Download How to teach the Standard Model

Document related concepts

Uncertainty principle wikipedia , lookup

ALICE experiment wikipedia , lookup

Symmetry in quantum mechanics wikipedia , lookup

Strangeness production wikipedia , lookup

Quantum tunnelling wikipedia , lookup

Weakly-interacting massive particles wikipedia , lookup

T-symmetry wikipedia , lookup

Relational approach to quantum physics wikipedia , lookup

Canonical quantization wikipedia , lookup

Renormalization group wikipedia , lookup

Quantum chromodynamics wikipedia , lookup

Grand Unified Theory wikipedia , lookup

Introduction to quantum mechanics wikipedia , lookup

Renormalization wikipedia , lookup

Double-slit experiment wikipedia , lookup

Relativistic quantum mechanics wikipedia , lookup

History of quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup

Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation wikipedia , lookup

Theory of everything wikipedia , lookup

ATLAS experiment wikipedia , lookup

Mathematical formulation of the Standard Model wikipedia , lookup

Identical particles wikipedia , lookup

Future Circular Collider wikipedia , lookup

Compact Muon Solenoid wikipedia , lookup

Peter Kalmus wikipedia , lookup

Lepton wikipedia , lookup

Standard Model wikipedia , lookup

Electron scattering wikipedia , lookup

Max Born wikipedia , lookup

Elementary particle wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
How to teach the Standard
Model
1.What is Fundamental And
What are Interactions
2 Nomenclature
2.Nomenclature
3.Building
g Particles
4.Interactions
1.What is Fundamental
Fundamental
2. Nomenclature
An Analogy with
Taxonomy
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Kingdom Animalia (Protista - * see note below)
Phylum Ciliophora
Class Ciliatea
Subclass Rhabdophorina
Order Hymenostomatida
Suborder Peniculina
Family Parameciidae
Genus Paramecium
Species aurelia, bursaria, or caudatum ..............
Kingdom
1. Fermions (matter)
(
)
2. Bosons (forces)
Kingdom
1. Fermions
Phylum
Quarks
Phylum
Lepton
Phylum
Quarks
1. Family
2. Family
up (+2/3)
charm (+2/3)
down (-1/3)
strange(-1/3)
3. Family
top (+2/3)
bottom (1/3)
Quark
Phylum
Leptons
1. Family
2.. Family
1. Family
electron (-1)
muon (-1)
tau (-1)
electron
neutrino (0)
muon
neutrino (0)
tau
neutrino (0)
leptons
Kingdom
2. Bosons (forces)
Phylum
1. Gravity
2 Electromagnetic
2.
3.Strong
g
4.weak
Phylum
1. Graviton
Gravity
Phylum
2.Electromagnetic
Electromagnatic
g
Phylum
3. Weak
Weak
Phylum
4. Strong
Strong
Summary of Things to
Know
1. Kingdom Names
2 Phylum Names
2.
3. Names and Charges of particles in each
Phylum and Family
BUILDING PARTICLES
Hadrons
Hadrons
• Quarks are confined in
Hadrons
• Hadrons are either
• A) Mesons
Pair of quark and antiquark
B) Baryons
-made up of three quarks
Mesons
• Mesons: made up of a pair of quark and antiquark.
• A few examples of types of mesons
1) pion
2) Kaon
3)) rho
4) B-zero
5)) eta-c
Baryons
• Made up of three quarks or three anti-quarks.
•
•
•
•
•
•
Examples of baryons
p
1)) proton
2) antiproton
3) neutron
4) lambda
5) omega
Why we’re here!
Particle Physics Timeline
• 2500 years of 5 y
particle progress in under 60 slides…guaranteed!
Democritus
(late 5th Century B.C.)
• Supposed that the cosmos consisted of “atoms and the void” , i.e. very small indivisible particle and empty space.
indivisible particle and empty space
Aristotle
(384 – 322 B.C.)
• Opposed atomism
Opposed atomism. Supposed the cosmos Supposed the cosmos consisted of a plenum of infinitely divisible particles: Earth Water Air Fire on Earth particles: Earth, Water, Air, Fire on Earth and Aether in the heavens.
R. Boscovic
Rudjer Bošković (1711‐1787) Croatia 5000 dinara note (1992).
A mathematician and astronomer, Bošković imagined atoms as point sources of force that repel each other at small separations (making liquids and solids difficult to compress) and attract at larger separations (making solids difficult to pull apart).
Rene Descartes
(1596 ‐ 1650)
• Followed Aristotle in believing the Cosmos is full of invisible particles. Supposed those particles whirling in vortices are responsible for gravity of Earth and planetary motion.
Daniel Bernoulli
• Daniel Bernoulli in Hydrodynamica
(1738) proposed that a gas is a collection of very many very small particles ( l
(molecules) in l ) i constant motion that exert pressure p
by collisions – the first kinetic theory of gasses.
of gasses
John Dalton
(1766 ‐ 1844)
Proposed the idea of the “chemical atom” y
f
in New System of Chemical Philosophy
(1808‐1827) and gave fi f l i first set of relative atomic weights based on combining proportions of elements in compounds.
James Clerk Maxwell
• James Clerk Maxwell in 1866 developed a statistical kinetic theory of gases that related molecular motion to gas temperature.
temperature
Wilh l R
Wilhelm Roentgen
• Wilhelm Röntgen
g in 1895 discovered x‐
rays, a previously unknown radiation that traveled in straight lines and gave shadow h d pictures of bones within the skin. Röntgen received the first Nobel Prize in Physics in 1901.
in Physics in 1901
Early Particle Physics
J.J. Thomson at work on his electron l t discovery.
Ernest Rutherford
(1871 – 1937)
•
Named α and β radiation based on absorption of rays, explored radioactive decay series, proposed atomic transmutation in radioactive elements (1902), showed α particles are He nuclei, developed nuclear model of atom (1910) based on α particle scattering, demonstrated artificial transmutation (proton
ifi i l i (
ejected when α
j
d h collided with N llid d i h N nucleus, measured nuclear size.
Rutherford s Experiment
Rutherford’s Experiment
Henri Becquerel
• Henri Becquerel discovered natural radioactivity in1896 y
9
while searching for x‐
rays produced from y p
phosphorescent uranium salts. He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903.
Albert Einstein
(1879 – 1955)
• His 1905 paper on the photoelectric effect proposed that 9 5p p
p
p p
light energy comes in “quantum” units (later called photons). The energy of a photon is E = hf, where f = frequency of the light and h = Planck
= Planck’s constant
s constant.
Robert Millikan
• Robert Millikan demonstrated the quantization of electric charge (qe = 1.6 x 10
= 1 6 x 10‐199 C) in 1910 and in 1915 verified Einstein’s photoelectric theory h
l
i h
based on energy y gp
carrying photons. He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1923.
Victor Hess
• Victor Hess discovered the existence of cosmic rays, high energy p
particles from space, as a result of measurements in balloon flights 1911‐
1913. He received the N b l P i i 6
Nobel Prize in 1936.
C.T.R. Wilson
• Charles Thomson Rees Wilson invented the cloud chamber in 1896 to examine the formation of clouds. In 1911 he made the first photographs of tracks h
h f k of α particles, β
p
particles, and electrons. ,
He received the Nobel Prize in 1927.
Niels Bohr
Niels Henrik David Bohr (1885-1962) Denmark 500 kroner note (1999).
Bohr established the first quantum theory of atomic structure in 1912 to
explain atomic spectral lines and the periodic table.
table He received the 1922
Nobel Prize for Physics for that work. His liquid drop model later
explained nuclear fission.
Henry Moseley
• Henry Moseley in 1913 y
y
93
found a pattern of characteristic x‐rays from cathodes of different materials that reflected the number p
p
of proton positive charges (atomic number) in the cathode materials. He was killed at Gallipoli in 1915 during WW I.
James Chadwick
• Ja
James Chadwick es C adw c
studied with Ernest Rutherford at C b id Cambridge, investigated β decay, and in 1932 demonstrated the existence of the neutron. He received the Nobel Prize in 1935.
Arthur Compton
• Arthur Compton p
studied the scattering of x‐rays from electrons in metals and in 1922 developed evidence for the existence of photons proposed by Einstein to explain the photoelectric p
effect. He received the Nobel Prize in 9 7
1927.
Louis de Broglie
• Louis de Broglie g
proposed that particles were characterized by wave properties in his doctoral thesis of 1924, an idea subsequently verified by the electron ifi d b th l t diffraction results of Davisson and Germer
and by G. P. Thomson. He received the Nobel Prize in 1929.
Prize in 1929
Werner Heisenberg
• German physicist and one of the founders of quantum mechanics. He is most well‐known for discovering one of th t l i i l f the central principles of modern physics, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1932.
Max Born
• German physicist and p y
mathematician. He won the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics for the formulation of the now‐standard i
interpretation of the i f h probability density ffunction for ψ*ψ in the ψ ψ
Schrödinger equation of quantum mechanics.
mechanics
Erwin Schroedinger
• An Austrian ‐
ust a Irish s
physicist who achieved fame for hi his contributions to ib i
quantum mechanics mechanics, especially the Schrödinger g
equation, for which he received the N b l P i i Nobel Prize in 1933.
Enrico Fermi
Italian physicist most ta a p ys c st ost
noted for his work on the development of the first nuclear f h fi l reactor, and for his contributions to the development of q
quantum theory y
and particle physics.He won the 1938 Nobel Prize in 8 N b l P i i Physics
P.A.M. Dirac
• British theoretical physicist and a founder of the field of quantum mechanics. Dirac shared the Nobel Prize in physics for 1933 with Erwin Schrödinger.
Erwin Schrödinger
Clinton Davisson
• American physicist p y
who confirmed the De Broglie hypothesis that all matter has a wave‐
like nature through th di
the discovery of f electron diffraction. He shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1937 with George Paget Thomson Paget Thomson. George P. Thomson
A Nobel‐Prize‐winning, (1937)English physicist who discovered the wave properties of the electron by electron diffraction.
He was the son of Nobel Prize winning physicist J. J. Thomson and Rose Elisabeth Paget, the daughter of the Professor of Medicine at Cambridge
Wolfgang Pauli
An Austrian theoretical physicist noted for his work on the theory of spin, and in particular the discovery of the exclusion principle, He received the Nobel Prize i Ph i i in Physics in 1945. He H had been nominated for the prize by Enstein.
the prize by Enstein
E.O. Lawrence
• An American physicist best known for his invention for his invention, utilization, and improvement of the cyclotron. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1939 1939. Robert Van de Graaff
• American physicist e ca p ys c st
and designer of the Van de Graaff
generator. In 1929, he I h developed his first generator (80 000 generator (80,000 volts); by 1933, he had constructed a much larger generator, capable of generating 7 million volts.
illi lt
John Cockroft & E. Walton
• Winners of the 1951 Nobel Prize in Physics for the development of the accelerator that bears their name.
bears their name
Carl Anderson
• Carl Anderson discovered th it i the positron in 1932 by b examining tracks of cosmic ray particles in a yp
cloud chamber. Continuing cosmic ray research with his cloud chamber, he and his first graduate student, Seth N dd
Neddermeyer, discovered di
d the muon in 1936, the year that Anderson received the Nobel Prize
P. Cherenkov
• Pavel Čerenkov in 1934 observed th bl l d d i the blue glow produced in a bottle of water bombarded by fast‐moving particles from a radioactive source. This Čerenkov effect results from light emitted when particles travel through a medium faster than light travels in the medium, analogous to a sonic boom shock wave produced when an object travels through air faster than sound travels in i f
h d l i air. Čerenkov received the Nobel Prize in 1958.
H. Yukawa
• Hideki Yukawa in 1935 935
published a field theory of nuclear forces in which he predicted the existence of a new particle, later identified with the pion
i h h i that was h first observed by Cecil 947
Powell in 1947. Yukawa received the Nobel Prize in 1949.
Seth Neddermeyer
• Seth Neddermeyer, while a graduate student with Cark Anderson, participated in the discovery of cloud chamber tracks that led to the discovery of the muon in 1936. 93
Neddermeyer later championed the development of the i l i implosion mechanism for h i f exploding plutonium nuclear bombs in the Manhattan Project during WW II.
Cecil Powell
• Cecil Powell pioneered p
methods of tracking particles with fine g
grained “nuclear” photographic emulsions. With this method he and his colleagues discovered the pion predicted by Hideki Yukawa in 1935. 935
Powell received the Nobel Prize in 1950.
•
G. Rochester & C. Butler
• George Rochester, working with Clifford Butler in 1947 947
on cosmic rays, discovered a pair of tracks indicating oppositely charged particles it l h
d ti l emanating from blank spot in a cloud chamber in a cloud chamber. Rochester and Butler inferred the existence of a heavy neutral particle later identified as a kaon, the first known strange particle.
first known strange particle
F. Reines & C. Cowan
• Frederick Reines, working with Clyde ki ith Cl d Cowan in 1956, observed the first direct evidence for the existence of a neutrino (electron antineutrino) in observations at the Savannah River nuclear reactor. After a long career in physics teaching and h i hi d research, Reines
received the Nobel Prize in 1995.
995
Donald Glaser
• Donald Glaser developed p
the bubble chamber to view tracks of charged particles in 1952. For over twenty 95
y
years analysis of bubble chamber tracks led to a y
p
variety of important discoveries including the Ω‐
particle and the existence of weak neutral currents. Glaser received the Nobel Prize in 1960.
Owen Chamberlain & Emilio Segre
• Owen Chamberlain and Emilio Segrè, working with Wiegand
and Ypsilantis
d Y il i in i 1955, produced and discovered the antiproton with the “Bevatron” accelerator at Berkeley Berkeley, California. They received the Nobel Prize in 1959.
L. Lederman, J. Steinberger, M S h
M. Schwartz
• Leon Lederman, Melvin ,
Schwartz, and Jack Steinberger developed the spark chamber experiment at Brookhaven in 1962 that led to the realization that muon
li i h neutrinos (νμ) are distinct from electron neutrinos (νe). They received the Nobel Prize in 1988.
Murray Gell Mann
Murray Gell‐Mann
• Murray Gell‐Mann developed the Eight Fold developed the Eight‐Fold Way theory relating particle properties in patterns of multiplet
symmetry groups. This led to his prediction of the existence of the Ω‐ particle in 1962 (confirmed in 1964) and the proposal that hadrons are composed of quarks with electric charges of + ⅔ qe and ‐⅓ qe. Gell Mann received the Gell‐Mann received the Nobel Prize in 1969.
A. Salam, S. Glashow, S. Weinberg
• Salam, Glashow and Weinberg arrived at the Electro‐Weak theory independently and shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979. h d h N b l P i i Ph i i Richard Feynman
• American physicist known for expanding the theory of quantum electrodynamics and particle theory He was particle theory. He was a joint recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965
G. ‘t Hooft
G. t Hooft & M. Veltman
• Shared the 1999 Nobel N b l Prize in Ph i "f Physics "for elucidating the quantum h structure of electroweak l
k interactions". D. Gross, F. Wilczek, H.D. Politzer
They were awarded y
the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery of h i di
f asymptotic freedom
S. Ting & B. Richter
• 1976 winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics for the h discovery of the J particle
Martin Perl
• American physicist, who p y
,
won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1995 for his discovery of the tau lepton
Leon Lederman
• American experimental physicist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1988 for his work on neutrinos He is Director neutrinos. He is Director Emeritus of the Fermilab.
C. Rubbia & S. Van der Meer
• Winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1984 for their decisive contributions which led to the discovery of the field particles W and Z, the communicato
rs of weak interaction"
CDF Collaboration ‐ 1995
CDF Collaboration • Two words…
Two words
DZero Collaboration Collaboration ‐ 1995
…TOP TOP QUARK!!!
DONUT Collaboration
• Discovered Tau Neutrino in 2000 at Fermilab
CERN
• The next chapter h
in the ongoing i particle physics h i progress sstory…
Compact Muon Solenoid
…where the story will be told!
where the story will be told!