Becquerel, 1895)
X-rays (Röntgen, 1895)
6
Atoms, Nucleus
electron: first hint that atom not indivisible
natural radioactivity understanding of
composition of atom, nucleus
atom = nucleus surrounded by electrons (Geiger,
Marsden, Rutherford, 1906 -1911)
hydrogen nucleus = proton, is component of all
nuclei (1920)
neutron (Bothe, Becker, Joliot-Curie, Chadwick,
1930 – 1932)
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8
Cosmic rays
Discovered by Victor Hess (1912)
Observations on mountains and in balloon: intensity of cosmic
radiation increases with height above surface of Earth – must come
from “outer space”
Much of cosmic radiation from sun (rather low energy protons)
Very high energy radiation from outside solar system, but probably
from within galaxy
9
10
Cosmic rays -- “elementary” particles
new detectors (cloud chambers, emulsions)
exposed to cosmic rays discovery of many new
particles
positron (anti-electron) : predicted by Dirac
(1928), discovered by Anderson 1932
muon (μ): 1937 Nedermeyer
pion (π) predicted by Yukawa (1935), observed
1947 (Lattes, Occhialini, Powell)
strange particles (K, Λ, Σ,…..
11
Particle Zoo
1940’s to 1960’s :
Plethora of new particles discovered
(mainly in cosmic rays):
e-, p, n, ν, μ-, π±, π0, Λ0, Σ+ , Σ0 , Ξ,….
question:
Can nature be so messy?
are all these particles really intrinsically
different?
or can we recognize patterns or
symmetries in their nature (charge, mass,
flavor) or the way they behave (decays)?
12
The Particle Zoo!
±
,
0
,
±
,
e,
±
0
0
K , K S, K L,
0
+
, p, n, ,
0
, , , …
13
Particle spectroscopy era
1950’s – 1960’s: accelerators, better detectors
even more new particles are found, many of them
extremely short-lived (decay after 10-21 sec)
1962: “eightfold way”, “flavor SU(3)” symmetry
(Gell-Mann, Ne’eman)
allows classification of particles into “multiplets”
Mass formula relating masses of particles in same
multiplet
quark model – three different kinds of quarks
(u, d, s)
Allows prediction of new particle Ω- , with all of its
properties (mass, spin, expected decay modes,..)
subsequent observation of Ω- with expected
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properties at BNL (1964)
ΩBNL
1964
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/history/Omega-minus.asp
eight-fold way quark model – particles
made up of three different “quarks” – u, d, s
p = uud, n = udd,… Ω- = sss
refinement of these ideas, more quarks,
“color”, gauge field theory
Standard Model
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Standard Model
A theoretical model of
interactions of elementary
particles, based on quantum field
theory
Symmetry:
SU(3) x SU(2) x U(1)
“Matter particles”
Quarks: up, down,
charm,strange, top, bottom
Leptons: electron, muon, tau,
neutrinos
“Force particles”
Gauge Bosons
o (electromagnetic force)
o W, Z (weak, electromagnetic)
o g gluons (strong force)
Higgs boson
spontaneous symmetry
breaking of SU(2)
mass
16
Contemporary
Physics
Education
Project17
Particles of Standard Model
Leptons
-1/3
-1
0
u
u
u
d
d
d
e
e
c
c
c
s
s
s
t
t
t
b
b
b
t
t
g
g
g
g
g
g
g
g
I
II
III
Z
W±
Bosons Fermions
+2/3
Quarks
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“every-day” matter
Proton
Neutron
d
u
u
u
d
Photon
d
Electron
e
Electron Neutrino
e
19
Electromagnetic interaction
Proton
q1
Photon
q1q2
F k 2
r
Electron
q2
20
Weak interaction Beta decay
Neutron
u
d
Mean lifetime of a free
neutron ~ 10.3 minutes
Proton
d
u
d
Mean lifetime of a free
proton > 1031 years!
u
W-
Anti-electron Neutrino
Electron
e
e
21
The Strong Force
d
u
g
u
Strong force caused by
the exchange of gluons
d
22
Forces (interactions)
Strong interaction
1
Binds protons and neutrons to form
nuclei
Electromagnetic interaction 10-2
Binds electrons and nuclei to form
atoms
Binds atoms to form molecules etc.
Weak interaction
10-10
Causes radioactivity
Gravitational interaction
10-39
Binds matter on large scales
23
What holds the world together?
interaction
strong
electromagnetic
weak
gravity
participants
quarks
charged
particles
all
particles
all
particles
1
10-2
10-10
10-39
g
gluon
relative strength
field quantum
(boson)
photon
W±
Z0
G
graviton
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The Discovery of Top Quark
1977 – 1992
Many null results
1992 – 1993
A few interesting
events show up
1994, CDF
First evidence
mt ~ 170 GeV/c2
1995 – CDF, DØ
Discovery!
1994, DØ
mt > 131 GeV/c2
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Creating Top Anti-Top Quark pairs
b
P
t
t
b
e t uc
-1/ 3
2 / 3
W
e t d s
P
-2 / 3
1/ 3
e t uc
-
W
-
-
-
e t d s
26
-
Artist’s impression of a top event
27
What do we actually “see”
_
t t e jets
Muon
Jet-1
Jet-2
Missing energy
Electron
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“event display” of a DØ
top event
t t e jets
29
Ωb (http://www.fnal.gov/pub/presspass/images/DZero-Omega-discovery.html
2008 DØ experiment
at Fermilab:
discover brother
of Ω- , the Ωb
Ω- = sss,
Ωb = ssb,
theory predicts
properties, decay
modes, ..
confirmed by
experiment
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Summary
we’ve come a long way ……
Standard Model (theory of particle interactions)
works embarrassingly well!
Has been tested by many hundreds of precision
measurements over last three decades – very
few measurements differ by more than 1 or 2
standard deviations
Even some amount of frustration – always hope
to see experimental result in disagreement with
theory
But there are some open questions ………………… 31