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Particles, Fields and Computers The building blocks of nature and their numerical study Fernando Pérez Prof. Tom DeGrand Prof. Anna Hasenfratz Francesco Knechtli Archie Paulson Colorado College, Colorado Springs December 2000 Outline • What is the world made of? An overview ◦ Air, Earth, Fire and Water ◦ Mendeleev’s periodic table (1871) ◦ The 20th century: atoms can be divided after all (protons, electrons and neutrons) ◦ And then, even protons and neutrons can be divided → too many particles! ◦ The fundamental blocks: Quarks and Leptons. • Theory: understanding our world ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ The Theory of Relativity Quantum Mechanics Relativistic Quantum Mechanics Quantum Field Theory • The Standard Model ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Electromagnetism: light and chemistry The weak force: radioactive decay The strong force: holding the nucleus together Gravity: planets and the universe (doesn’t fit in) • What about mass? The Higgs boson 1 • Quantum Chromo Dynamics (QCD): only three colors, but plenty of work to do! ◦ Quarks and gluons: a strange theory of things we can’t see ◦ Non-perturbative behavior: a hard theory of things we can’t compute with standard methods • Lattice QCD: solving the theory (or a version of it) on a computer ◦ Theoretical problems ◦ Numerical problems • Experimental particle physics: the largest experiments on Earth • The future: physics beyond the Standard Model? • Resources on the web 2 What is the world made of? • The ancient Greeks: Air, Earth, Fire and Water They already (Leucippus of Miletus and Democritus of Abdera–5th century BC) had the idea of the atom (ατ oµoν, “that which cannot be divided”) • Mendeleev’s periodic table (1871) 3 The Rutherford Experiment 1911: atoms can be divided after all. Sir Ernest Rutherford performs the first “particle physics” experiments. Prevailing model at the time: the atom is a blob of neutral charge with no distinct components (plum pudding model). Rutherford probes this by scattering α particles (Helium nuclei) through a thin gold film. The resulting atomic model: small, positive nucleus with electrons orbiting it (a “mini solar system”). 4 Understanding the Nucleus At this point we can ask: is the nucleus just a point with positive charge (the “new atom”)? Answer: No. The Proton and the Neutron (James Chadwick, 1932) show up in the nucleus. Two problems arise: 1. Why doesn’t the nucleus explode? 2. Nucleons can be divided → too many particles! Models of nuclear structure were developed by assuming the existence of some type of interaction between the nucleons which could hold them together against electrostatic repulsion. 5 Quarks: Nature’s Lego M. Gell-Mann and G. Zweig (1964): protons, neutrons and most other known particles are made up of something even smaller: quarks. 1. Only a few (6) are needed to explain the particle zoo: 2. They interact via the strong force, and the residual force holds the whole nucleus together: 3. Quarks would have to be fractional charge particles. Why have we never seen such a thing? Later... Our current view of the atom: 6 The fundamental blocks We’ve seen the following physical scales: 1 1/10,000 Atoms (electromagnetic forces). Chemistry Nuclei (residual strong force). Radioactive phenomena (weak force). 1/100,000 Protons & neutrons (strong force). 1/100,000,000 Quarks & electrons: fundamental (we think). Matter in the universe (that we know about): 7 Theory: constructing the Standard Model Special Relativity: Einstein, 1905. Mass and energy are ultimately equivalent: E = mc2 Quantum Mechanics: 1900-1925. • All matter exhibits wave-like properties (interference, diffraction, etc.) • Classically forbidden processes may occur (small prob.). • Anything that is not forbidden will happen. • We can only predict the probability of each possible outcome. Relativistic Quantum Mechanics: Dirac, 1928 • For every particle there must be an anti-particle. • Spin was naturally explained: fermions (spin n2 = 1 3 2 , 2 , . . .) and bosons (integer spin). Quantum Field Theory: 1928-1972. Everything (particles, energy–force) is a field whose “intensity” determines how many particles we find. It provides a natural language to describe particle creation and annihilation processes, matter, antimatter and energy in a single, clean framework. 8 The “Standard Model” The world as (we think) we know it, minus gravity “Matter”: Quarks and Leptons, three generations with 2 quarks and 2 leptons per generation. “Energy” (Interactions): Gauge bosons, one type per fundamental interaction (force). Name Acts on Gauge Boson Range Strength Weak Force Everything but γ W ± , Z 0 (3) < 10−17 m 10−5 Electromagnetism Charged matter Photon, γ (1) Long: F ∼ r −2 1/137 Strong Force Quarks and gluons Gluons, g (8) 10−15 m 1 Gravity Everything Graviton g (1) Long: F ∼ r −2 ∼ 10−39 The Standard Model describes the first three in a very coherent manner, but gravity doesn’t fit into the picture. 9 What about mass? The Higgs boson A (technical) problem with the Standard Model: it doesn’t like particles to have a mass. Yet the quarks, the leptons, the W ± and the Z 0 are all massive. What to do? Suggestion: a new particle, the Higgs boson: (a) Quarks & leptons (b) Gauge bosons (c) Higgs + ? Have we seen it? Maybe, maybe not... 10 Quantum Chromo Dynamics (QCD) 6 quarks: the components of all hadronic –sensitive to the strong force– matter. ¯ Proton (uud), Neutron (udd), Pions (uū + dd) Problem: Quarks are fermionic particles, so they can’t pile on top of one another. But there’s a particle (the ∆++) with 3 identical quarks, uuu. How can it exist? Solution: each quark comes in three “colors” (red, green, blue). The force between quarks is mediated by gluon exchange. Gluons are like the photon of QCD, but they also carry color (and anti-color). 11 Confinement: the world is white A fundamental property of QCD: the world is white, we never see isolated quarks. All hadrons are either made of: • Three quarks (RGB). The baryons (heavy particles) like the proton, neutron, ∆++, ... • A quark/anti-quark pair (RR, GG, BB). The mesons (medium weight particles): the pions π 0, π ± , ... The gluon energy increases with distance: think of confinement as the stretching of a rubber band which snaps creating new quarks when stretched hard enough. 12 QCD: a Non-Perturbative theory Consider the exponential function written as a series ex = ∞ X xn n=0 n! Now look at what happens when we sum a finite number of terms (n = 0 . . . N ) for different values of x : N 1 2 3 4 ex x = 0.5 1.5 1.625 1.6458 1.6484 1.6487 x=5 6 18.5 39.333 65.375 148.41 The electromagnetic and weak forces have characteristic parameters of order 1/137 and 10−5 while QCD’s coupling is of order 1. This makes perturbative calculations (in the form of a finite series like above) very difficult for QCD. 13 Now consider finding a series expansion for the function 1 − f (x) = e x A Taylor series at x = 0 for f (x) is in principle given by ˛ ˛ 2 1 d f ˛˛ df ˛˛ + f (x) = f (0) + ˛ dx ˛x=0 2 dx2 ˛ + ... x=0 But for our function f (x) we immediately see a problem: ˛ ˛ df ˛˛ 1 − 1 ˛˛ = 2e x˛ =0 ˛ dx x=0 x x=0 And the same thing will happen to all orders, so we can’t make a series expansion at all! 1 The function f (x) = e− x is non-analytic at the origin, it has no power series representation at all. All its derivatives vanish, even though it looks perfectly well behaved: 0.7 exp(-1/x) 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 QCD suffers from both of these problems: 1. Perturbative (series) calculations are slow and difficult because the relevant parameter isn’t small. 2. Worse, many questions produce non-analytic functions, where series expansions are simply impossible. 14 Lattice QCD: computational QFT Discretize space-time as a grid: compute the properties of QCD “exactly” on it. With the best supercomputers, the space-time grid can have a size ∼ 483 × 96. CU-Boulder: develop “smart” algorithms: put as much physics as possible into the code, then work on smaller computers (desktop workstations, clusters of inexpensive PCs). We can do simulations with lattices ∼ 123 × 24. Things that can be computed on the lattice: • Spectrum of QCD (particle masses). • Decay constants for certain processes. • Basic properties of the vacuum – confinement. 15 The largest experiments on Earth: CERN (Switzerland/France) The 20th century: from bubble chambers to huge underground tunnels. CERN is a circular accelerator: Hydrogen bubble chamber image CERN main ring (27km circ.) The LHC detector An event at LEP 16 And SLAC (Stanford) SLAC: a linear accelerator (less radiation problems): SLAC accelerator (3km) BaBar detector SLAC structure BaBar detector diagram 17 Beyond The Standard Model There are still many unanswered questions left by the Standard Model: ✔ Why do we observe matter and almost no antimatter if we believe there is a symmetry between the two in the universe? ✔ What is this ”dark matter” that we can’t see that has visible gravitational effects in the cosmos? ✔ Why can’t the Standard Model predict a particle’s mass? ✔ Are quarks and leptons actually fundamental, or made up of even more fundamental particles? ✔ Why are there exactly three generations of quarks and leptons? ✔ How does gravity fit into all of this? Answers: Super Symmetry , String Theory ? A topic for another day... 18 Web Resources • http://ParticleAdventure.org: Welcome to the Particle Adventure. Main source of images for this talk, excellent site. • www2.slac.stanford.edu/vvc/home.html: SLAC Virtual Visitor Center. Nice descriptions of BaBar. • public.web.cern.ch/Public/SCIENCE/TutorialWelcome.html: plore the Atom - Introduction. • CERN official education site. hepwww.ph.qmw.ac.uk/epp/higgs.html: The Waldegrave Higgs Challenge. • Ex- One page essays explaining the Higgs. www.superstringtheory.com: The Official String Theory Web Site. Very nice animations of particle physics topics. • casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/sr/sr.shtml: Special Relativity. Prof. Andrew Hamilton’s relativity site (CU Boulder). • pdg.lbl.gov/particleadventure/other/othersites.html: Physics Education Sites. Particle List with many more links. 19