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From Quantum Mechanics to String Theory Relativity (why it makes sense) ✓ Quarks and the Strong Force Quantum mechanics: measurements and uncertainty ✓ Symmetry and Unification Smashing things together: from Rutherford to the LHC ✓ Particle Interactions ✓ Thursday, May 7, 2009 String Theory: a different kind of unification Extra Dimensions Strings and the Strong Force Particle Interaction Summary quantum mechanics and special relativity together imply the existence of anti-particles forces are mediated by the exchange of virtual particles, which carry energy and momentum inconsistent with their masses using quantum uncertainty. This leads to a decrease of force strength with distance, and in the case of massive mediators, an effective range for the force particle interactions are limited by conservation laws: energy, momentum, angular momentum, charge, quark number. These conservation laws lead to particle stability. virtual electron/positron pairs in the vacuum shield electromagnetic charges, making them seem smaller than they are Thursday, May 7, 2009 Quarks and the Strong Force Thursday, May 7, 2009 The Particle Zoo for a while it looked like we were close to a complete picture, with just the electromagnetic and nuclear forces, and the particles from last time In the 1950s and 60s accelerator and cosmic ray experiments produced a proliferation of new particles heavier particles related to protons, neutrons, and pions Thursday, May 7, 2009 Patterns try arranging the particles by spin, quark number, charge, mass Thursday, May 7, 2009 Patterns try arranging the particles by spin, quark number, charge, mass Quark Number 3 Thursday, May 7, 2009 Quark Number 0 Patterns try arranging the particles by spin, quark number, charge, mass Quark Number 3 Thursday, May 7, 2009 Quark Number 0 Patterns try arranging the particles by spin, quark number, charge, mass Quark Number 3 Thursday, May 7, 2009 Quark Number 0 Patterns try arranging the particles by spin, quark number, charge, mass Quark Number 3 Thursday, May 7, 2009 Quark Number 0 Quarks just like with the periodic table, these patterns of particles indicate some underlying structure Murray Gell-Mann realized that they could be explained if the particles were made up of smaller particles he called quarks the quarks that explain these patterns come in three types: up, down, and strange (and their anti-particles) the particles with non-zero quark number (baryons) have 3 quarks each, the ones with zero quark number (mesons) have one quark, one anti-quark two of the quarks are very close to identical in the masses they generate, the third causes (generically) larger masses Thursday, May 7, 2009 Baryon Decuplet the ten baryons in this ++ ∆ pattern are the ten possible 3-quark combinations of up, (uuu) down, and strange quarks by looking at the charges, we see that the charges of the three quarks must be u: +2/3 d: -1/3 s: -1/3 Thursday, May 7, 2009 ∆+ ∆0 ∆− (uud) (udd) (ddd) ∗+ Σ∗0 Σ∗− (suu) (sud) (sdd) Σ ∗0 Ξ Ξ∗− (ssu) (ssd) Ω− (sss) Baryon Octet baryon octet similar to decuplet, except with the corners cut off and the middle doubled since quarks have anti-particle partners, for each of the Σ+ baryon patterns there is an equivalent pattern made up of (suu) anti-baryons particles in the decuplet tend to be extremely unstable, generically they decay into particles in the octet Thursday, May 7, 2009 + n0 (uud) (udd) p 0 Σ− (sud) (sud) (sdd) Σ 0 Λ Ξ0 Ξ− (ssu) (ssd) Meson Nonets the mesons are made up of a quark and an anti-quark. They are arranged directly opposite their anti-particles the 6 mesons in the centers and to the sides are made up of ¯ ss̄ combinations of uū, dd, the mesons in the second nonet tend to be highly unstable and decay first to the mesons in the first nonet generally K + (s̄u) ¯ π ,η π + (du) 0 0 π − (ūd) ¯ K̄ 0 (ds) K − (ūs) K ∗+ (s̄u) K ∗0 (s̄d) ¯ ρ (du) + ¯ K̄ ∗0 (ds) Thursday, May 7, 2009 K 0 (s̄d) 0 ρ ,ω 0 ρ − (ūd) K ∗− (ūs) η !0 φ0 More Quarks Deep Inelastic Scattering Experiments: evidence of 3 quarks in protons, confirmation of their charges further experiments revealed three more quarks: charmed, top, and bottom (which combine in extremely massive, short-lived mesons and baryons) quarks and leptons fall into “generations”: each generation needs all four elements to be mathematically consistent e (electron) νe (neutrino) μ (muon) τ (tau) Thursday, May 7, 2009 d (down) u (up) νμ (neutrino) s ( strange) c (charmed) ντ (neutrino) b (bottom) t (top) The Color Puzzle quarks are spin 1/2 particles (fermions) fermions satisfy the “pauli exclusion principle”: you cannot have 2 fermions in exactly the same state consider the particle Δ++, made up of three “u” quarks it is a spin 3/2 particle, capable of carrying angular momentum in the z-direction equivalent to all three quarks having spin in the same direction (+++) it looks as if we have three identical quarks, all in the same spin state (u,+) there must be some other quantity that the quarks carry that allows them to be in different states: call it “color” Thursday, May 7, 2009 Colored Quarks Mesons Red Green Blue Anti-Red Anti-Green Anti-Blue Baryons Anti-Baryons quarks come in 3 colors (and 3 anti-colors) baryons are made up of one of each color, antibaryons one of each anti-color mesons are made up of one color and one anti-color these are called “colorless” combinations: all natural combinations are colorless Thursday, May 7, 2009 The Strong Force & Gluons what role (besides explaining the exclusion principle paradox) does color play? the strong force: color is to the strong force what charge is to the electromagnetic force the mediators for the strong force are gluons 8 varieties, each a combination of one color and one anticolor--but *not* colorless combinations gluons are massless and spin 1, like photons. Unlike photons, they are not colorless and therefore interact directly with other gluons Thursday, May 7, 2009 Confinement no particles found in nature have any net color. Why? gluons are massless, like photons. Classically the strong force should behave the same as the electromagnetic force. qm shielding is a large effect here, because the gluons themselves carry color virtual gluons and quarks serve to re-inforce bare colored particles. Classically the force decreases with distance like 1/ r^2, but quantum mechanically the force increases with distance like r. this is spring-like behavior. Colored objects attach to each other as if by a spring--it requires an infinite amount of energy to separate them Thursday, May 7, 2009 Confinement Energy quarks close together feel very little force from each other (like marbles in a sack). The force becomes strong when you start to separate them what would happen if you tried to pull a meson apart? as you begin to separate them, you put more and more energy into the system eventually, you have put more energy in than is required to produce a quark/anti-quark pair. They are created out of this energy, and what results is two (colorless) mesons coming apart in accelerators, when energies are high enough to probe the insides of protons and mesons, the result is messier: “jets” of hadrons Thursday, May 7, 2009 The Effective Nuclear Force can we explain the behavior of the “nuclear force” between protons and neutrons in terms of the strong force and gluons? the nuclear force is a residual effect of the color structure of objects that have no net color it dies off quickly with distance because as you get further away the color structure “disappears” (parallel: electromagnetic Van der Walls force) what about the pion as a nuclear force mediator? Let’s draw a picture of how a proton and a neutron can interact Thursday, May 7, 2009 Pion Exchange can proton/neutron interaction occur by exchange of a gluon? the gluon is a colored object, so this interaction must be *extremely* short range (even shorter than the nuclear force range) but we can make the proton and neutron “exchange” a color neutral object: this can act over a longer distance (up to what is limited by the pion’s mass) and becomes the dominant effect in the nucleus Thursday, May 7, 2009 d u u d u u gluon u d d u d d d u u d u u pion exchange u d d u d d Quark Summary mesons and baryons can be fit into patterns according to quark number, spin, mass and charge: quark structure baryons are made up of three quarks, mesons are made up of a quark and an anti-quark quarks have a quantity called color, which is the “charge” of the strong force, mediated by gluons (which also carry color) quantum shielding causes the strong force to grow with distance, holding colored objects together as if with a spring the nuclear force and pion exchange is a residual effect from the color structure of baryons which have no net color Thursday, May 7, 2009