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Introduction of Nuclear Physics

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Relativistic heavy ion collisions. Virtual photon from deep inelastic ... 1971 NON-ABELIAN t'Hooft, GAUGE theory Veltman. 1972 QCD theory Gell-Man, Frizsch ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction of Nuclear Physics


1
Introduction of Nuclear Physics
2
  • How can we probe the structure in the smaller
    scale?
  • Discovery of nuclear structure
  • Development of nuclear physics
  • Nuclear structure
  • Exotic nuclei
  • Heavy ion collisions
  • Relativistic heavy ion collisions
  • Virtual photon from deep inelastic scattering
    with electron beam
  • Laser-electron photon, Bremsstrulumg photon
  • Laser Nuclear Physics

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100 Years of Particle Physics
  • 1897 ELECTRON discovery J.J. Thomson
  • 1909 PROTON discovery E. Rutherford
  • 1932 NEUTRON discovery J. Chadwick
  • 1935 EXCHANGE theory Yukawa
  • 1948 QED theory Feynman,
  • 1961 - W Z theory Glashow
  • 1964 QUARK theory Gell-Man, Zweig
  • 1964 HIGGS theory Higgs, Englert,
  • 1967 ELECTROWEAK theory Weinberg,
    Salam,

5
100 Years of Particle Physics
  • 1971 NON-ABELIAN tHooft,
  • GAUGE theory Veltman
  • 1972 QCD theory Gell-Man,
  • Frizsch
  • 1973 ASYMPTOTIC Gross, FREEDOM theory Wilzc
    ek, Politzer

6
100 Years of Particle Physics
  • 1974 CHARM discovery Ting, Richter
  • 1977 BOTTOM discovery Lederman
  • 1979 GLUON discovery TASSO, JADE,
  • MARK-J,
  • PLUTO
  • 1983 W Z discovery Rubbia/UA1
  • UA2
  • 1995 TOP discovery DØ CDF

7
Geiger-Marsden experiment
  • The Geiger-Marsden experiment (also called the
    Gold foil experiment or the Rutherford
    experiment) was an experiment done by Hans Geiger
    and Ernest Marsden in 1909, under the direction
    of Ernest Rutherford at the Physical Laboratories
    of the University of Manchester which led to the
    downfall of the plum pudding model of the atom.
  • They measured the deflection of alpha particles
    (helium ions with a positive charge) directed
    normally onto a sheet of very thin gold foil.
    Under the prevailing plum pudding model, the
    alpha particles should all have been deflected
    by, at most, a few degrees. However they observed
    that a very small percentage of particles were
    deflected through angles much larger than 90
    degrees some were even scattered back toward the
    source. From this observation Rutherford
    concluded that the atom contained a very
    physically-small (as compared with the size of
    the atom) positive charge, which could repel the
    alpha particles if they came close enough,
    subsequently developed into the Bohr model.

8
Low-Energy electron scattering from Carbon
9
High-Energy electron scattering from Carbon
10
Parton Structure of Proton- Quark
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Elementary Particles discovered 1898 ? 1964
1953 Donald Glaser invented the bubble chamber.
The Brookhaven Cosmotron, a 1.3 GeV accelerator,
started operation.
13
Back to Year 1964
  • A hundred or so types of particles were
    identified
  • Baryons (fermion) n, p, ?, ?, ?,.
  • Mesons (boson) ?, ?, ..
  • Murray Gell-Mann (Mendeleev of elementary
    particle physics) proposed the eightfold way to
    put these particles in order, suggesting more
    elementary constituents quarks.
  • Three types of quarks, u, d and s.
  • Baryons composed of 3 quarks.
  • Mesons composed of 2 quarks a quark and an
    antiquark.

14
Baryon Octet (s1/2)
15
Meson Octet (s0)
16
Baryon Decuplet (s3/2)
(1232)
(1384)
(1533)
(1672)
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Deep Inelastic Scattering with Electrons beam
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A November revolution the birth of a new
particle J/?
BNL pA?ee- X
SLAC ee-?X
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http//ed.fnal.gov/projects/exhibits/searching/exh
ibit_home2.html
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? Upsilon
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Three-jet EventsProof of radiated Gluon
28
1995 European Physical Society High-Energy and
Particle Physics Prize
29
Observation of Neutral Currents in 1973
30
Discovery of W and Z in 1983http//cern-discoveri
es.web.cern.ch/CERN-Discoveries/Courier/HeavyLight
/Heavylight.html
On 25 January 1983, CERN called a press
conference to announce the discovery of the W
particles.
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W and Z Production
Number of candidates in 200pb-1 64000 W ? e?
51000 W ? ?? 2900 Z ? ee 4900 Z ? ??
  • Isolated, high pT leptons
  • Missing transverse momentum in W's
  • Z events provide excellent control sample
  • Typically small hadronic (jet) activity

33
W Mass Measurement
  • W mass information contained in location of
    transverse Jacobian edge

Provides cross-check of production model. Needs
theoretical model of pT(W) Provides
cross-check of hadronic modelling
Insensitive to pT(W) to first order. Reconstructi
on of pT? sensitive to hadronic response and
multiple interactions
34
Detector Calibration Lepton Energy Scale
  • Energy scale measurements drive the W mass
    measurement
  • Calibrate lepton track momentum with mass
    measurements
  • of J/??and ? decays to ?
  • Calibrate calorimeter energy using track momentum
    of e
  • from W decays
  • Crosscheck with Z mass measurement, then add Z's
    as a
  • calibration point

Z ? ee
Z ? ??
35
Signature of Top Quark Production
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ee-?X around Z bosons Proof of
three-generation of neutrios
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40
A hadron event - a neutrino interacting with a
nucleon and emerging as a neutrino first
observation of "neutral currents" in the
Gargamelle heavy liquid bubble chamber.
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