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Theory of (strongly coupled) quark

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... left-handed components assigned to doublets and the right handed states singlets under SU (2). The strong interactions result from the gauge bosons of an SU (3) local gauge symmetry, with each quark coming in three “colours” and belonging to a triplet of states related by SU (3) rotations as shown i ...
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The Excitement of Scattering Amplitudes

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An Introduction to the Standard Model and the Electroweak Force

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8. Quantum field theory on the lattice

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ppt - UCSB Physics

... • We should reconsider classical degeneracy breaking by – Further neighbor couplings – Spin-lattice interactions • C.f. “spin Jahn-Teller”: Yamashita+K.Ueda;Tchernyshyov et al Considered identical distortions of each tetrahedral “molecule” We would prefer a model that predicts the periodicity of the ...
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The beginning of physics

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Group representation theory and quantum physics

... choice for simplifying the physical analysis of systems possessing some degree of symmetry. Group theory is of course ubiquitous in high energy physics. In other areas of physics and chemistry, its uses have been predominantly confined to spectroscopic studies of atoms, molecules, and materials, whi ...
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The String Theory Landscape

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Slide 1

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Quantum chromodynamics

In theoretical physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of strong interactions, a fundamental force describing the interactions between quarks and gluons which make up hadrons such as the proton, neutron and pion. QCD is a type of quantum field theory called a non-abelian gauge theory with symmetry group SU(3). The QCD analog of electric charge is a property called color. Gluons are the force carrier of the theory, like photons are for the electromagnetic force in quantum electrodynamics. The theory is an important part of the Standard Model of particle physics. A huge body of experimental evidence for QCD has been gathered over the years.QCD enjoys two peculiar properties:Confinement, which means that the force between quarks does not diminish as they are separated. Because of this, when you do separate a quark from other quarks, the energy in the gluon field is enough to create another quark pair; they are thus forever bound into hadrons such as the proton and the neutron or the pion and kaon. Although analytically unproven, confinement is widely believed to be true because it explains the consistent failure of free quark searches, and it is easy to demonstrate in lattice QCD.Asymptotic freedom, which means that in very high-energy reactions, quarks and gluons interact very weakly creating a quark–gluon plasma. This prediction of QCD was first discovered in the early 1970s by David Politzer and by Frank Wilczek and David Gross. For this work they were awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics.The phase transition temperature between these two properties has been measured by the ALICE experiment to be well above 160 MeV. Below this temperature, confinement is dominant, while above it, asymptotic freedom becomes dominant.
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