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Title: 14.1Early Discoveries


1
CHAPTER 14Elementary Particles
  • 14.1 Early Discoveries
  • 14.2 The Fundamental Interactions
  • 14.3 Classification of Elementary Particles
  • 14.4 Conservation Laws and Symmetries
  • 14.5 Quarks
  • 14.6 The Families of Matter
  • 14.7 Beyond the Standard Model
  • 14.8 Accelerators

If I could remember the names of all these
particles, Id be a botanist. - Enrico Fermi
2
Elementary Particles
  • We began our study of subatomic physics in
    Chapter 12. We investigated the nucleus in
    Chapters 12 and 13. We now delve deeper, because
    finding answers to some of the basic questions
    about nature is a foremost goal of science
  • What are the basic building blocks of matter?
  • What is inside the nucleus?
  • What are the forces that hold matter together?
  • How did the universe begin?
  • Will the universe end, and if so, how and when?

3
The Building Blocks of Matter
  • We have thought of electrons, neutrons, and
    protons as elementary particles, because we
    believe they are basic building blocks of matter.
  • However, in this chapter the term elementary
    particle is used loosely to refer to hundreds of
    particles, most of which are unstable.

4
14.1 Early Discoveries
  • In 1930 the known elementary particles were the
    proton, the electron, and the photon.
  • Thomson identified the electron in 1897, and
    Einsteins work on the photoelectric effect can
    be said to have defined the photon (originally
    called a quantum) in 1905. The proton is the
    nucleus of the hydrogen atom.
  • Despite the rapid progress of physics in the
    first couple of decades of the twentieth century,
    no more elementary particles were discovered
    until 1932, when Chadwick proved the existence of
    the neutron, and Carl Anderson identified the
    positron in cosmic rays.

5
The Positron
  • Dirac in 1928 introduced the relativistic theory
    of the electron when he combined quantum
    mechanics with relativity.
  • He found that his wave equation had negative, as
    well as positive, energy solutions.
  • His theory can be interpreted as a vacuum being
    filled with an infinite sea of electrons with
    negative energies.
  • If enough energy is transferred to the sea, an
    electron can be ejected with positive energy
    leaving behind a hole that is the positron,
    denoted by e.

6
Antiparticles
  • Diracs theory, along with refinements made by
    others opened the possibility of antiparticles
    which
  • Have the same mass and lifetime as their
    associated particles
  • Have the same magnitude but are opposite in sign
    for such physical quantities as electric charge
    and various quantum numbers
  • All particles, even neutral ones (with some
    notable exceptions like the neutral pion), have
    antiparticles.

7
Cosmic Rays
  • Cosmic rays are highly energetic particles,
    mostly protons, that cross interstellar space and
    enter the Earths atmosphere, where their
    interaction with particles creates cosmic
    showers of many distinct particles.

8
Positron-Electron Interaction
  • The ultimate fate of positrons (antielectrons) is
    annihilation with electrons.
  • After a positron slows down by passing through
    matter, it is attracted by the Coulomb force to
    an electron, where it annihilates through the
    reaction

9
Feynman Diagram
  • Feynman presented a particularly simple graphical
    technique to describe interactions.
  • For example, when two electrons approach each
    other, according to the quantum theory of fields,
    they exchange a series of photons called virtual
    photons, because they cannot be directly
    observed.
  • The action of the electromagnetic field (for
    example, the Coulomb force) can be interpreted as
    the exchange of photons. In this case we say that
    the photons are the carriers or mediators of the
    electromagnetic force.

Figure 14.2 Example of a Feynman spacetime
diagram. Electrons interact through mediation of
a photon. The axes are normally omitted.
10
Yukawas Meson
  • The Japanese physicist Hideki Yukawa had the idea
    of developing a quantum field theory that would
    describe the force between nucleons analogous to
    the electromagnetic force.
  • To do this, he had to determine the carrier or
    mediator of the nuclear strong force analogous to
    the photon in the electromagnetic force which he
    called a meson (derived from the Greek word meso
    meaning middle due to its mass being between
    the electron and proton masses).

11
Yukawas Meson
  • Yukawas meson, called a pion (or pi-meson or
    p-meson), was identified in 1947 by C. F. Powell
    (19031969) and G. P. Occhialini (19071993)
  • Charged pions have masses of 140 MeV/c2, and a
    neutral pion p0 was later discovered that has a
    mass of 135 MeV/c2, a neutron and a proton.

Figure 14.3 A Feynman diagram indicating the
exchange of a pion (Yukawas meson) between a
neutron and a proton.
12
14.2 The Fundamental Interactions
  • The fundamental forces in nature responsible for
    all interactions
  • Gravitation
  • Electroweak (electromagnetic and weak)
  • Strong
  • The electroweak is sometimes treated separately
    as the electromagnetic and the weak force thus
    creating four fundamental forces.

13
The Fundamental Interactions
  • We have learned that the fundamental forces act
    through the exchange or mediation of particles
    according to the quantum theory of fields. The
    exchanged particle in the electromagnetic
    interaction is the photon. All particles having
    either electric charge or a magnetic moment (and
    also the photon) interact with the
    electromagnetic interaction. The electromagnetic
    interaction has very long range.

14
The Fundamental Interactions
  • In the 1960s Sheldon Glashow, Steven Weinberg,
    and Abdus Salam (Nobel Prize for Physics, 1979)
    predicted that particles, which they called W
    (for weak) and Z, should exist that are
    responsible for the weak interaction.
  • This theory, called the electroweak theory,
    unified the electromagnetic and weak interactions
    much as Maxwell had unified electricity and
    magnetism into the electromagnetic theory a
    hundred years earlier.

15
Other Mesons
  • We previously saw that Yukawas pion is
    responsible for the nuclear force. Now we know
    there are other mesons that interact with the
    strong force. Later we will see that the nucleons
    and mesons are part of a general group of
    particles formed from even more fundamental
    particles quarks. The particle that mediates the
    strong interaction between quarks is called a
    gluon (for the glue that holds the quarks
    together) it is massless and has spin 1, just
    like the photon.
  • Particles that interact by the strong interaction
    are called hadrons examples include the neutron,
    proton, and mesons.

16
The Graviton
  • It has been suggested that the particle
    responsible for the gravitational interaction be
    called a graviton.
  • The graviton is the mediator of gravity in
    quantum field theory and has been postulated
    because of the success of the photon in quantum
    electrodynamics theory.
  • It must be massless, travel at the speed of
    light, have spin 2, and interact with all
    particles that have mass-energy.
  • The graviton has never been observed because of
    its extremely weak interaction with objects.

17
The Fundamental Interactions
18
The Standard Model
  • The most widely accepted theory of elementary
    particle physics at present is the Standard
    Model.
  • It is a simple, comprehensive theory that
    explains hundreds of particles and complex
    interactions with six quarks, six leptons, and
    three force-mediating particles.
  • It is a combination of the electroweak theory and
    quantum chromodynamics (QCD), but does not
    include gravity.

19
14.3 Classification of Elementary Particles
  • We discussed in Chapter 9 that articles with
    half-integral spin are called fermions and those
    with integral spin are called bosons.
  • This is a particularly useful way to classify
    elementary particles because all stable matter in
    the universe appears to be composed, at some
    level, of constituent fermions.

20
Bosons and Fermions
  • Photons, gluons, W , and the Z are called gauge
    bosons and are responsible for the strong and
    electroweak interactions.
  • Gravitons are also bosons, having spin 2.
  • Fermions exert attractive or repulsive forces on
    each other by exchanging gauge bosons, which are
    the force carriers.

21
The Higgs Boson
  • One other boson that has been predicted, but not
    yet detected, is necessary in quantum field
    theory to explain why the W and Z have such
    large masses, yet the photon has no mass.
  • This missing boson is called the Higgs particle
    (or Higgs boson) after Peter Higgs, who first
    proposed it.

22
The Higgs Boson
  • The Standard Model proposes that there is a field
    called the Higgs field that permeates space.
  • By interacting with this field, particles acquire
    mass.
  • Particles that interact strongly with the Higgs
    field have heavy mass particles that interact
    weakly have small mass.
  • The Higgs field has at least one particle
    associated with it, and that is the Higgs
    particle (or Higgs boson). The properties of the
    gauge and Higgs bosons, as well as the graviton,
    are given in the next slide.
  • The search for the Higgs boson is of the highest
    priority in elementary particle physics.

23
Boson Properties
24
Leptons
  • The leptons are perhaps the simplest of the
    elementary particles.
  • They appear to be pointlike, that is, with no
    apparent internal structure, and seem to be truly
    elementary.
  • Thus far there has been no plausible suggestion
    they are formed from some more fundamental
    particles.
  • There are only six leptons plus their six
    antiparticles.

25
The Electron and the Muon
  • Each of the charged particles has an associated
    neutrino, named after its charged partner (for
    example, muon neutrino).
  • The muon decays into an electron, and the tau can
    decay into an electron, a muon, or even hadrons
    (which is most probable).
  • The muon decay (by the weak interaction) is

26
Neutrinos
  • We are already familiar with the electron
    neutrino that occurs in the beta decay of the
    neutron (Chapter 12).
  • Neutrinos have zero charge.
  • Their masses are known to be very small. The
    precise mass of neutrinos may have a bearing on
    current cosmological theories of the universe
    because of the gravitational attraction of mass.
  • All leptons have spin 1/2, and all three
    neutrinos have been identified experimentally.
  • Neutrinos are particularly difficult to detect
    because they have no charge and little mass, and
    they interact very weakly.

27
Hadrons
  • These are particles that act through the strong
    force.
  • Two classes of hadrons mesons and baryons.
  • Mesons are particles with integral spin having
    masses greater than that of the muon (106 MeV/c2
    note that the muon is a lepton and not a meson).
  • All baryons have masses at least as large as the
    proton and have half-integral spins.

28
Mesons
  • Mesons are bosons because of their integral spin.
  • The meson family is rather large and consists of
    many variations, distinguished according to their
    composition of quarks.
  • The pion (p-meson) is a meson that can either
    have charge or be neutral.
  • In addition to the pion there is also a K meson,
    which exists in both charged (K) and neutral
    forms (K0). The K- meson is the antiparticle of
    the K, and their common decay mode is into muons
    or pions.
  • All mesons are unstable and not abundant in
    nature.

29
Baryons
  • The neutron and proton are the best-known
    baryons.
  • The proton is the only stable baryon, but some
    theories predict that it is also unstable with a
    lifetime greater than 1030 years.
  • All baryons except the proton eventually decay
    into protons.

30
The Hadrons
31
Particles and Lifetimes
  • The lifetimes of particles are also indications
    of their force interactions.
  • Particles that decay through the strong
    interaction are usually the shortest-lived,
    normally decaying in less than 10-20 s.
  • The decays caused by the electromagnetic
    interaction generally have lifetimes on the order
    of 10-16 s, and
  • The weak interaction decays are even slower,
    longer than 10-10 s.

32
Fundamental and Composite Particles
  • We call certain particles fundamental this means
    that they are not composed of other, smaller
    particles. We believe leptons, quarks, and gauge
    bosons are fundamental particles.
  • Although the Z and W bosons have very short
    lifetimes, they are regarded as particles, so a
    definition of particles dependent only on
    lifetimes is too restrictive.
  • Other particles are composites, made from the
    fundamental particles.

33
14.4 Conservation Laws and Symmetries
  • Physicists like to have clear rules or laws that
    determine whether a certain process can occur or
    not.
  • It seems that everything occurs in nature that is
    not forbidden.
  • Certain conservation laws are already familiar
    from our study of classical physics. These
    include mass-energy, charge, linear momentum, and
    angular momentum.
  • These are absolute conservation laws they are
    always obeyed.

34
Additional Conservation Laws
  • These are helpful in understanding the many
    possibilities of elementary particle
    interactions.
  • Some of these laws are absolute, but others may
    be valid for only one or two of the fundamental
    interactions.

35
Baryon Conservation
  • In low-energy nuclear reactions, the number of
    nucleons is always conserved.
  • Empirically this is part of a more general
    conservation law for what is assigned a new
    quantum number called baryon number that has the
    value B 1 for baryons and -1 for antibaryons,
    and 0 for all other particles.
  • The conservation of baryon number requires the
    same total baryon number before and after the
    reaction.
  • Although there are no known violations of baryon
    conservation, there are theoretical indications
    that it was violated sometime in the beginning of
    the universe when temperatures were quite high.
    This is thought to account for the preponderance
    of matter over antimatter in the universe today.

36
Lepton Conservation
  • The leptons are all fundamental particles, and
    there is a conservation of leptons for each of
    the three kinds (families) of leptons.
  • The number of leptons from each family is the
    same both before and after a reaction.
  • We let Le 1 for the electron and the electron
    neutrino Le -1 for their antiparticles and
    Le 0 for all other particles.
  • We assign the quantum numbers Lµ for the muon and
    its neutrino and Lt for the tau and its neutrino
    similarly.
  • Thus three additional conservation laws.

37
Strangeness
  • In the early 1950s physicists had considerable
    difficulty understanding the myriad of observed
    reactions and decays. For example, the behavior
    of the K mesons seemed very odd.
  • There is no conservation law for the production
    of mesons, but it appeared that K mesons, as well
    as the ? and S baryons, were always produced in
    pairs in the proton reaction studied most often,
    namely the p p reaction.
  • In addition, the very fast decay of the p0 meson
    into two photons (10-16 s) is the preferred mode
    of decay.
  • One would expect the K0 meson to also decay into
    two photons very quickly, but it does not. The
    long and short decay lifetimes of the K0 are 10-8
    and 10-10 s, respectively.

38
The New Quantum Number Strangeness
  • Strangeness, S, is conserved in the strong and
    electromagnetic interactions, but not in the weak
    interaction.
  • The kaons have S 1, lambda and sigmas have S
    -1, the xi has S -2, and the omega has S -3.
  • When the strange particles are produced by the p
    p strong interaction, they must be produced in
    pairs to conserve strangeness.

39
Further
  • p0 can decay into two photons by the strong
    interaction, it is not possible for K0 to decay
    at all by the strong interaction. The K0 is the
    lightest S 0 particle, and there is no other
    strange particle to which it can decay. It can
    decay only by the weak interaction, which
    violates strangeness conservation.
  • Because the typical decay times of the weak
    interaction are on the order of 10-10 s, this
    explains the longer decay time for K0.
  • Only ?S 1 violations are allowed by the weak
    interaction.

40
Hypercharge
  • One more quantity, called hypercharge, has also
    become widely used as a quantum number.
  • The hypercharge quantum number Y is defined by Y
    S B.
  • Hypercharge, the sum of the strangeness and
    baryon quantum numbers, is conserved in strong
    interactions.
  • The hypercharge and strangeness conservation laws
    hold for the strong and electromagnetic
    interactions, but are violated for the weak
    interaction.

41
Symmetries
  • Symmetries lead directly to conservation laws.
  • Three symmetry operators called parity, charge
    conjugation, and time reversal are considered.

42
The Conservation of Parity P
  • The conservation of parity P describes the
    inversion symmetry of space,
  • Inversion, if valid, does not change the laws of
    physics.
  • The conservation of parity is valid for the
    strong and electromagnetic interactions, but not
    in the weak interaction (experimentally).

43
Charge conjugation C
  • Charge conjugation C reverses the sign of the
    particles charge and magnetic moment.
  • It has the effect of interchanging every particle
    with its antiparticle.
  • Charge conjugation is not conserved in the weak
    interactions, but it is valid for the strong and
    electromagnetic interactions.
  • Even though both C and P are violated for the
    weak interaction it was believed that when both
    charge conjugation and parity operations are
    performed (called CP), conservation was still
    valid.

44
Time Reversal T
  • Here time t is replaced with t.
  • When all three operations are performed (CPT),
    where T is the time reversal symmetry,
    conservation holds.
  • We speak of the invariance of the symmetry
    operators, such as T, CP, and CPT.

45
14.5 Quarks
  • We are now prepared to discuss quarks and how
    they form the many baryons and mesons that have
    been discovered experimentally.
  • In 1961 Murray Gell-Mann and Yuval Neeman
    independently proposed a classification system
    called the eightfold way that separated the known
    particles into multiplets based on charge,
    hypercharge, and another quantum number called
    isospin, which we have not previously discussed.
    Isospin is a characteristic that can be used to
    classify different charged particles that have
    similar mass and interaction properties.
  • The neutron and proton are members of an isospin
    multiplet we call the nucleon. In this case the
    isospin quantum number (I) has the value ½, with
    the proton having the substate value ½ (spin
    up) and the neutron having -½ (spin down).
    Isospin is conserved in strong interactions, but
    not in electromagnetic interactions.

46
Quarks
  • After the eightfold way was developed, it was
    noticed that some members of the multiplets were
    missing. Because of physicists strong belief in
    symmetry, experimentalists set to work to find
    them, a task made easier because many of the
    particles properties were predicted by the
    theoretical model.
  • The O- was detected in 1964 at Brookhaven
    National Laboratory (see Figure 14.10 and Example
    14.5) in this manner, a discovery that confirmed
    the usefulness of the eightfold way.

47
Quarks
  • However, as other particles were discovered it
    soon became clear that the eightfold way was not
    the final answer. In 1963 Gell-Mann and,
    independently, George Zweig proposed that hadrons
    were formed from fractionally charged particles
    called quarks. The quark theory was unusually
    successful in describing properties of the
    particles and in understanding particle reactions
    and decay.
  • Three quarks were proposed, named the up (u),
    down (d), and strange (s), with the charges
    2e/3, -e/3, and -e/3, respectively. The strange
    quark has the strangeness value of -1, whereas
    the other two quarks have S 0.
  • Quarks are believed to be essentially pointlike,
    just like leptons.

48
Quarks, Antiquarks, and Charm
  • With these three quarks, all the known hadrons
    could be specified by some combination of quarks
    and antiquarks.
  • A fourth quark called the charmed quark (c) was
    proposed to explain some additional discrepancies
    in the lifetimes of some of the known particles.
  • A new quantum number called charm C was
    introduced so that the new quark would have C
    1 while its antiquark would have C -1 and
    particles without the charmed quark have C 0.
  • Charm is similar to strangeness in that it is
    conserved in the strong and electromagnetic
    interactions, but not in the weak interactions.
    This behavior was sufficient to explain the
    particle lifetime difficulties.

49
Quark Properties
  • We can now present the given quark properties
    and see how they are used to make up the
    hadrons. In Table 14.5 we give the name, symbol,
    mass, charge, and the quantum numbers for
    strangeness, charm, bottomness, and topness. The
    spin of all quarks (and antiquarks) is 1/2.

50
Quark Description of Particles
  • A meson consists of a quark-antiquark pair, which
    gives the required baryon number of 0. Baryons
    normally consist of three quarks.
  • We present the quark content of several mesons
    and baryons in Table 14.6. The structure is quite
    simple. For example, a p - consists of ,
    which gives a charge of (-2e/3) (-e/3) -e,
    and the two spins couple to give 0 (-1/2 1/2
    0).
  • A proton is uud, which gives a charge of (2e/3)
    (2e/3) (-e/3) e its baryon number is 1/3
    1/3 1/3 1 and two of the quarks spins
    couple to zero, leaving a spin 1/2 for the proton
    (1/2 1/2 - 1/2 1/2).

51
Quark Description of Particles
  • What about the quark composition of the O-, which
    has a strangeness of S -3? We look in Table
    14.6 and find that its quark composition is sss.
    According to the properties in Table 14.5 its
    charge must be 3(-e/3) -e, and its spin is due
    to three quark spins aligned, 3(1/2) 3/2. Both
    of these values are correct. There is no other
    possibility for a stable omega (lifetime 10-10
    s) in agreement with Table 14.4.

52
Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD)
  • Because quarks have spin 1/2, they are all
    fermions and according to the Pauli exclusion
    principle, no two fermions can exist in the same
    state. Yet we have three strange quarks in the
    O-.
  • This is not possible unless some other quantum
    number distinguishes each of these quarks in one
    particle.
  • A new quantum number called color circumvents
    this problem and its properties establish quantum
    chromodynamics (QCD).

53
Color
  • There are three colors for quarks we call red
    (R), green (G), and blue (B) with antiquark color
    antired ( ) antigreen ( ) and antiblue ( ).
  • (A bar above the symbol is usually used to
    describe the anti-color).
  • Color is the charge of the strong nuclear
    force, analogous to electric charge for
    electromagnetism.

54
Color
  • The two theories, quantum electrodynamics and
    quantum chromodynamics, are similar in structure
    color is often called color charge and the force
    between quarks is sometimes referred to as color
    force.
  • Earlier we saw that gluons are the particles that
    hold the quarks together. We show a Feynman
    diagram of two quarks interacting in Figure
    14.11. A red quark comes in from the left and
    interacts with a blue quark coming in from the
    right. They exchange a gluon, changing the blue
    quark into a red one and the red quark into a
    blue one.

Fig 14.11
55
Color
  • A color and its anticolor cancel out. We call
    this colorless (or white). All hadrons are
    colorless. In Figure 14.11 the gluon itself must
    have the color in order for the diagram
    to work. Quarks change color when they emit or
    absorb a gluon, and quarks of the same color
    repel, whereas quarks of different color attract.

Fig 14.11
56
Color
  • To finish the story we should mention that the
    six different kinds of quarks are referred to as
    flavors. There are six flavors of quarks (u, d,
    s, c, b, t). Each flavor has three colors.
    Finally, how many different gluons are possible?
    Using the three colors red, blue, and green,
    there are nine possible combinations for a gluon.
    They are
  • Note in Figure 14.11 that the gluon is and
    not . The combination does not
    have any net color change and cannot be
    independent. Therefore, there are only eight
    independent gluons, and that is what quantum
    chromodynamics predicts.
  • Gluons can interact with each other because each
    gluon carries a color charge. Note that in this
    case gluons, as the mediator of the strong force,
    are much different from photons, the mediator of
    the electromagnetic force.

57
Confinement
  • Physicists now believe that free quarks cannot be
    observed they can only exist within hadrons.
    This is called confinement.

Figure 14.12 When a high-energy gamma ray is
scattered from a neutron, a free quark cannot
escape because of confinement. For high enough
energies, an antiquark-quark pair is created (for
example, ), and a pion and proton are the
final particles.
58
14.6 The Families of Matter
  • We now have a brief review of the particle
    classifications and have learned how the hadrons
    are made from the quarks.
  • In summary
  • We presently believe that the two varieties of
    fermions, called leptons and quarks, are
    fundamental particles.
  • These fundamental particles can be divided into
    three simple families or generations.
  • Each generation consists of two leptons and two
    quarks. The two leptons are a charged lepton and
    its associated neutrino. The quarks are combined
    by twos or threes to make up the hadrons.

59
The Families of Matter
Figure 14.14 The three generations (or families)
of matter. Note that both quarks and leptons
exist in three distinct sets. One of each charge
type of quark and lepton make up a generation.
All visible matter in the universe is made from
the first generation second- and
third-generation particles are unstable and decay
into first-generation particles.
60
The Families of Matter
  • Most of the mass in the universe is made from the
    components in the first generation (electrons and
    u and d quarks).
  • The second generation consists of the muon, its
    neutrino, and the charmed and strange quarks. The
    members of this generation are found in certain
    astrophysical objects of high energy and in
    cosmic rays, and are produced in high-energy
    accelerators.
  • The third generation consists of the tau and its
    neutrino and two more quarks, the bottom (or
    beauty) and top (or truth). The members of this
    third generation existed in the early moments of
    the creation of the universe and can be created
    with very high energy accelerators.

61
The Families of Matter
  • Leptons are essentially pointlike, because they
    have no internal structure.
  • There are three leptons with mass and three
    others with little mass (the neutrinos).
  • Quarks and antiquarks make up the hadrons (mesons
    and baryons). Quarks may also be pointlike (lt
    10-18 m) and are confined together, never being
    in a free state.
  • There are six flavors of quarks (up, down,
    strange, charmed, bottom, and top) and there are
    three colors (green, red, and blue) for each
    flavor.
  • Rules for combining the colored quarks allow us
    to represent all known hadrons.

62
The Families of Matter
  • Bosons mediate the four fundamental forces of
    nature gluons are responsible for the strong
    interaction, photons for the electromagnetic
    interaction, W and Z for the weak interaction,
    and the as yet unobserved graviton for the
    gravitational interaction.
  • In our study of nuclear physics we discussed the
    pion as the mediator of the strong force. At a
    more fundamental level, we can now say that the
    gluon is responsible.
  • The gluon is responsible for the attraction
    between the antiquark and quark that make up the
    pion, and the gluon is responsible for the
    attraction between the quarks that make up the
    nucleons.

63
14.7 Beyond the Standard Model
  • Although the Standard Model has been successful
    in particle physics, it doesnt answer all the
    questions. For example, it is not by itself able
    to predict the particle masses.
  • Why are there only three generations or families
    of fundamental particles?
  • Do quarks and/or leptons actually consist of more
    fundamental particles?

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Neutrino Oscillations
  • One of the most perplexing problems over the last
    three decades has been the solar neutrino problem
    where the number of neutrinos reaching Earth from
    the sun is a factor of 23 too small if our
    understanding of the energy-producing (nuclear
    fusion) is correct.
  • Suggestions were made that other processes were
    going on. Neutrinos come in three varieties or
    flavors electron, muon, and tau. Researchers had
    seen neutrinos generated in the Earths
    atmosphere (from cosmic rays) changing or
    oscillating into another flavor. This could
    only happen if neutrinos have mass.
  • Physicists have seen various oscillations between
    the three flavors of neutrinos.

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Matter-Antimatter
  • According to the Big Bang theory, matter and
    antimatter should have been created in exactly
    equal quantities. It appears that matter
    dominates over antimatter now in our universe,
    and the reason for this has concerned physicists
    and cosmologists for years.
  • The tiny violation of CP symmetry in the kaon
    decay tilts the scales in terms of matter over
    antimatter however, the Standard Model indicates
    that this violation is too small to account for
    the predominance of matter.
  • B meson decays may yield more about CP violations
    than with kaons and physicists are exploring
    theories going beyond the Standard Model.

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Grand Unifying Theories
  • There have been several attempts toward a grand
    unified theory (GUT) to combine the weak,
    electromagnetic, and strong interactions.
  • Predictions
  • The proton is unstable with a lifetime of 1029 to
    1031 years. Current experimental measurements
    have shown the lifetime to be greater than 1032
    years.
  • Neutrinos may have a small, but finite, mass.
    This has been confirmed.
  • Massive magnetic monopoles may exist. There is
    presently no confirmed experimental evidence for
    magnetic monopoles.
  • The proton and electron electric charges should
    have the same magnitude.

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String Theory
  • For the last two decades there has been a
    tremendous amount of effort by theorists in
    string theory, which has had several variations.
    The addition of supersymmetry resulted in the
    name theory of superstrings.
  • In superstring theory elementary particles do not
    exist as points, but rather as tiny, wiggling
    loops that are only 10-35 m in length.
  • Further work has revealed that they describe not
    just strings, but other objects including
    membranes and higher-dimensional objects. The
    addition of membranes has resulted in brane
    theories.
  • Presently superstring theory is a promising
    approach to unify the four fundamental forces,
    including gravity.

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Supersymmetry
  • Supersymmetry is a necessary ingredient in many
    of the theories trying to unify the forces of
    nature.
  • The symmetry relates fermions and bosons. All
    fermions will have a superpartner that is a boson
    of equal mass, and vice versa.
  • The superpartner spins differ by h / 2.
  • Presently, none of the known leptons, quarks, or
    gauge bosons can be identified with a
    superpartner of any other particle type.

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M-theory
  • Recently theorists have proposed a successor to
    superstring theory called M-theory.
  • M-theory has 11 dimensions and predicts that
    strings coexist with membranes, called branes
    for short.
  • The number of particles that have been predicted
    from a variety of different theories include the
    fancifully named sleptons, squarks, axions,
    winos, photinos, zinos, gluinos, and preons.
  • Only through experiments will scientists be able
    to wade through the vast number of unifying
    theories.

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14.8 Accelerators
  • Particle physics was not able to develop fully
    until particle accelerators were constructed with
    high enough energies to create particles with a
    mass of about 1 GeV/c2 or greater.
  • There are three main types of accelerators used
    presently in particle physics experiments
    synchrotrons, linear accelerators, and colliders.

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Synchrotron Radiation
  • One difficulty with cyclic accelerators is that
    when charged particles are accelerated, they
    radiate electromagnetic energy called synchrotron
    radiation. This problem is particularly severe
    when electrons, moving very close to the speed of
    light, move in curved paths. If the radius of
    curvature is small, electrons can radiate as much
    energy as they gain.
  • Physicists have learned to take advantage of
    these synchrotron radiation losses and now build
    special electron accelerators (called light
    sources) that produce copious amounts of photon
    radiation used for both basic and applied
    research.

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Linear Accelerators
  • Linear accelerators or linacs typically have
    straight electric-field-free regions between gaps
    of RF voltage boosts. The particles gain speed
    with each boost, and the voltage boost is on for
    a fixed period of time, and thus the distance
    between gaps becomes increasingly larger as the
    particles accelerate.
  • Linacs are sometimes used as preacceleration
    device for large circular accelerators.

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Colliders
  • Because of the limited energy available for
    reactions like that found for the Tevatron,
    physicists decided they had to resort to
    colliding beam experiments, in which the
    particles meet head-on.
  • If the colliding particles have equal masses and
    kinetic energies, the total momentum is zero and
    all the energy is available for the reaction and
    the creation of new particles.
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