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Robert McNees Brown University (Alum, National Science Bowl `91*) * Yes, that was the first one. Some of you were born that year. Department of Energy National Science Bowl 2007 Outline 1. The System of the World 2. The Early 20th Century: Quantum Mechanics and Special Relativity 3. General Relativity: Curvature and Motion 4. The Standard Model of Particle Physics 5. Faint Supernovae and Glowing Black Holes 6. String Theory The System of the World Isaac Newton dv 1. F 0 0 dt d p 2. F with p m v dt 3.`For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.’ And, of course, he invented the Calculus, did pioneering work in Optics, etc… Newtonian Gravity Mm F G 2 r Electricity and Magnetism William Gilbert and the Scientific Method •Observed attraction and repulsion between poles of a magnet •Produced static electricity by rubbing amber •Concluded that Electricity and Magnetism were distinct. It wasn’t what he did. It was how he did it! “In the discovery of secret things, and in the investigation of hidden causes, stronger reasons are obtained from sure experiments and demonstrated arguments than from probable conjectures and the opinions of philosophical speculators.” - De Magnete (1600) Electricity and Magnetism Hans Oersted Electric Current produces a magnetic effect! Michael Faraday • Electromagnetic Induction: A changing magnetic field induces a current. • Suspected that Electricity and Magnetism were wave phenomenon, related to light, propagate at finite speed • Electrical experiments gave him huge sideburns. Electricity and Magnetism James Clerk Maxwell made the connection b/t electricity and magnetism in a beautiful set of equations UNIFICATION - Phenomena that appear to be unrelated turn out to be aspects of a single, underlying cause. th 20 The Early Century: Quantum Mechanics and Special Relativity Blackbody Radiation A blackbody radiates based on its Temperature, not its composition. •Radiated energy peaks at a specific frequency. •Drops off at higher frequencies. Classical physics couldn’t come up with the right curve. The physics was saying that the black body should emit more and more at higher frequencies… The Ultraviolet Catastrophe! Max Planck Perhaps energy must be radiated in indivisible units… This assumption leads to the correct result for a blackbody: Fits the data beautifully! It depends on a new constant, called `Planck’s Constant’ h = 6.6 x 10-34 Joule-seconds Einstein and the Photoelectric Effect Shining light on a metal can produce a current! Energy of electrons depends on frequency of light, not intensity. Current Einstein suggested that the electrons all have the same energy because they receive it in whole packets, or quanta, from the light. Quanta are real! The Bohr Hydrogen Atom • An electron can only orbit the nucleus at certain fixed radii. • The orbits are stable. Other orbits are not allowed. • Electrons jumping from one orbit to another release quanta of light. • Each orbit only has room for a certain number of electrons. Bohr’s model correctly predicts the spectral lines for Hydrogen. De Broglie, Schrodinger, and Heisenberg Suggested that electrons can also behave like waves. In fact, any particle can. This was verified in electron diffraction experiments. Erwin Schrodinger developed a quantum mechanical model of the electron that treats it like a wave. Werner Heisenberg developed a quantum mechanical model of the electron that treats it like a particle. The Uncertainty Principle Heisenberg noticed something important. You can treat the electron like a particle, but there is an inherent uncertainty that goes along with that. The more precisely you try to say where it is, the less precisely you can measure its momentum, and viceversa. As he put it: “we cannot know, as a matter of principle, the present in all of its details.” 1905: A Big Year for Einstein 1905 was a busy year for Einstein. 1. He established the reality of quanta. 2. He explained Brownian motion. 3. He laid down the foundations of Special Relativity. Special Relativity Consider these three observations, all accepted by physicists at the end of the 19th century. 1. The laws of physics are the same for a stationary observer and an observer moving at constant speed. 2. Galileo’s rule for adding velocities is correct. 3. Light travels at a finite speed, which is a consequence of physical laws described by Maxwell’s equations. Any two of these are mutually consistent. But if you take all Three together, you get contradictions. Lorentz Transformations Einstein said that Galileo’s rule for adding velocities must be wrong. Transformations between frames of reference have to preserve the speed of light. Consider two observers moving at relative velocity v. The first one uses coordinates (x,t), and the second uses coordinates (x’,t’). Galileo: x x v t Einstein: x x vt v2 1 2 c t t vx 2 c t v2 1 2 c Space and time are no longer separate concepts: Not consistent with Maxwell’s equations. t Consistent with Maxwell’s equations. Time Dilation The Lorentz transformations have some pretty weird consequences. For instance, if I see a clock moving with speed v, it looks like it is ticking too slow! t t0 2 v 1 2 c This has been verified in lots of experiments, with fantastic precision. • Measured in atomic clocks that are sent around the world on a plane. • Measured in the lab directly, as a relativistic Doppler shift. Length Contraction An observer who sees an object moving with a velocity v perceives that object’s length as being contracted. It is a small but real effect 2 v L L 1 2 c v = 0.87c v = 0.99c v = 0.999c Special Relativity is not intuitive, but it is true. It has been verified in numerous experiments. Phenomena like length contraction and time dilation are physical effects, as real as anything else we experience. But Einstein still felt like something was missing. General Relativity “Matter tells space how to curve, and curved space tells matter how to move.” Some Problems with Newtonian Gravity The orbit of Mercury precesses about 1.5 degrees each century. Influence of other planets account for all but 0.1 degree of this. This excess is not explained by Newtonian gravity. Some Problems with Newtonian Gravity Why are inertial mass and gravitational mass the same thing? And what is gravity, anyway? What causes it? Newton says that it just happens, and it is instantaneous. Action at a distance? General Relativity! Einstein: The structure of spacetime is influenced by matter and energy •Matter and Energy curve spacetime. •The curvature of spacetime is what causes gravity. •Objects follow geodesics: the `straightest’ lines on a curved surface. Curved Spaces Curved Time? There are a lot of clever ways of representing curved spaces. The artist M.C. Escher used them in many of his drawings, like this one. This drawing represents a two-dimensional space with constant negative curvature. Consequences and Tests of General Relativity •Curvature of spacetime is larger closer to the sun. Mercury Sun Earth •Larger curvature means that GR is more important. •Corrections to Newton from GR are more important for Mercury than for the other planets. General Relativity accounts for the precession of Mercury’s orbit. Consequences and Tests of General Relativity Changes in the curvature - and the effect of gravity – propagate at the speed of light. Not instantaneous. Gravitational Bending of Light Path that light follows (a geodesic) bends due to the sun’s gravity. A small but measurable effect. Gravitational Lensing This is an image of a distant quasar. The gravitational effect of a galaxy between us and the quasar results in four images. Redshift of Light Due to Gravity Light loses energy as it overcomes gravity, just like a ball thrown in the air loses kinetic energy. •This effect was measured in 1959 by Pound and Rebka, in a three story tower in Jefferson Lab at Harvard. •This effect is essential in Cosmology. It helps us piece together what the universe looked like along the trajectory of a photon. The Standard Model of Particle Physics SR + QM = QFT When you combine Quantum Mechanics with Special Relativity, the result is called `Quantum Field Theory’. It is the framework that we use to describe the physics of elementary particles. What is a field? Fields exist everywhere. Sometimes these fields are constant. Excitations – bumps and wiggles in the fields – are what we think of as particles. Propagation A particles is an excitation of a field. The way it moves – or propagates – follows the rules of Special Relativity. t The excitation can propagate into this region: the `future’ is t > 0. This is where the excitation is right now: t = 0. y x The excitation could have wound up where it is now by starting off somewhere in here: the `past’ is t < 0. Interactions Particles can absorb and emit other particles. There are rules that govern the ways this can happen. Forces between two particles are due to one particle emitting an intermediate particle, which is then absorbed by a second particle. Virtual Particles We are interested in Quantum field theory. The Uncertainty principle tells us that a particle and its anti-particle can pop into existence. They can’t stick around for long, but they have real consequences: In a QFT we have to consider all the ways the particles might interact. There are usually an infinite number of things to keep track of! The Building Blocks QFT is a framework – a set of rules we can use to describe particles. There are a lot of possible QFTs. The Standard Model is a specific QFT that describes the real world. It contains many different kinds of fields. The Fermions that make up matter are arranged in three generations. Everything about particles in a column is the same except for their mass. First Generation Second Generation Third Generation The Fundamental Forces (Well, except gravity) In the standard model forces are due to the exchange of particles called vector bosons. Three forces of this type have been identified: Electromagnetism, the Weak Nuclear force, and the Strong Nuclear Force. The first two are really one force: the Electroweak force. 1. Electromagnetism: Mediated by the exchange of photons. 2. Weak Force: Responsible for some forms of nuclear decay. Mediated by three vector bosons: W+, W-, and Z. Only left-handed quarks and left-handed leptons experience this force! 3. Strong Force: Binds quarks together into baryons (like the proton and neutron) and mesons (like the pion). Mediated by massless vector bosons called gluons. Tests and Predictions of the Standard Model The Standard Model makes numerous predictions. Here are a few of them: 1. Anomalous magnetic moment of the electron: predicted value:0.0011596521594(230) observed value: 0.0011596521884(43) 2. Predicts the existence of the Top quark. Discovered in 1995 at Fermilab. 3. Predicts the W and Z bosons. Discovered in 1983. Some (Big) Open Questions 1.Why do particles have mass? Most particle physicists assume that a particle known as the Higgs Boson is responsible. We anticipate that it will be found soon. 2.Why don’t we see any antimatter outside of the lab? Seems weird, right? We don’t know why nature should prefer matter over anti-matter. 3.Why are there three families of particles? We don’t know for sure. Any ideas? The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Faint Supernovae and Glowing Black Holes The Expanding Universe In 1929 Edwin Hubble reported that the Universe was expanding. Everything seemed to be moving away from everything else. The more distant galaxies seemed to be receding faster than the closer ones. Hubble Expansion C A C B A A long time ago, galaxies B and C were far, far away from galaxy A (that’s us). Now, their distances from A -as measured on the surface of the globe- have increased. B The Big Bang What if we follow the expansion back in time? Things must have been very hot and dense. We can only go back so far. Eventually the physics breaks down! The Big Bang refers to the initial event or period from which the universe (as we currently understand it) emerged. It is an expansion, but not into anything. It is an expansion of space and time itself. Well what about the future? Until very recently we assumed that one of two things would happen to the expansion of the universe: 1. Gravity stops the expansion. The Universe collapses in a fiery Big Crunch. 2. Gravity slows down the expansion, but does not stop it. The Universe goes out with a cold and lonely Big Whimper. The poet Robert Frost had already figured this out in 1923. Some say the world will end in fire, Some say in ice. From what I've tasted of desire I hold with those who favor fire. But if it had to perish twice, I think I know enough of hate To say that for destruction ice Is also great And would suffice. The Cosmological Constant XX R 12 g R g Einstein had added an extra term to his equations, called the cosmological constant. He needed this term to describe a universe that was static. But since the universe is expanding, he could get rid of it! And then, 70 years later… Faint supernova? In the late `90s two groups of astronomers were observing distant supernovae. The type Ia SN are thought to be good standard candles. We know how bright they should be, so we can figure out how far away they are. They found something totally unexpected. The supernova were too dim. The Accelerating Universe Dark Energy The data is telling us that 70% of the stuff in the universe is a mysterious force that we call Dark Energy. It does the opposite of what gravity is supposed to do: it makes space want to expand instead of contract. (And another 20% is Dark Matter… we don’t know what that is either.) Not so fast, Dr. Einstein! That term Einstein wanted to drop from his equations – the Cosmological Constant – seems to be the best candidate for Dark Energy! My Bad! R 12 g R g So, what’s on the next slide? Do we predict the cosmological constant with amazing accuracy? The Cosmological Constant is an example of a question our theories can’t answer. A naïve application of QFT – the rules we use for the Standard Model – makes a prediction. It just happens to be super-wrong. kg observed 6 10 3 m 95 kg predicted 10 3 m 27 Not bad! Only off by about 120 orders of magnitude. That’s a factor of 1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 000000000000000000000000000. What went wrong? We asked our theory a question it didn’t know how to answer, so it gave us a nonsense result. To get the right answer we will probably need a framework that combines the principles of General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics. We call it Speaking of Quantum Gravity… Black Holes Predicted in context of Newtonian gravity by John Mitchell in 1784, then by Laplace in 1796. Based on escape velocity. Modern view based on Relativity: gravity – the curvature of space – becomes so strong that nothing can escape a region. The boundary of this region is the Event Horizon. How Do We Detect Them? We observe the things around them. Gas spiraling in is heated to millions of degrees, emitting x-rays and other forms of radiation, as well as energetic jets of particles. We detect them by seeing things around them – gas and stuff spirals in and radiates. Nothing Can Escape We think of this as a defining characteristic of Black Holes. But… Glowing Black Holes? In the 1970s the British physicist Stephen Hawking realized that Black Holes actually radiate. Sure, the stuff that falls into them Is hot and emits radiation. But the Black Holes are also Glowing on their own! This is a consequence of quantum mechanics, and his predictions show up no matter what route you take to describing the physics of Black Holes. In 2003 I had a chance to have dinner with Stephen Hawking. I wasn’t sure how to break the ice. So I asked him the following question: “Which are you more proud of: your groundbreaking work on singularity theorems, or your appearance on the Simpsons?” What do you think he said? Where did all the info go? There is a problem with Black Holes – one we still don’t know how to resolve. What happens to the stuff that falls in? We assume that Quantum Mechanics is something really fundamental. But the idea that something can disappear into the Black Hole poses a big problem. This is called the Information Paradox. It is a problem because, without access to the info that disappeared, one of the central assumptions of Quantum Mechanics seems to break down. What Is Inside a Black Hole? A lot of strange things happen. A freely falling observer would not notice that they crossed the Horizon. Much later, however, the force of gravity would be so much stronger at their feet than at their head that the difference – what we call a tidal force – would rip them apart. F~ 1 (R d )2 F~ F~ 1 (r d ) 2 1 R2 F~ 1 r2 Eventually they would reach a region where gravity is so violently strong that everything we know about physics breaks down. What happens here? No one is sure. It’s kind of like the old maps drawn by sailors. Sailors have pretty vivid imaginations. They might see a pod of whales from a distance, and not recognize it for what it was. So they would come up with an explanation for what they were seeing – the curves of a sea serpent. Then they would draw some sort of sea monster on their maps. You can’t blame them. They knew they saw something. Saying “Arr! Check out yon sea-serpent!” sounds a lot better than “I don’t know what happens in a Black Hole.” Knowing which questions you can or cannot answer is just as important as the answers themselves. Right now, what we know about General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics is not capable of probing too far into a Black Hole. Maybe a theory of Quantum Gravity could tell us more. Anything else is a story told by a sailor. String Theory I’ve given you two examples of problems at the intersection of Gravity and Quantum Mechanics. Physicists have been working for many years to try and devise a quantum model of gravity. There are a few different approaches out there. They are all models – frameworks that may lead to a theory, but don’t make many concrete predictions yet. The model I work on is called String Theory. It is based on the idea that, in addition to the point particles used in QFT, we should also consider extended, one dimensional objects. The Origins of String Theory Originally proposed as a model of the strong nuclear force. Lost out to QCD (Quantum Chromodynamics). String Tension = Constant Force = Tension x Separation Restoring Force grows with distance. The idea is simple. All the particles we see are actually excitations of very, very small strings. They are so small that they look like point particles. Instead of having lots of different kinds of particles, we have two kinds of strings: open and closed. The different sorts of wiggles – excitations – of these strings correspond to all the particles and forces we observe. Strings ‘interact’ by joining and splitting. Any other interaction is inconsistent with quantum mechanics. String theory requires – depending on who you ask – 10 or 11 spacetime dimensions. That’s a high price to pay, but we get a model of quantum gravity for our trouble. Think of an extra sphere ‘attached’ to every point in space. The extra dimensions tend to curl up in shapes called CalabiYau manifolds. They are 6 dimensional shapes with special properties. The details of the shape have an impact on features of the theory – like the number of generations of particles we see in the Standard Model. “The simplicity of nature is not to be measured by that of our conceptions. Infinitely varied in its effects, nature is simple only in its causes, and its economy consists in producing a great number of phenomena, often very complicated, by means of a small number of general laws.” - Pierre Simon LaPlace Exposition du Systeme du Monde (On the System of the World)