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The Big Bang, the LHC and the Higgs Boson Dr Cormac O’ Raifeartaigh (WIT) Overview I. LHC What, How and Why II. Particle physics The Standard Model III. LHC Expectations The Higgs boson and beyond Big Bang cosmology The Large Hadron Collider High-energy proton beams Opposite directions Huge energy of collision Create short-lived particles E = mc2 Detection and measurement No black holes How E = 14 TeV λ =1 x 10-19 m Ultra high vacuum Low temp: 1.6 K LEP tunnel: 27 km 1200 superconducting magnets 600 M collisions/sec Why Explore fundamental constituents of matter Investigate inter-relation of forces that hold matter together Glimpse of early universe Highest energy since BB 1019 T= K t = 1x10-12 s V = football Mystery of dark matter Mystery of antimatter Cosmology E = kT → T = Particle cosmology Particle detectors 4 main detectors • CMS multi-purpose •ATLAS multi-purpose •ALICE quark-gluon plasma •LHC-b antimatter decay Particle detectors Tracking device measures momentum of charged particle Calorimeter measures energy of particle by absorption Identification detector measures velocity of particle by Cherenkov radiation II Particle physics (1930s) • electron (1895) • proton (1909) • nuclear atom (1911) RBS Periodic Table: protons (1918) • neutron (1932) • what holds nucleus together? • what holds electrons in place? • what causes radioactivity? Four forces of nature Force of gravity Holds cosmos together Long range Electromagnetic force Holds atoms together Strong nuclear force: holds nucleus together The atom Weak nuclear force: Beta decay Strong force SF >> em charge indep protons, neutrons short range HUP massive particle Yukawa pion 3 charge states New particles (1950s) Cosmic rays π+ → μ+ + ν Particle accelerators cyclotron Particle Zoo (1960s) Over 100 particles Quarks (1960s) new periodic table p+,n not fundamental symmetry arguments (SU3 gauge symmetry) SU3 → quarks new fundamental particles UP and DOWN prediction of Stanford experiments 1969 Gell-Mann, Zweig Quantum chromodynamics scattering experiments colour SF = chromodynamics asymptotic freedom confinement infra-red slavery The energy required to produce a separation far exceeds the pair production energy of a quark-antiquark pair, Quark generations Six different quarks (u,d,s,c,t,b) Six leptons (e, μ, τ, υe, υμ, υτ) Gen I: all of matter Gen II, III redundant Electro-weak interaction Gauge theory of em and w interaction Salaam, Weinberg, Glashow Above 100 GeV Interactions of leptons by exchange of W,Z bosons Higgs mechanism to generate mass Predictions • Weak neutral currents (1973) • W and Z gauge bosons (CERN, 1983) • Higgs boson The Origin of Mass The strong nuclear force cannot explain the mass of the electron though… Or very heavy quarks top mass = 175 proton mass The Higgs Boson We suspect the vacuum is full of another sort of matter that is responsible – the higgs…. a new sort of matter – a scalar? To explain the W mass the higgs vacuum must be 100 times denser than nuclear matter!! It must be weak charged but not electrically charged The Standard Model (1970s) Strong force = quark force (QCD) EM + weak force = electroweak Matter particles: fermions (quarks and leptons) Force particles: bosons Prediction: W+-,Z0 boson Detected: CERN, 1983 Standard Model : 1980s • Experimental success but Higgs boson outstanding Key particle: too heavy? III LHC expectations (SM) Higgs boson Determines mass of other particles 120-180 GeV Set by mass of top quark, Z boson Search…surprise? Main production mechanisms of the Higgs at the LHC Ref: A. Djouadi, hep-ph/0503172 Higgs decay channels For low Higgs mass mh 150 GeV, the Higgs mostly decays to two b-quarks, two tau leptons, two gluons and etc. In hadron colliders these modes are difficult to extract because of the large QCD jet background. The silver detection mode in this mass range is the two photons mode: h , which like the gluon fusion is a loop-induced process. Decay channels depend on the Higgs mass: Ref: A. Djouadi, hep-ph/0503172 A summary plot: Ref: hep-ph/0208209 Expectations: Beyond the SM Unified field theory Grand unified theory (GUT): 3 forces Theory of everything (TOE): 4 forces Supersymmetry symmetry of fermions and bosons improves GUT makes TOE possible Phenomenology Supersymmetric particles? Not observed: broken symmetry IV Expectations: cosmology √ 1. Exotic particles:S 1. Unification of forces: SUSY 2. SUSY = dark matter? double whammy 3. Matter/antimatter asymmetry? LHCb √ 2. Unification of forces 3. Nature of dark matter? neutralinos? 4. Missing antimatter? LHCb High E = photo of early U Particle cosmology LHCb • Where is antimatter? • Asymmetry in M/AM decay • CP violation Tangential to ring B-meson collection Decay of b quark, antiquark CP violation (UCD group) Quantum loops Summary Higgs boson Close chapter on SM Supersymmetric particles Open new chapter: TOE Cosmology Nature of Dark Matter Missing antimatter Unexpected particles? New avenues http://coraifeartaigh.wordpress.com Epilogue: CERN and Ireland European Organization for Nuclear Research World leader 20 member states 10 associate states 80 nations, 500 univ. Ireland not a member No particle physics in Ireland