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Nuclear Physics I (PHY 551) Joanna Kiryluk Spring Semester Lectures 2014 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Stony Brook University Lecture 3: 2. Nucleon Structure –continued § Elementary Particles, Fundamental Interactions and the Standard Model § Form factors Textbook: Wong, Chapter 2 1 The Standard Model A theory which explains what is the matter made of and how subatomic particles interact with each other. The Standard Model is a Quantum Field Theory: the union of Quantum ChromoDynamics (QCD) and the electro-weak theory. Standard Model does not include gravity! + Higgs boson the first elementary spin 0 particle observed 2 3 Feynman diagrams § § § § pictorial representations of particle interactions forces are described by exchange of particles primarily applied to Quantum Field Theory mathematical tool for calculating amplitudes for a given process Feynman diagram elements 4 Feynman diagrams § § § § pictorial representations of particle interactions forces are described by exchange of particles primarily applied to Quantum Field Theory mathematical tool for calculating amplitudes for a given process x Quantum Electro-Dynamics (QED)= relativistic quantum field theory of electrodynamics q = p1 + p3 = p2 + p4 t M.Peskin, D. Schroeder, An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory Feynman diagrams provide physical insight into the nature 5 of particle interactions. quark, lepton, neutrino photon, boson Z, W+, W(virtual – “off mass-shell” particles) gluon Vertex: point where fermion and boson lines connect. Energy, momentum, charge, lepton and baryon numbers are conserved. Caution: Different plotting conventions in different books (calculations give the same results). It is important to understand how to read these plots. Example: e+ + e− → µ + + µ − e+ γ* e- µ- µ+ time Convention 1 e+ and e- (and µ+ and µ-) move forward in time. we’ll use this convention in this lecture, less confusing quark, lepton, neutrino photon, boson Z, W+, W(virtual – “off mass-shell” particles) gluon Vertex: point where fermion and boson lines connect. Energy, momentum, charge, lepton and baryon numbers are conserved. e+ γ* µ+ annihilation eγ* µ- e- e- µ+ µ+ scattering 9 Feynman diagrams Process amplitude ~ (single boson exchange) ~ 1 ' ' µ ' q = (ν , q ) = ( k − k ) = ( E − E , p − p ) µ k k’ α = e 2 4π α = e 2 4π Coulomb scattering 2 2 dσ dq ~ α q 4 10 Feynman diagrams Amplitude: M= + + + + ….. Perturbative expansion (terms with αn) Cross section: dσ~|M|2 11 Electroweak Interactions Charged currents interactions: Examples: Or Neutral currents interactions: eν e e- Example: Muon decay W- νe µ- νµ Helicity ! Ĥ, Ŝ # ≠ 0 Z$ " " Ĥ, Ŝ ⋅ p̂$ = 0 # % Sz – not a “good quantum number” because Sz and Hamiltonian don’t commute. The component of particle’s spin along its momentum is a good quantum number. Helicity = projection of particle’s spin on it’s momentum direction. Note: different notations/definitions S⋅p S⋅p σ⋅p 1) h ≡ 2) h ≡ 3) h ≡ S= σ (spin 1 / 2 particle) p p 2 S p σ = Pauli matrices For a spin 1/2 particle helicity 1 or 2) and 3) h = ±1 1) h = ± 2 13 h-positive h-negative Helicity Helicity = projection of particle’s spin on it’s momentum direction. Note: different notations/definitions S⋅p S⋅p σ⋅p 1) h ≡ 2) h ≡ 3) h ≡ p p S p 1 S= σ (spin 1 / 2 particle) 2 Definition 1) used in e.g. § M.Peskin, D. Schroeder “An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory”, § wikipedia Definition 2) used in e.g. § B. Povh, K. Rith, C. Scholz, F. Zetsche “Particles and Nuclei” § E. Henley, A. Garcia “Subatomic Physics” § D. Griffiths “Introductory to Elementary Particles” Definition 3) used in § S. Wong “Introductory Nuclear Physics” In this course we will follow definition 2), 3) 14 Neutrinos in the mirror Real world left-handed Negative helicity Mirror world right-handed Positive helicity Neutrinos in the mirror Right-handed neutrino Left-handed neutrino does not exits Right-handed anti-neutrino Left-handed anti-neutrino does not exits Helicity Structure in Weak Interactions In the ultra-relativistic limit only left-handed particles and right-handed antiparticles participate in charged current weak interactions. Weak interaction bosons (Spin=1) are left-handed. e− + ν e → W − W- Valid weak interaction Mirror W- Does not occur (parity is violated in weak interactions) Feynman Diagram of the neutron Beta decay − n → p + e +νe at partonic level: d → u +W → u + e + νe € W- νe e − Weak Bosons resonance production Example: e+ + e− → q + q e+ q q e- q- q time At sqrt(s)~MZ production of real Z0 boson Weak boson discovered at SPS (Super Synchrotron Collider) at CERN in the 1980’s 19 leptons Force carriers quarks Elementary particles 1st 2nd 3rd 3 generations 20 QED vs QCD QED Photons do not carry electric charge Gluons carry color charge QCD RB 21 QCD potential 4 αs VQCD ( r ) = − + kr 3 r k ~ 1 GeV / fm § QED-like at short distance r ≤ 0.01 fm § Quarks are tightly bound α s ~ 0.2 § String tension: potential increases linearly at large distance r ≥ 1 fm Potential similar for baryons and mesons Force between 2 quarks at large distance: F = dVQCD dr 22 Strong interactions: gluons exchange QCD is a gauge theory of the SU(3) gauge group obtained by taking the color charge to define a local symmetry. 3x3 color combinations gluon octet gluon singlet no color does not exist nucleon What holds the nucleon? 23 Strong force carrier – the gluons § 1979 The first direct experimental evidence of gluons found, when three-jet events were observed at the e+e- collider PETRA @ DESY jet1 jet2 gluon bremsstrahlung jet3 § The angular distribution of the jets proved that the gluon is a spin 1 particle.! This discovery marked the beginning of intensive tests of QCD Strong force carrier – the gluons An angular distribution of jets compared to QCD calculations with a spin 0 and a spin 1 gluon. 25 Soft processes (not described by QCD) 26 QED vs QCD QED DOES NOT EXIST Photons interact only with charged particles DOES EXIST QCD Gluons interact with colorcharged particles (quarks and gluons) 27 The gluon in the strong force Confinement The photon does not carry electric charge. αem = e2/4π ~ 1/137 Coupling constant: numerical coefficient that occur as a parameter whenever there’s an interaction. Strength of interaction ~ magnitude of a coupling constant The gluon in the strong force The photon does not carry electric charge. αem = e2/4π ~ 1/137 The gluon carries color charge itself. α ~ 1(large!) Solution: running αs α →α s (Q2 ) Extra diagrams depend on energy: QCD at 10GeV = QCD at 1GeV , but with smaller coupling constant € Running coupling and asymptotic freedom in QCD 2 α s (Q ) = 1 33 − 2n f Q2 × ln 2 12π Λ The couplings, which set the strength for the interactions, change their value if one probes smaller distances with higher energies. where: nf=number of quarks with mass<Q and Λ~230 MeV € 30 € Extra Running coupling and asymptotic freedom in QCD 1 2 α s (Q ) = 2 33 − 2n f Q × ln 2 12π Λ # −1 & Λ 2 = µ 2 exp % 2 ( B α ( µ )' $ s Λ ~ 230MeV The effective strong coupling decreases with energy (typical for non-Abelian fields, self-copupling gluons) Q 2 →∝ α → 0 s α em (Q 2 ) = asymptotic freedom α (µ ) ( 1 " Q 2 %+ *1− α (µ )ln $ 2 '# µ &, ) π α (µ = 1MeV ) = 1 137 (atomic physics) α (M Z = 90GeV ) = 1 129 (LEP e+e- accelerator) The effective em coupling increases with energy (or decreasing with smaller Q2) α em (Q12 ) α em (Q22 ) Q12 < Q22 31 Confinement: a crucial feature of QCD (but no rigorous theoretical proof exists) electron nucleus We can extract an electron from an atom by providing energy neutral atom But we cannot get free quarks out of hadrons: “colour confinement” quark-antiquark pair created from vacuum quark “white” proton (confined quarks) Strong colour field 2 E= mc Energy grows with separation! “white” proton “white” π0 (confined quarks) C.Lourenco (CERN)