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Experimental Tests of the Standard Model • • • • What is the Standard Model ? How do we test it ? Why do we think its incomplete ? What are the next steps ? The Standard Model Goal: a theory which describes all of the fundamental constituents of nature and their interactions with the minimum of assumptions and free parameters. Ultimately describe all interactions over small distance scales and cosmological observations. The Standard Model is our best attempt at this - assess how successfult in this lecture. 6 quarks, 6 leptons, 3 exchange bosons + antiparticles. Two independent forces (electroweak and QCD). 19 free parameters: particle masses, mixing angles, CP-violating term, couplings.... Consistent method of introducing interactions via so-called gauge invariance and Feynam diagram formalism. The Standard Model assumes massless neutrinos but this is easily fixed. Barring neutrino oscillations, the Standard Model has never failed a single experimental test. There is still one test left to pass - finding the Higgs boson. History of accelerators in particle physics Top quark Now 2010! Traditionally collide hadron-hadron (eg pp, pp...) and electron-positron. + ep (HERA) W+-,Z0 3 light ν gluon jets Charm (J/ψ) Colliders are successful tools for discovering fundamental particles and measuring their properties. Testing the Standard Model Method Colliders Smaller scale/”Desk-top” experiments of particle properties Cosmological experiments High Low High precision energy (< energy GeV) (<5 TeV) Very high energy >> TeV x x x x x Obs! Very approximate classification. Global tests combine information from all different methods. The world’s major colliders Name Colliding Particles Approximate beam energies (GeV) Location Status SLC e -e + 50+50 Stanford, USA Ended LEP e -e + 100+100 CERN, Geneva Ended Tevatron pp 1000+1000 HERA e -p 27.5 (e-) + 920 (p) PEP-II e -e + 9 (e-) +3.1 (e+) Stanford, Current USA KEKB e -e + 8 (e-) +3.5 (e+) Tsukuba, Current Japan LHC pp 7000+7000 Fermilab, Current USA DESY, Hambur g CERN, Geneva Ended Start 2009 Designing a collider: e++e- or hadron-hadron ? e++e- hadron-hadron Clean – can study annihilation reactions with no remnants of colliding particles Messy – remnants of interacting hadrons remain and influence measurements. Lower energy (for same radius) due to synchrotron radiation. LEP: ECM~200 GeV Higher energy (for same radius) LHC: ECM~14000 GeV Energy of e+,e- known. Energy of q,q not known (only have pdfs) Fixed energy of e+,e- for a given set of operator conditions Variable energy of q,q for a given set of operatorational conditions Best for detailed study Best for discovery Synchrotron Technology used for modern day cyclic accelerators, eg LHC, HERA, Tevatron... Principles of a synchrotron: (1) Acceleration performed in RF-cavities (2) Accelerated by time-varying electric field. (3) Bending magnetic field increased after particles pass through cavity Synchronised to keep same radius: p (16.02) p increases and B increases qB Out of time particle orbits corrected by form of time-varying E -field. A B ∆R = 0 ∆Cr > 0 r= Eg Particle A arrives in time (synchronised). Particle B arrives behind A and gets smaller momentum kick. E Particle C arrives ahead of A and gets bigger momentum kick All particles move with v ∼ c. After "momentum kick" in rf cavity. pA (16.03) qB p p Particle B radius rB = B < rA (16.04) Similarly, rC = C > rA (16.05) qB qB Particle A radius rA = C A B Time at fixed point in rf cavity. Limitations in energy of a synchrotron p = qBr ⇒ several factors determining maximum momentum/energy. (1) radius of curvature ; (2) magnetic field ; (3) synchrotron radiation (next slide). Factor (1) is determined by construction costs and we'd obviously like it to be big as possible but practically, accelerators have been restricted to radii of several km. To illustrate the effects of factors (2) and (3) consider particles accelerated around the LHC ring at CERN: 27km circumference. Prior to LHC building for p + p (7+7 TeV) ring was used for LEP: e + + e− (45+45 GeV and later 104+104 GeV) Limitations An accelerating charge loses energy by radiation. Eg a particle with charge q moving around a circle of radius R. Energy radiated per turn per particle: 4π q 2 β 3γ 4 ∆E = 3ε 0 R ⇒γ = E m (16.10) m=mass, E =energy. ⇒ Relativistic particles ( β ∼ 1) of fixed energy ∆E ∝ 1 m4 4 Synchrotron radiation losses for electron at energy E m p ⇒ = 4 ≈ 1013 (16.11) Synchrotron radiation losses for proton at energy E me Large problem for electrons. LEP at 45 GeV and ∼ 4km radius - 8 bunches of 4 × 1011 particles ⇒ 0.5MW lost via synchrotron radiation. ⇒ Synchrotron radiation limits beam energies for electron synchrotrons. Magnetic field strength and size limits hadron synchrotrons. DIS event at H1 detector at HERA ep collider (4) Muon Tracker µ− (3) Had. Calo e- (30 GeV) jet p (820 GeV) (1) Tracker e- (2) EM Calo Generic example of a collider detector system. Four major components: (1) Inner tracking system (2) electromagnetic calorimeter (3) Hadronic Calorimeter (4) Muon tracking system. Collider tests of the SM • Particle content – 3 light neutrinos – 3 quarks in a proton • Electroweak unification – the weak force isn’t weak at all – precision calculations There are three light neutrino species e+ + e− → Z 0 Width and peak of Z 0 sensitive to invisible decays : Γ ( Z 0 → ν +ν ) = 0.166 GeV (calculated) ⇒ Nν = 3.00 ± 0.05 A stunning result demonstrating the precision of particle physics measurements and theory. ⇒ there aren't any heavy charged leptons with associated light neutrinos. ⇒ from anomaly condition: if neutrinos are massless there are only 3 generations of leptons and quarks. We've already found the fundamental fermions. This is where we end the story. Combined data from LEP experiments Deep-inelastic scattering – probing the proton An electron interacts with a proton and recoils at a large angle after scattering off substructure within the proton. Modern day Rutherford scattering. A more sophisticated view of proton structure Traditionally view the proton as comprising: 2 up and 1 down quark. This is naive. Valence quarks The up and down quarks are "valence quarks". From the uncertainty principle exchanged gluons can fluctuate into qq pairs of any flavour (sea quarks): uu , dd , ss , cc , bb , tt Lifetime τ ∼ 1 (11.21) ⇒ heavy quark content: cc , bb , tt negligible! mq ⇒ Expect that up, down and strange quarks form the structure of the proton as seen in DIS interactions. Non-strange sea quarks Strange sea quarks electron-nucleon cross section 2 dσ α2 1 2 θ 2 2 θ Q 2 = cos F2 ( x, Q ) + sin 2 F1 ( x, Q ) (11.17) dE ' d Ω 4 E 2 sin 4 θ ν 2 2 xm p 2 F1 ( x, Q 2 ) , F2 ( x, Q 2 ) are "structure functions". F2 ( x ) = ∑ eq2 xq ( x ) + eq2 xq ( x ) (11.18) q sum extends over all flavours of quarks in the proton. Eg q = u, d .. q ( x ) dx = average number of quarks of type q with momentum fraction in range x to x + dx 1 1 F2p ( x ) − F2n ( x ) = x uvp ( x ) − d vp ( x ) 3 3 Subtract off the messy sea quarks - we should be left with the momentum distribution of the valence quarks. They should peak at x ~ 1 . 3 When the weak force become stronger Compare electromagnetic and weak forces for Q 2 >> M W2 . Consider the following deep-inelastic scattering processes at HERA collider: (a) e − + p → e − + X and (b) e − + p → ν e + X . e- e- νe e- γ,Z0 W- p p (a) proceeds via em and weak (b) proceeds via weak only. Very rough order of magnitude estimate: 2 2 g dσ (a) 2 Amplitude for (a) Q2 dQ 2 ≈ ∼ 2 dσ Amplitude for (b) gW2 (b) dQ 2 Q 2 + M W2 2 (13.01) For Q 2 >> M W2 expect the two processes to become comparable in size. Electromagnetic and weak force strength As expected, for Q 2 > M W2 the cross sections for electromagnetic and weak processes are of similar strength. νe Data from the HERA electron-proton collider. Note that the Standard Model calculations cover several orders of magnitude in energy. M W2 ∼ 6400 GeV 2 Smaller scale/”desk top” experiments • Anomalous magnetic moments • Electric dipole moments • Mass measurements Anomalous magnetic moments Dirac equation implies that for every spin (a) a corresponding spin 1 particle there is 2 1 antiparticle 2 (b) two spin states Spin and antiparticles arises as a consequence of treating quantum mechanics relativistically e Intrinsic magnetic moment of elementary particle: µ = g S (1.23) 2mc Prediction of Dirac equation for electrons: g = 2 Experiment g ≈ 2.002.. g −2 = (1159652180.7 ± 0.3) × 10−12 2 g −2 Dirac prediction + quantum corrections for e − : = (1159652153.5 ± 28 ) ×10−12 2 Precision experimental result: Quantum electrodynamics is "the best theory we've got!" The Muon g – 2 Experiment q g −2 ωa = B m 2 Shoot in polarised muons and measure Larmor rotation of spin Brookhaven Lab. USA Results • The average of the Muon anomaly is – aμ = 11659208(6) × 10-10 A lot of people are still excited by this. 11659181(8) × 10-10 Symmetries Fundamental discrete symmetries: Charge conjugation Cˆ : Particle ⇔ antiparticle p +π − → n +π + ≡ p +π + → n +π − Parity Pˆ : r → −r Is the mirror image of a reaction possible/same rate ? Time invariance Tˆ t → −t Could we be able to tell if a reaction was being played "backwards in time"? C , P, T are violated and we don't know why. Interesting because they CP-violating processes treat matter and antimatter differently -> matter/antimatter asymmetry. CPT is always respected. CPT symmetry ˆ ˆ ˆ operator turns a particle into its antiparticle, inverts space and The CPT reverses time. ˆ ˆ ˆ |ψ (r , t ) >=| ψ (− r , −t ) > (8.10) for particle (antiparticle) a (a ) CPT a a ˆ ˆ ˆ is a good symmetry ⇒ CPT ˆ ˆ ˆ , Hˆ = 0. If CPT Take simple case of a particle at rest. ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ | ψ (r , t ) >= m CPT ˆ ˆ ˆ | ψ (r , t ) >= m | ψ (−r , −t ) > (8.11) CPTH a a a a a ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ | ψ (r , t ) >= Hˆ | ψ (−r , −t ) >= m | ψ (−r , −t ) > (8.12) HCPT a ⇒ ma = ma a a a (8.13) Proof valid for stable particles - similar derivation possible for decaying particles CPT symmetry implies a particle and an antiparticle have the same mass! Tests and consequences of CPT invariance Consistent particle and anti-particle masses imply CPT symmetry. mK 0 = K 0 | H | K 0 ,mK 0 = K 0 | H | K 0 | mK 0 − mK 0 | mK 0 + mK 0 < 10−18 (current experimental limit) + CPT invariance implies particles and anti-particles have the same lifetime. τ µ −τ µ (τ + − µ+ +τ µ − ) < 10-4 (current experimental limit) + CPT invariance also implies that if CP and T are violated then there must be at least 3 quark generations. u d ( ) ( ) ( ) c s t b If CPT is violated ”all hell breaks loose” P,T-violation from neutron electric dipole moment If a, eg neutron, possesses a permanent non-zero electric dipole moment then this would violate T and P. Good test of the SM. CP Lear Experiment 0 0 0 0 Compare rates for the two processes K → K and K → K CP/T-reversal transformations . CPLEAR Experiment at CERN (pp interactions) Consider two strong reactions pp → K0 (S =1)K− (S = −1)π + , pp → K 0 (S = −1)K+ (S =1)π − Identify if a K 0 or K 0 was produced by looking for the presence of K − or K + in one of the reactions. Observe the decay of that particle and see if it ended life as a K 0 or K 0 by looking for an e + or e − in one of the following decays. π− d π+ e+ νe u d u W+ d s K0 eW- d s K0 νe CP-Lear Experiment • Measurement made of an asymmetry AT (Probability of K 0 → K 0 ) − (Probability of K 0 → K 0 ) AT = (Probability of K 0 → K 0 ) + (Probability of K 0 → K 0 ) = (6.6 ± 1.6) ×10-3 (integrated over time 20τ s ) • K0 K0 and K0 K0 do not occur at the same rate • First direct measurement of T-violation. • Also CP violation • Result and experiment to be discussed (8.05) The Standard Model • The standard model is fantastically predictive • There is no unambiguous evidence that it fails and overwhelming evidence that it works. • It is the most precisely tested theory in the history of physics. • But it has problems The Higgs boson The missing particle in the Standard Model. Explains mass generation of the fundamental particles. The Higgs mechanism is a way of explaining why, in an apparently unified electroweak theory, the W +− and Z 0 are heavy and the γ is massless. Some consequences: A spin-0 massive boson, the Higgs particle H 0 , is required. A Higgs field pervades space: fermions interacting with the field acquire mass. A fermion with mass m f can also couple to the Higgs boson with strength g Hff . mf g Hff = 2 gW (15.01) m W Couplings to other particles, with strength proportional to particle mass. How do we look for the Higgs ? How is it produced and how does it decay ? At LEP: e + + e − → H 0 + Z 0 208 GeV centre-of-mass energy Sensitive to Higgs masses up to ∼ 120 GeV. Production mechanism ina m Do b 0 H →b+b bb ec nt d ay Observation of a Higgs ? An excess of events was seen at mass ~115 GeV but reanalysis of data and rigorous statistical calculation of significance means it is impossible (and stupid) to conclude a Higgs was seen. Lower mass limit MH > 113.5 GeV (15.02) Where is the Higgs ? Excluded by direct search. Most likely Higgs mass value from fits to measured electroweak quantities in the Standard Model. The Higgs is either just around the corner or nature is more complicated than we suppose. Problems of the Standard Model A subjective selection of three open areas in particle physics about which the Standard Model has nothing to say. (i) Cosmology: Dark matter. 22% of universe's energy budget in the form of "dark matter". Current evidence suggests that WIMPs: electrically neutral and weakly interacting massive particles with masses 1 ↔ 10 TeV may be responsible ( ∼ LHC energies) (ii) Forces: unification and gravity Is there hope for a theory which unifies all of the fundamental forces or at least the strong, em and weak forces ? Why is gravity weak until the Planck mass (the hierarchy problem) ? (iii) Properties of particles: electric charge quantisation Why do we never observe particles with charge, eg, 1.5234e ? (iv) What is the origin of CP-violation. Does it have anything to do with the matter-antimatter asymmetry ? If the ultimate aim is a theory of everything which predicts particles, forces and cosmological measurements from a single principle/equations then solutions to one of the above problems should address in some way the other problems. *There's loads more, eg neutrino masses, dark energy etc. but we'll take (i), (ii) and (iii) and (iv) as opportunities to show how a problem is defined and solutions proposed. Speculation strategy We have few answers but that doesn't mean we can't ask sensible questions. (1) At which energies can we expect that the Standard model will not describe subatomic particle interactions ? (2) In which areas is the Standard Model incomplete and which theories have been proposed address these problems ? How well can we localise a particle ? To what precision can we know the position of a particle, eg electron ? In quantum mechanics the position can be known to infinite accuracy if we accept we have no knowledge of its momentum. Eg from basic quantum mechanics: Heisenberg's microscope. 1 Resolution in position ∆x ∼ λ ∼ (2.36) ; λ = probing photon wavelength. pγ pγ =photon momentum ∼ ∆px maximum change in momentum in x-direction of particle. ⇒ ∆x∆px ∼ 1 (2.12) Above picture assumes reaction: γ + e − → γ + e − Quantum field theory changes this picture. If pγ > 2me (me =electron particle) ⇒ kinematically feasible reaction: γ + e− → γ + e− + e− + e+ Two identical particles in final state. No longer possible to say anything about electron position for pγ > 2me . ⇒ Fundamental limitation on knowledge of position: ∆x ≥∼ 1 (15.03) 2m Gravity From general relativity: any object of mass m contained within its Scharzschild radius leads to a gravitational singularity (black hole): Scharzschild radius : rs = 2Gm. G = Gravitational constant. Quantum description of nature implies that a particle position be known to accuracy: λC = 2π . m However, for λC < rc the particle is contained within such a small size that a gravitational singularity occurs. The quantum prediction of a particle localised to a certain distance must be invalid if that localisation is taking place inside a black hole :). ⇒ (naively) quantum gravity becomes important at: rc = λC ⇒ 2Gm = 2π π ⇒m= (15.05) m G 1 = 1.2 ×1019 GeV (15.06) (drop the π ) G The Standard Model must fail for masses and energies > Planck mass and a theory of quantum gravity is needed. Formally define the Planck mass ≈ Eg strong force becomes weak at short distances (<1fm) ⇒ asymptotic freedom. measurements The coupling constants vary with momentum transfer (or distance) 1/coupling Other possible energy scales E Electromagnetic Weak ~GUT scale Strong Log(Momentum transfer, Q(GeV) ) ( 33 − 2 N f ) Q α s ( Q ) = α s ( M Z ) 1 + α s ( M Z ) ln 6π MZ −1 (12.05) Couplings appear to unify for Q ∼ 1016 GeV. ⇒ Grand unified theories (GUTs) unify em, weak and strong forces (to come). Speculation strategy We have few answers but that doesn't mean we can't ask sensible questions. (1) At which energies can we expect that the Standard model will not describe subatomic particle interactions ? Quantum gravity effects must play a role for masses and energies at and above the Planck scale ( ∼ 10 19 GeV). The GUT scale ( ∼ 1016 GeV) looks a promising energy for "new physics" to appear. (2) In which areas is the Standard Model incomplete and which theories have been proposed address these problems ? Supersymmetry Every Standard Model has a supersymmetry partner. Symmetry between bosons and fermion Quarks (fermions) ↔ Squarks (bosons) ; W , Z , γ , g (bosons) ↔ W , Z , γ, g (fermions) Symmetry is broken otherwise SM and SUSY particles (sparticleS) would have the same mass. SM and SUSY particles have different R-parity. Conservation of R-parity stops SUSY sparticles decaying to SM particles. R=(-1) ( 3 B − L)+2 S = +1 SM particles (15.07) = -1 SUSY partner particles. B=baryon number, L=lepton number, S =Spin quantum number. Why look for SUSY ? Many reasons for looking for SUSY, amongs them... (1) It predicts a dark matter candidate: i.e. a WIMP with mass ∼ TeV. Neutralino: χ 0 a mixed state of SUSY partners of the Higgs, Z and γ . (2) Unification of the couplings is more exact if SUSY sparticles exist. Can develop SUSY grand unified theories (GUTs) which unify the electromagnetic, Standard Model EElectromagnetic Weak 1/coupling 1/coupling weak and strong forces. Standard Model+SUSY Electromagnetic Weak Strong Strong Log(Momentum transfer, Q(GeV) ) Log(Momentum transfer, Q(GeV) ) SUSY Simulation CMS experiment. Missing transverse momentum SM SUSY Grand Unified Theories Incorporate strong, electromagnetic and weak forces into a GUT. Simplest model: SU(5) (Georgi-Glashow). Introduce new heavy exchange bosons X and Y : mass ∼ 1016 GeV. Prediction of proton decay. Violation of lepton and baryon number. Eg p → π 0 + e + Predictions for lifetime τ ∼ 1030 years. Current limits (SuperK- lecture) τ >∼ 1033 years. Other GUTS predict τ > 1033 years. GUTs also predict heavy magnetic monopoles m ∼ 1016 GeV and explain charge quantisation. precision experiments: proton decay Super kamiokande: neutrino oscillation experiment 11,200 PMTs 50,000 tonnes of ultra-pure water, 1000m underground in the Kamioka Mine Super kamiokande: use data to look for proton decay events Extra spatial dimensions Original ideas on extra dimensions from T. Kaluza and O. Klein (1921). Several different models incorporating extra dimensions on the market today. Large Extra Dimensions. Hierarchy problem → gravity is weak since it propagates in extra dimensions (bulk) and we see a diluted form of it in our 3+1 dimension world (brane). Gravitational potential V ( r ) ∼ 1 r n +1 n = number of extra dimensions. (15.08) where r < R R = distance scale for interactions at which the effects of extra dimensions are observed. n ≥ 2 ⇒ R <∼ 1 mm (15.09) In general, many extra dimensions theories often predict "new" heavy particles with masses ∼ TeV and provide dark matter candidates. Micro Black Holes at the LHC In general, when two particles pass each other with enough energy, a micro black hole can be formed. For three spatial dimensions, gravity is too weak. With extra dimensions gravity becomes stronger, micro black holes can be created. "Normal" black hole: size ∼ km, mass ∼ msun , temperature ∼ 0.01K, τ ∼ ∞ "Micro" blackhole: size ∼ 10 −18m, mass ∼ 1 TeV, temperature ∼ 1016K, τ ∼ 10−27 s (evaporate through Hawking radition.) The world won't end when we turn on the LHC. Electric charge quantisation Maybe its better not to be too ambitious and just focus on one specific problem. Electric charge quantisation. Why is electric charge always meaured in integer multiples of the elementary charge e ? Why are the electron and proton charges the same (barring a sign) ? The best limits state: qelectron + q proton qelectron < 10−20 (15.10) Is there any way to accommodate electric charge quantisation within quantum mechanics ? Speculation strategy We have few answers but that doesn't mean we can't ask sensible questions. (1) At which energies can we expect that the Standard model will not describe subatomic particle interactions ? Quantum gravity effects must play a role for masses and energies at and above the Planck scale ( ∼ 10 19 GeV). The GUT scale ( ∼ 1016 GeV) looks a promising energy for "new physics" to appear. (2) In which areas is the Standard Model incomplete and which theories have been proposed address these problems ? Dark matter, hierarchy problem, force unification, charge quantisation (to name but four) SUSY, extra dimensions, magnetic monopoles are just some of the things we've been speculating..But this is a game - we need data! So how close are we to a unified theory of all the forces ? At present string theory offers the best hope. It is the most promising candidate theory for quantum gravity. However, its been the most promising theory for over 20 years now... Hadron masses can be calculated using a picture of hadrons as excitations of string. This formed part of the early ideas which led to string theory. Point-like particles are tiny quantised one-dimensional strings. Extra dimensions and supersymmetry accommodated within string theory. Extremely challenging to come up with a quantitative prediction from string theory which can be tested. Time will tell. Summary • Higgs discovery would be confirmation of the Standard Model • Standard Model is incomplete • A range of proposed solutions exist which postulate the existence of ”new” particles which could be ”around the corner” at LHC energies.