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Smashing the Standard Model: Physics at the CERN LHC Kenneth Johns University of Arizona Outline Opening remarks – 5 min Destroyed magnets, black hole video Standard model and Higgs – 12 min CERN and LHC accelerator – 8 min ATLAS detector – 5 min October disaster – 5 min Higgs – 12 min Production Decay Discovery potential Other LHC physics and conclusions – 5 min Total UA contributions 2 First Beam in the LHC Sept 10, 2008 in the ATLAS control room 3 First Beam in the LHC No black hole or stranglet production 4 First Beam in the LHC No black hole or stranglet production 5 First Malfunction at the LHC Sept 19, 2008 in the LHC tunnel 6 Physics at the LHC “There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we don't know we don't know.” Donald Rumsfeld 7 Fundamental Forces 8 Fundamental Particles 9 Fundamental Particles Or just another pattern to unravel? 10 Standard Model The Standard Model unifies the strong, weak, and electromagnetic interactions in the sense that they all arise from a local symmetry principle Local gauge invariance A minor problem is that the symmetries of the Standard Model do not allow for massive gauge bosons There are no experimental contradictions to the predictions of the Standard Model, which is complete in that its mathematical structure allows calculations to be carried out Tested to a high precision (1 part in 1000) 11 Standard Model Local gauge invariance The free particle Dirac Lagrangia n is given by L iψ γ μ μψ mψ ψ We first ask is the theory (L) invariant under global gauge transformations? x x ei x We next ask is the theory (L) invariant under local gauge transformations? x x ei x x 12 Standard Model We can make the theory locally gauge invariant by introducing a gauge covariant derivative that includes a gauge field D ieA 1 where A A A x e Now our Lagrangian does remain invariant under local gauge transformations Using this derivative leads directly to QED! And tells us that the photon is massless! L iψ γμ ψ mψ ψ e A μ 13 Standard Model We could apply the same idea to the weak interaction Lagrangian (SU(2)) We’d find the need for three gauge covariant derivatives containing three gauge bosons We’d like to identify them as the W+, W-, and Z except they too are massless 14 Standard Model Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking (SSB) occurs when a Lagrangian is invariant under some symmetry but the ground state (vacuum) is not Pencil falling Heisenberg ferromagnet 15 2008 Nobel Prize to Nambu for discovering SSB Standard Model Higgs mechanism We have SSB when a Lagrangian is invariant under some symmetry but the ground state (vacuum) is not If the broken symmetry is a continuous symmetry, then there necessarily exists one or more massless spin 0 particles (Goldstone bosons) If the broken symmetry is a local gauge symmetry, then the Goldstone bosons get absorbed (eaten) by the massless gauge bosons thereby acquiring mass 16 Standard Model Consider a charged self-interacting complex scalar field (the Higgs field) Require the Lagrangian to be locally gauge invariant 1 2 2 2 * 2 L D 2 For 2 > 0 we have QED of charged scalars For 2 < 0 we have SSB and a continuum of degenerate vacuum states 2 0 2 v2 2 2 17 Standard Model The Lagrangian for small perturbations about the ground state For v i / 2 And after using a specific gauge transform ation 1 qv 2 2 L 2 A A interact . 2 2 A massive scalar (Higgs) with m2 2 2 2 2 A massive gauge boson 2 2 2 with mA q v And no massless Goldstone boson 18 Standard Model Summary Massive Higgs Boson Higgs Mechanism Local Gauge Invariance Massive Gauge Bosons 19 Standard Model An often used analogy for mass generation 20 Standard Model Successes Tested from 10-17 to 1022 cm No significant deviations (including quantum corrections) at the 10-3 level Predicted weak neutral currents – discovered Required the existence of W, Z – discovered Necessitated charm and top – discovered Predicts only 3 neutrino families 21 Standard Model Successes There are no experimental discrepancies with Standard Model predictions But no Higgs boson observation either 22 Standard Model Parameters On the other hand, the Standard Model does contain a lot of parameters 23 Seeking the underlying patterns of matter The basic constituents of matter are the 6 quarks and the 6 leptons, and the 4 carriers of the fundamental forces. The three quark and lepton generations have very similar properties. All the particles we know of (protons, neutrons, nuclei, atoms are made from these simple building blocks. As far as we know, there are no smaller units than quarks and leptons. 24 Fundamental Forces Interactions arise from Fields (classical field theory) Exchanged quanta (quantum field theory) 25 Fundamental Fermions There are three families of leptons and quarks 26 Fundamental Particles Or just another pattern to unravel? e e e e u u u d d d u u u L d d d Z 0 W L c c c s s s c c c t t t b b b t t t s s s t t t W g 27 So what is this thing called the Standard Model we are trying to smash – and why Let’s start with the fundamental particles and their interactions You’ve seen this many times so I won’t linger here 28 One of the goals of physics is to understand the common elements of these forces and particles Perhaps they can be unified in the sense that electricity and magnetism are unified as electromagnetism And in fact, in the 1960’s it was shown that the electromagnetic force and weak force had a common origin 29