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Recap Elementary Particles

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Title: Recap Elementary Particles


1
Recap Elementary Particles
  • Define the following particles baryons, mesons,
    hadrons, leptons, fermions, bosons.
  • What are in todays science the basic bricks of
    matter ?
  • Describe the Standard Model of bricks and force
    carriers.
  • How do experimentalists look for a certain new
    particle ?
  • How can experimentalists see the Universe at a
    very small scale (say 10-16 cm) ?
  • What are the components of a high-energy physics
    experiment ? What are the two types of
    experiments in high-energy physics ?
  • How deep can we see today ?
  • Why todays standard model cannot be the final
    answer ?

2
The Standard Clasification
Leptons Anti-leptons
Quarks
Anti-quarks
Mesons Anti-mesons
Baryons
Anti-baryons
Bricks
Hadrons and Anti-hadrons
Force
Acts on
Force Carriers
foton electromagnetic
all charged particles weakon
weak all particles gluon
colour
quarks graviton gravitational all
particles
3
The Second Unification
  • 1st unification was electromagnetism in the 19th
    century.
  • 2nd unification involved electromagnetism and the
    weak force
  • No similarities between electromagnetism
    (electrical wires, the compass) and the weak
    nuclear force (the disintegration of nuclei or of
    heavy leptons).
  • No similarities between their carriers the
    photon is neutral and with zero mass, the weakon
    is usually electrically charged and has a large
    mass (about 50GeV)
  • But in spite of all these differences the two
    forces were proven to be closely related.

4
(No Transcript)
5
The carrier of the weak nuclear force (II)
Each weakon changes its composition depending on
circumstances. This magic behaviour (justifies
the name universal alchemist) allows the weak
force to act on all the particles. The Zo diagram
shows that this weakon can have the same
composition as the photon, the carrier of the
electromagnetic force.
W
e
ud
ud
e
e
ud
W-
du
du
e
du
e
Zo
dd
ss
ee
cc
uu
6
The Electro-Weak Force
  • 1968 S.Weinberg and A.Salam unified the gauge
    field theories corresponding to electromagnetism
    and weak force. They used a theory which employed
    zero mass carriers.
  • J.Goldstone and P.Higgs have shown since 1960
    that when nature breaks symmetry it creates some
    heavy bosons called the Higgs bosons.
  • Higgs bosons, like the weakons, rotate only to
    the left and can be attached to weakons.
  • The fact that photons rotate both to the left and
    right ensure that only weakons will couple with
    the Higgs bosons and will become heavy.
  • The Higgs bosons were discovered experimentally
    only in 2000.

7
Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
  • The structure of salt (NaCl)
  • At high level one sees the straight lines in
    the crystalline structure.
  • At the 10-8 cm level the spherical symmetry of
    the Na and Cl- ions is evident.
  • Electro-weak force
  • the change of symmetry is at about 10-16 cm.
  • Below 10-16 cm the electromagnetic force and the
    weak nuclear force look the same, except that
    weakons rotate only to the left.

8
Observing Heavy Light
  • Theory
  • Theoretical mass predictions were W about 74
    GeV, Z about 86 GeV.
  • Until 1980 the heaviest particle observed was
    Upsilon with 9.4 GeV.
  • Experiment
  • 1980 CERN accomplished the building of the first
    proton-antiproton supercollider with an effective
    energy of 540 GeV.
  • 1983 two experiments (UA1 and UA5) reported the
    first findings of the W bosons. Out of about 1
    million collisions which were sufficiently
    violent for the weakons to form the two
    experiments found only 10 which were associated
    with the W particles.
  • 1984 UA1 obtained 14 events corresponding to Z
    and about 100 events corresponding to W and their
    masses were in 3 agreement with the theory.

9
The Standard Model Re-Written
  • Todays Standard Model is based on the
    electro-weak theory and on quantum
    chromodynamics.
  • This theoretical model explains well the
    experimental results.
  • But the Standard Model is not a final unified
    theory.
  • A final unified theory would probably have a new
    symmetry which incorporates all the known
    particles.
  • This theory should explain many numbers that the
    physicists were not able to explain (for instance
    the masses of all fermions).
  • The total number of parameters in the Standard
    Model is no less than 27 and it is hard to
    believe that they are all as fundamental as the
    speed of light.

10
Limitations of the The Standard Model
  • Not a true unification of all 4 forces
  • Too many parameters
  • The mystery of the 3 generations
  • The model of a generation
  • No explanation for the fact that the differences
    between the electric charges of various fermions
    must be integers, while the electric charges can
    be fractions.
  • No explanation for the fact that the charge of an
    electron is rigorously equal to that of a proton.
  • No explanation for the fact that colored fermions
    have fractions of electric charges, while white
    fermions have integer charges.

11
Theoretical Alternatives
  • The most successful are
  • Grand Unification Theories (GUTs)
  • Compounds Models such as the Pati-Salam preons.
  • Super-symmetry (SUSY) Models
  • Superstring Theories
  • How to choose between them ?
  • Theoretical Consistency
  • Experimental verification (predictions)

12
The Pati-Salam Model (I)
  • Basic idea
  • Each quark contains two pre-quarks (or preons),
    one corresponding to the type (u,d,s,c) and the
    other to its colour (red, green, blue).
  • Leptons were part of the same model, being built
    with a type preon and a violet preon.
  • The number of bricks was reduced from 16(4x34)
    to 8. (see next diagram)
  • Implications
  • Integer charges for quarks
  • Disintegration of quarks into leptons.

13
The Pati-Salam Model (II)
Preons
d
u
s
c
red
blue
green
violet
Muonic Neutrino or
Neutrino or
ured
cred
Same for blue and green
uviolet
cviolet
dred
sred
Muon or
Electron or
dviolet
sviolet
14
The Life of a Proton
  • Will an isolated proton live for ever ?
  • Pati-Salams model showed that even proton has a
    finite lifetime 1031 years.
  • Statistical meaning
  • Proton decays through the weak force into a
    positron and a few neutrinos.
  • In the Pati-Salam model the lifetime of a quark
    is 10-9 but the chance of all 3 disintegrating in
    the same time is extremely small.
  • Experiments have tried to see decaying protons
    but few were successful
  • 1977 in a South African gold mine an experiment
    established a lifetime of 1029 years
  • 1983 in the Mont Blanc tunnel a 150 tons detector
    obtained data corresponding to 1031 years
  • Experiments at the bottom of the Pacific failed
    to obtain and positive results.

15
GUTs
  • Put together tables of quarks and leptons
    together with the carriers of forces in their
    interaction
  • Use Group Theories (with basic sets,
    representations and classes) to incorporate all
    known particles
  • 1973 S.Glashow and H.Georgi propose SU(5), the
    simplest GUT (shown next)
  • All GUTs allow quarks to desintegrate into
    leptons through the hyperweak force (X bosons)

16
SU(5) Basic Set
photon anti-neutrino
17
Another Change of Symmetry
  • 1974 - H.Quinn and collab. calculated that the
    SU(5) symmetry can be seen at distances below
    10-29 cm.
  • Using SU(5) one can describe the structure of
    matter with the following diagram
  • SU(5) colourelectroweak
    colour, weak, elmg.
  • 10-29 cm
    10-16 cm
  • Higgs bosons could be created through the change
    to the SU(5) symmetry and they are responsible
    for the mass of the X bosons.

18
SU(5) and Experiments
  • Although we cannot see the world at the 10-29
    cm level (we would need 1015 GeV projectiles !),
    we can test SU(5) through the verifications of
    its predictions.
  • 1977 a CERN experiment showed that the ratio
    between the masses of the quark b and the tau
    lepton is larger than 2.5, while SU(5) predicts
    3.
  • 1983 the Mont Blanc protons disintegration
    experiment obtains results which suggest 1031
    years as protons lifetime but SU(5) predicts
    1029 years.
  • Other, more complex GUTs predict values closer
    to 1031 years.

19
Super-Symmetry (SUSY)
  • SUSY for each fermion there is a boson with the
    same properties except the spin and the other way
    round.
  • All the these particles are organized in
    symmetric super-multiplets.
  • As no experiment has seen these new particles,
    SUSY has no real support.
  • SUGRASUSY GUTs gravitation. It introduced
    many useful ideas
  • It deals with all universal forces
  • It introduces the need to work in many dimensions
    (11 dimensions)

20
More than 4 Dimensions ?
  • Michio Kakus Hyperspace for a history
  • Visualizing hyperspace a Sphere in Flatland.

21
Supergravity in 11 Dimensions
  • Kaluza-Klein model was applied successfully in 11
    dimensions to account for all the particles of
    SUGRA(8). The metric tensor of this model is
    shown below.

Einsteins Gravity
Maxwells Light
Gauge Theory Bosons
Matter quarks and leptons
22
Superstrings (I)
  • Superstrings correspond to resonances
  • The basic idea is that particles correspond to
    resonances that correspond to distinct
    frequencies of vibration of some strings.
  • Superstrings are extremely small
  • They are 1020 times smaller than a proton, or
    10-36 cm.
  • Complicated motions
  • No infinities if calculated in 10 dimensions.

23
Superstrings (II)
  • Recently there were 5 competing 10-dimensional
    superstrings theories
  • E.Witten proved the 5 theories to be equivalent
    and related to an 11-dimensional M-Theory
  • The M-theory has similarities with supergravity
  • Contemporary experiments performed with the most
    powerful supercolliders will try to produce the
    sparticles predicted by the M-theory
  • The M-theory has not only superstrings, but also
    2,3.. etc -dimensional branes (multidimensional
    vibrations)
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