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: CP Violation Part I Introductory concepts Slides available on my web page http://www.hep.manchester.ac.uk/u/parkes/ Chris Parkes Outline THEORETICAL CONCEPTS (with a bit of experiment) I. Introductory concepts Matter and antimatter Symmetries and conservation laws Discrete symmetries P, C and T II. CP Violation in the Standard Model Kaons and discovery of CP violation Mixing in neutral mesons Cabibbo theory and GIM mechanism The CKM matrix and the Unitarity Triangle Types of CP violation Chris Parkes 2/ Matter and antimatter Chris Parkes 4/ “Surely something is wanting in our conception of the universe... positive and negative electricity, north an south magnetism…” Matter antimatter Symmetry “matter and antimatter may further co-exist in bodies of small mass” Particle Antiparticle Oscillations Prof. Physics, Manchester – physics building named after Adding Relativity to QM p2 Apply QM prescription E 2m 2 2 i Get Schrödinger Equation 2m dt Missing phenomena: Anti-particles, pair production, spin Free particle Or non relativistic Whereas relativistically See Advanced QM II p i 1 p2 2 E mv 2 2m E 2 p 2c 2 m2c 4 Applying QM prescription again gives: Klein-Gordon Equation 1 mc 2 2 2 c dt 2 2 Quadratic equation 2 solutions One for particle, one for anti-particle Dirac Equation 4 solutions particle, anti-particle each with spin up +1/2, spin down -1/2 6 Anti-particles: Dirac Combine quantum mechanics and special relativity, linear in δt Half of the solutions have negative energy predicted 1931 Or positive energy anti-particles Same mass/spin… opposite charge Chris Parkes 7 Antiparticles – Interpretation of negative energy solutions - Dirac: in terms of ‘holes’ like in semiconductors - Feynman & Stückelberg: as particles traveling backwards in time, equivalent to antiparticles traveling forward in time both lead to the prediction of antiparticles ! Paul A.M. Dirac E etc.. electron mc2 -mc2 positron etc.. Westminster Abbey Chris Parkes positron 8/ Discovery of the positron (1/2) 1932 discovery by Carl Anderson of a positively-charged particle “just like the electron”. Named the “positron” First experimental confirmation of existence of antimatter! Cosmic rays with a cloud camber Outgoing particle (low momentum / high curvature) Lead plate to slow down particle in chamber Incoming particle (high momentum / low curvature) Chris Parkes 9/ Discovery of the positron (2/2) 4 years later Anderson confirmed this with g e+e- in lead plate using g from a radioactive source Chris Parkes 10/ Dirac equation: for every (spin ½) particle there is an antiparticle Dirac: predicted 1931 Antiproton observed 1959 Bevatron Positron observed 1932 Anti-deuteron 1965 PS CERN / AGS Brookhaven Chris Parkes Anti-Hydrogen 1995 Spectroscopy starts 2011 CERN LEAR CERN LEAR (ALPHA) 11 Antihydrogen Production Will Bertsche Fixed Target Experiments (too hot, few!) – First anti-hydrogen G.Bauer et al. (1996) Phys. Lett. B 368 (3) – < 100 atoms CERN (1995), Fermilab – Anti-protons on atomic target ‘Cold’ ingredients (Antiproton Decelerator) – ATHENA (2002), ATRAP, ALPHA, ASACUSA – Hundreds of Millions produced since 2002. M. Amoretti et al. (2002). Nature 419 (6906): 456 ALPHA Experiment Antihydrogen Trapping & Spectroscopy Nature 468, 355 (2010). Nature Physics, 7, 558-564 (2011). Nature 541, 506–510 (2017). Will Bertsche Antihydrogen: How do you trap something electrically neutral ? Atomic Magnetic moment in minimum-B trap – T < 0.5 K! Quench magnets and detect annihilation ALPHA Traps hundreds of atoms for up to 1000 seconds! – Have performed first spectroscopy studies, agreement with hydrogen – Observation of 1S-2S transition stimulated with laser Chris Parkes 14/ Matter and antimatter Differences in matter and antimatter Do they behave differently ? Yes – the subject of these lectures We see they are different: our universe is matter dominated Equal amounts of matter & antimatter (?) Matter Dominates ! Chris Parkes 15/ Chris Parkes 16/ Tracker: measure deflection R=pc/|Z|e, direction gives Z sign Time of Flight: measure velocity beta Tracker/TOF: energy loss (see Frontiers 1) measure |Z| Chris Parkes 17/ Search for anti-nuclei in space AMS experiment: A particle physics experiment in space Search of anti-helium in cosmic rays AMS-01 put in space in June 1998 with Discovery shuttle Lots of He found No anti-He found ! Chris Parkes 18/ Chris Parkes 19/ Chris Parkes 20/ Chris Parkes 21/ How measured? Nucleosynthesis – abundance of light elements depends on Nbaryons/Nphotons Chris Parkes 22/ Proton decay so far unobserved in experiment, limit is lifetime > 1032 years Observed BUT magnitude (as we will discuss later) is too small In thermal equilibrium N(Baryons) = N(anti-Baryons) since in equilibrium Chris Parkes 23/ Dynamic Generation of Baryon Asymmetry in Universe CP Violation & Baryon Number Asymmetry Chris Parkes 24/ Key Points So Far • Existence of anti-matter is predicted by the combination of • Relativity and Quantum Mechanics • No ‘primordial’ anti-matter observed • Need CP symmetry breaking to explain the absence of antimatter Chris Parkes 25/ Symmetries and conservation laws Symmetries and conservation laws Emmy Noether Role of symmetries in Physics: Conservation laws greatly simplify building of theories Well-known examples (of continuous symmetries): translational momentum conservation rotational angular momentum conservation time energy conservation Fundamental discrete symmetries we will study - Parity (P) – spatial inversion - Charge conjugation (C) – particle antiparticle transformation - Time reversal (T) - CP, CPT Chris Parkes 27/ The 3 discrete symmetries Parity, P – Parity reflects a system through the origin. Converts right-handed coordinate systems to left-handed ones. – Vectors change sign but axial vectors remain unchanged but L=xpL Charge Conjugation, C – Charge conjugation turns a particle into its antiparticle x -x , p -p e+ e- , K - K + Time Reversal, T – Changes, for example, the direction of motion of particles Chris Parkes t -t 28/ Parity - spatial inversion (1/2) P operator acts on a state |(r, t)> as P (r, t ) P (r, t ) P (r, t ) (r, t ) 2 Hence eigenstates P=±1 |(r, t)>= cos x has P=+1, even |(r, t)>= sin x has P=-1, odd |(r, t)>= cos x + sin x, no eigenvalue Chris Parkes Hence, electric dipole transition l=1Pg=- 1 e.g. hydrogen atom wavefn |(r,, )>=(r)Ylm(,) m m P Yl (,) Yl (-,+) =(-1)l Ylm(,) So atomic s,d +ve, p,f –ve P 29/ Parity - spatial inversion (2/2) Parity multiplicative: |> = |a> |b> , P=PaPb Proton Convention Pp=+1 Quantum Field Theory Parity of fermion opposite parity of anti-fermion Parity of boson same parity as anti-particle Angular momentum Use intrinsic parity with GROUND STATES Also multiply spatial config. term (-1) l scalar, pseudo-scalar, vector, axial(pseudo)-vector, etc. JP = 0+, 0-, 1-, 1+ -,o,K-,Ko all 0- , photon 1- Conserved in strong & electromagnetic interactions Chris Parkes 30/ Left-handed=spin anti-parallel to momentum Right-handed= spin parallel to momentum Chris Parkes 31/ Chris Parkes 32/ Chris Parkes 33/ Chris Parkes 34/ Chris Parkes 35/ Chris Parkes 36/ Spin in direction of momentum Spin in opposite direction of momentum Chris Parkes 37/ Chris Parkes 38/ Chris Parkes 39/ Chris Parkes 40/ Chris Parkes 41/ Chris Parkes 42/ Charge conjugation Particle to antiparticle transformation C operator acts on a state |(x, t)> as C (r, t ) C (r, t ) C 2 (r, t ) (r, t ) Only a particle that is its own antiparticle can be eigenstate of C ! e.g. C |o> = ±1 |o> EM sources change sign under C, hence C|g> = -1 o g + g (BR~99%) Thus, C|o> =(-1)2 |o> = +1 |o> Chris Parkes 43/ (Demonstrated Parity, Charge Conjugation Violated. Experiment did not determine Helicity of neutrino) Chris Parkes 44/ Chris Parkes 45/ Chris Parkes 46/ Chris Parkes 47/ Chris Parkes 48/ Measuring Helicity of the Neutrino Goldhaber et. al. 1958 Consider the following decay: Electron capture K shell, l=0 See textbook photon emission •Momenta, p Eu at rest Neutrino, Sm In opposite dirns •spin e- Select photons in Sm* dirn Sm* 152 Sm g J= 1 0 1 152 g S=+ ½ S=+ 1 OR right-handed right-handed S=- ½ S=- 1 Left-handed Left-handed •Helicities of forward photon and neutrino same 49 helicity •Measure photon helicity, find neutrino Neutrino Helicity Experiment Tricky bit: identify forward γ Use resonant scattering! g 152 Sm 152 Sm* 152 Sm g Measure γ polarisation with different B-field orientations 152Eu magnetic field Fe γ Pb γ Vary magnetic field to vary photon absorbtion. Photons absorbed by e- in iron only if spins of photon and electron opposite. S g S e S 'e 1 1 (1) ( ) ( ) 2 2 1 1 (1) ( ) ( ) 2 2 Forward photons, NaI (opposite p to neutrino), 152Sm 152Sm Have slightly higher p than backward PMT and cause resonant scattering Only left-handed neutrinos exist 50 Similar experiment with Hg carried out for anti-neutrinos Charge Inversion Particle-antiparticle mirror C P Parity Inversion Spatial mirror CP 51 Neutrino helicity • Massless approximation Parity Charge & Parity Chris Parkes (Goldhaber et al., Phys Rev 109 1015 (1958) left-handed right-handed ✗ left-handed right-handed 52/ T - time reversal Inversion of the time coordinate: t -t – Changes, for example, the direction of motion of particles Invariance checks: detailed balances a+bc+d becomes under T c+da+b Conserved in strong & electromagnetic interactions Chris Parkes 53/ Chris Parkes 54/ CPT invariance CPT THEOREM Any Lorentz-invariant local quantum field theory is invariant under the combination of C, P and T G. Lűders, W. Pauli, J. Schwinger (1954) Consequences: particles / antiparticles have Opposite quantum numbers Equal mass and lifetime Equal magnetic moments of opposite sign Fields with Integer spins commute, half-integer spins anti-commute (Pauli exclusion principle) Tests: Best experimental test of CPT invariance: (mK 0 mK 0 ) mK 0 ~ 10 18 (see PDG review on “CPT invariance Tests in Neutral Kaon decays”) Non-CPT-invariant theories have been formulated, but are not satisfactory Chris Parkes 55/ Key Points So Far • Existence of anti-matter is predicted by the combination of • Relativity and Quantum Mechanics • No ‘primordial’ anti-matter observed • Need CP symmetry breaking to explain the absence of antimatter • Three Fundamental discrete symmetries: C, P , T • C, P, and CP are conserved in strong and electromagnetic interactions • C, P completely broken in weak interactions, but initially CP looks OK • CPT is a very good symmetry • (if CP is broken, therefore T is broken) Chris Parkes 56/