Title: Particle Physics
1Chapter 31
2Atoms as Elementary Particles
- Atoms
- From the Greek for indivisible
- Were once thought to be the elementary particles
- Atom constituents
- Proton, neutron, and electron
- After 1932 these were viewed as elementary
- All matter was made up of these particles
3Discovery of New Particles
- New particles
- Beginning in 1945, many new particles were
discovered in experiments involving high-energy
collisions - Characteristically unstable with short lifetimes
- Over 300 have been cataloged
- A pattern was needed to understand all these new
particles
4Elementary Particles Quarks
- Physicists recognize that most particles are made
up of quarks - Exceptions include photons, electrons and a few
others - The quark model has reduced the array of
particles to a manageable few - Protons and neutrons are not truly elementary,
but are systems of tightly bound quarks
5Fundamental Forces
- All particles in nature are subject to four
fundamental forces - Strong force
- Electromagnetic force
- Weak force
- Gravitational force
- This list is in order of decreasing strength
6Nuclear Force
- Holds nucleons together
- Strongest of all the fundamental forces
- Very short-ranged
- Less than 10-15 m
- Negligible for separations greater than this
7Electromagnetic Force
- Is responsible for the binding of atoms and
molecules - About 10-2 times the strength of the nuclear
force - A long-range force that decreases in strength as
the inverse square of the separation between
interacting particles
8Weak Force
- Is responsible for instability in certain nuclei
- Is responsible for decay processes
- Its strength is about 10-5 times that of the
strong force - Scientists now believe the weak and
electromagnetic forces are two manifestions of a
single interaction, the electroweak force
9Gravitational Force
- A familiar force that holds the planets, stars
and galaxies together - Its effect on elementary particles is negligible
- A long-range force
- It is about 10-41 times the strength of the
nuclear force - Weakest of the four fundamental forces
10Explanation of Forces
- Forces between particles are often described in
terms of the actions of field particles or
exchange particles - The force is mediated, or carried, by the field
particles
11Forces and Mediating Particles
12Paul Adrian Maurice Dirac
- 1902 1984
- Understanding of antimatter
- Unification of quantum mechanics and relativity
- Contributions of quantum physics and cosmology
- Nobel Prize in 1933
13Antiparticles
- Every particle has a corresponding antiparticle
- From Diracs version of quantum mechanics that
incorporated special relativity - An antiparticle has the same mass as the
particle, but the opposite charge - The positron (electrons antiparticle) was
discovered by Anderson in 1932 - Since then, it has been observed in numerous
experiments - Practically every known elementary particle has a
distinct antiparticle - Among the exceptions are the photon and the
neutral pi particles
14Diracs Explanation
- The solutions to the relativistic quantum
mechanic equations required negative energy
states - Dirac postulated that all negative energy states
were filled - These electrons are collectively called the Dirac
sea - Electrons in the Dirac sea are not directly
observable because the exclusion principle does
not let them react to external forces
15Diracs Explanation, cont
- An interaction may cause the electron to be
excited to a positive energy state - This would leave behind a hole in the Dirac sea
- The hole can react to external forces and is
observable
16Diracs Explanation, final
- The hole reacts in a way similar to the electron,
except that it has a positive charge - The hole is the antiparticle of the electron
- The electrons antiparticle is now called a
positron
17Pair Production
- A common source of positrons is pair production
- A gamma-ray photon with sufficient energy
interacts with a nucleus and an electron-positron
pair is created from the photon - The photon must have a minimum energy equal to
2mec2 to create the pair
18Pair Production, cont
- A photograph of pair production produced by 300
MeV gamma rays striking a lead sheet - The minimum energy to create the pair is 1.022
MeV - The excess energy appears as kinetic energy of
the two particles
19Annihilation
- The reverse of pair production can also occur
- Under the proper conditions, an electron and a
positron can annihilate each other to produce two
gamma ray photons - e- e 2g
20Antimatter, final
- In 1955 a team produced antiprotons and
antineutrons - This established the certainty of the existence
of antiparticles - Every particle has a corresponding antiparticle
with - equal mass and spin
- equal magnitude and opposite sign of charge,
magnetic moment and strangeness - The neutral photon, pion and eta are their own
antiparticles
21Hideki Yukawa
- 1907 1981
- Nobel Prize in 1949 for predicting the existence
of mesons - Developed the first theory to explain the nature
of the nuclear force
22Mesons
- Developed from a theory to explain the nuclear
force - Yukawa used the idea of forces being mediated by
particles to explain the nuclear force - A new particle was introduced whose exchange
between nucleons causes the nuclear force - It was called a meson
23Mesons, cont
- The proposed particle would have a mass about 200
times that of the electron - Efforts to establish the existence of the
particle were made by studying cosmic rays in the
late 1930s - Actually discovered multiple particles
- Pi meson (pion)
- Muon
- Not a meson
24Pion
- There are three varieties of pions
- ? and ?-
- Mass of 139.6 MeV/c2
- ?0
- Mass of 135.0 MeV/c2
- Pions are very unstable
- For example, the ?- decays into a muon and an
antineutrino with a lifetime of about 2.6 x10-8 s
25Muons
- Two muons exist
- µ- and its antiparticle µ
- The muon is unstable
- It has a mean lifetime of 2.2 µs
- It decays into an electron, a neutrino, and an
antineutrino
26Richard Feynman
- 1918 1988
- Developed quantum electrodynamics
- Shared the Noble Prize in 1965
- Worked on Challenger investigation and
demonstrated the effects of cold temperatures on
the rubber O-rings used
27Feynman Diagrams
- A graphical representation of the interaction
between two particles - Feynman diagrams are named for Richard Feynman
who developed them - A Feynman diagram is a qualitative graph of time
on the vertical axis and space on the horizontal
axis - Actual values of time and space are not important
- The actual paths of the particles are not shown
28Feynman Diagram Two Electrons
- The photon is the field particle that mediates
the interaction - The photon transfers energy and momentum from one
electron to the other - The photon is called a virtual photon
- It can never be detected directly because it is
absorbed by the second electron very shortly
after being emitted by the first electron
29The Virtual Photon
- The existence of the virtual photon seems to
violate the law of conservation of energy - But, due to the uncertainty principle and its
very short lifetime, the photons excess energy
is less than the uncertainty in its energy - The virtual photon can exist for short time
intervals, such that ?E ? / 2?t
30Feynman Diagram Proton and Neutron (Yukawas
Model)
- The exchange is via the nuclear force
- The existence of the pion is allowed in spite of
conservation of energy if this energy is
surrendered in a short enough time - Analysis predicts the rest energy of the pion to
be 100 MeV / c2 - This is in close agreement with experimental
results
31Nucleon Interaction More About Yukawas Model
- The time interval required for the pion to
transfer from one nucleon to the other is - The distance the pion could travel is cDt
- Using these pieces of information, the rest
energy of the pion is about 100 MeV
32Nucleon Interaction, final
- This concept says that a system of two nucleons
can change into two nucleons plus a pion as long
as it returns to its original state in a very
short time interval - It is often said that the nucleon undergoes
fluctuations as it emits and absorbs field
particles - These fluctuations are a consequence of quantum
mechanics and special relativity
33Nuclear Force
- The interactions previously described used the
pion as the particles that mediate the nuclear
force - Current understanding indicate that the nuclear
force is more fundamentally described as an
average or residual effect of the force between
quarks
34Feynman Diagram Weak Interaction
- An electron and a neutrino are interacting via
the weak force - The Z0 is the mediating particle
- The weak force can also be mediated by the W
- The W and Z0 were discovered in 1983 at CERN
35Classification of Particles
- Two broad categories
- Classified by interactions
- Hadrons interact through strong force
- Leptons interact through weak force
- Note on terminology
- The strong force is reserved for the force
between quarks - The nuclear force is reserved for the force
between nucleons - The nuclear force is a secondary result of the
strong force
36Hadrons
- Interact through the strong force
- Two subclasses distinguished by masses and spins
- Mesons
- Decay finally into electrons, positrons,
neutrinos and photons - Integer spins (0 or 1)
- Baryons
- Masses equal to or greater than a proton
- Half integer spin values (1/2 or 3/2)
- Decay into end products that include a proton
(except for the proton) - Not elementary, but composed of quarks
37Leptons
- Do not interact through strong force
- Do participate in electromagnetic (if charged)
and weak interactions - All have spin of ½
- Leptons appear truly elementary
- No substructure
- Point-like particles
38Leptons, cont
- Scientists currently believe only six leptons
exist, along with their antiparticles - Electron and electron neutrino
- Muon and its neutrino
- Tau and its neutrino
- Neutrinos may have a small, but nonzero, mass
39Conservation Laws
- A number of conservation laws are important in
the study of elementary particles - Already have seen conservation of
- Energy
- Linear momentum
- Angular momentum
- Electric charge
- Two additional laws are
- Conservation of Baryon Number
- Conservation of Lepton Number
40Conservation of Baryon Number
- Whenever a baryon is created in a reaction or a
decay, an antibaryon is also created - B is the Baryon Number
- B 1 for baryons
- B -1 for antibaryons
- B 0 for all other particles
- Conservation of Baryon Number states the sum of
the baryon numbers before a reaction or a decay
must equal the sum of baryon numbers after the
process
41Conservation of Baryon Number and Proton Stability
- There is a debate over whether the proton decays
or not - If baryon number is absolutely conserved, the
proton cannot decay - Some recent theories predict the proton is
unstable and so baryon number would not be
absolutely conserved - For now, we can say that the proton has a
half-life of at least 1033 years
42Conservation of Baryon Number, Example
- Is baryon number conserved in the following
reaction? -
- Baryon numbers
- Before 1 1 2
- After 1 1 1 (-1) 2
- Baryon number is conserved
- The reaction can occur as long as energy is
conserved
43Conservation of Lepton Number
- There are three conservation laws, one for each
variety of lepton - Law of Conservation of Electron-Lepton Number
states that the sum of electron-lepton numbers
before the process must equal the sum of the
electron-lepton number after the process - The process can be a reaction or a decay
44Conservation of Lepton Number, cont
- Assigning electron-lepton numbers
- Le 1 for the electron and the electron neutrino
- Le -1 for the positron and the electron
antineutrino - Le 0 for all other particles
- Similarly, when a process involves muons,
muon-lepton number must be conserved and when a
process involves tau particles, tau-lepton
numbers must be conserved - Muon- and tau-lepton numbers are assigned
similarly to electron-lepton numbers
45Conservation of Lepton Number, Example
- Is lepton number conserved in the following
reaction? -
- Check electron lepton numbers
- Before Le 0 After Le 1 (-1) 0 0
- Electron lepton number is conserved
- Check muon lepton numbers
- Before Lµ 1 After Lµ 0 0 1 1
- Muon lepton number is conserved
46Strange Particles
- Some particles discovered in the 1950s were
found to exhibit unusual properties in their
production and decay and were given the name
strange particles - Peculiar features include
- Always produced in pairs
- Although produced by the strong interaction, they
do not decay into particles that interact via the
strong interaction, but instead into particles
that interact via weak interactions - They decay much more slowly than particles
decaying via strong interactions
47Strangeness
- To explain these unusual properties, a new
quantum number, S, called strangeness, was
introduced - A new law, the conservation of strangeness, was
also needed - It states that whenever a reaction or decay
occurs via the strong force, the sum of
strangeness numbers before the process must equal
the sum of the strangeness numbers after the
process - Strong and electromagnetic interactions obey the
law of conservation of strangeness, but the weak
interaction does not
48Bubble ChamberExample of Strange Particles
- The dashed lines represent neutral particles
- At the bottom,
- ?- p ? ?0 K0
- Then ?0 ? ?- p and
-
49Creating Particles
- Most elementary particles are unstable and are
created in nature only rarely, in cosmic ray
showers - In the laboratory, great numbers of particles can
be created in controlled collisions between
high-energy particles and a suitable target
50Measuring Properties of Particles
- A magnetic field causes the charged particles to
curve - This allows measurement of their charge and
linear momentum - If the mass and momentum of the incident particle
are known, the product particles mass, kinetic
energy, and speed can usually be calculated - The particles lifetime can be calculated from
the length of its track and its speed
51Resonance Particles
- Short-lived particles are known as resonance
particles - They exist for times around 10-20 s
- In the lab, times for around 10-16 s can be
detected - They cannot be detected directly
- Their properties can be inferred from data on
their decay products
52Murray Gell-Mann
- 1929
- Studies dealing with subatomic particles
- Named quarks
- Developed pattern known as eightfold way
- Nobel Prize in 1969
53The Eightfold Way
- Many classification schemes have been proposed to
group particles into families - These schemes are based on spin, baryon number,
strangeness, etc. - The eightfold way is a symmetric pattern proposed
by Gell-Mann and Neeman - There are many symmetrical patterns that can be
developed - The patterns of the eightfold way have much in
common with the periodic table - Including predicting missing particles
54An Eightfold Way for Baryons
- A hexagonal pattern for the eight spin ½ baryons
- Stangeness vs. charge is plotted on a sloping
coordinate system - Six of the baryons form a hexagon with the other
two particles at its center
55An Eightfold Way for Mesons
- The mesons with spins of 0 can be plotted
- Strangeness vs. charge on a sloping coordinate
system is plotted - A hexagonal pattern emerges
- The particles and their antiparticles are on
opposite sides on the perimeter of the hexagon - The remaining three mesons are at the center
56Eightfold Way for Spin 3/2 Baryons
- The nine particles known at the time were
arranged as shown - An empty spot occurred
- Gell-Mann predicted the missing particle and its
properties - About three years later, the particle was found
and all its predicted properties were confirmed
57Quarks
- Hadrons are complex particles with size and
structure - Hadrons decay into other hadrons
- There are many different hadrons
- Quarks are proposed as the elementary particles
that constitute the hadrons - Originally proposed independently by Gell-Mann
and Zweig
58Original Quark Model
- Three types or flavors
- u up
- d down
- s strange
- Associated with each quark is an antiquark
- The antiquark has opposite charge, baryon number
and strangeness - Quarks have fractional electrical charges
- 1/3 e and 2/3 e
- Quarks are fermions
- Half-integral spins
59Original Quark Model Rules
- All the hadrons at the time of the original
proposal were explained by three rules - Mesons consist of one quark and one antiquark
- This gives them a baryon number of 0
- Baryons consist of three quarks
- Antibaryons consist of three antiquarks
60Quark Composition of Particles Examples
- Mesons are quark-antiquark pairs
- Baryons are quark triplets
61Additions to the Original Quark Model Charm
- Another quark was needed to account for some
discrepancies between predictions of the model
and experimental results - A new quantum number, C, was assigned to the
property of charm - Charm would be conserved in strong and
electromagnetic interactions, but not in weak
interactions - In 1974, a new meson, the J/? was discovered that
was shown to be a charm quark and charm antiquark
pair
62More Additions Top and Bottom
- Discovery led to the need for a more elaborate
quark model - This need led to the proposal of two new quarks
- t top (or truth)
- b bottom (or beauty)
- Added quantum numbers of topness and bottomness
- Verification
- b quark was found in a Y- meson in 1977
- t quark was found in 1995 at Fermilab
63Numbers of Particles
- At the present, physicists believe the building
blocks of matter are complete - Six quarks with their antiparticles
- Six leptons with their antiparticles
64Particle Properties
65More About Quarks
- No isolated quark has ever been observed
- It is believed that at ordinary temperatures,
quarks are permanently confined inside ordinary
particles due to the strong force - Current efforts are underway to form a
quark-gluon plasma where quarks would be freed
from neutrons and protons
66Color
- It was noted that certain particles had quark
compositions that violated the exclusion
principle - Quarks are fermions, with half-integer spins and
so should obey the exclusion principle - The explanation is an additional property called
the color charge - The color has nothing to do with the visual
sensation from light, it is simply a name
67Colored Quarks
- Color charge occurs in red, blue, or green
- Antiquarks have colors of antired, antiblue, or
antigreen - These are the quantum numbers of color charge
- Color obeys the Exclusion Principle
- A combination of quarks of each color produces
white (or colorless) - Baryons and mesons are always colorless
68Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD)
- QCD gave a new theory of how quarks interact with
each other by means of color charge - The strong force between quarks is often called
the color force - The strong force between quarks is mediated by
gluons - Gluons are massless particles
- When a quark emits or absorbs a gluon, its color
may change
69More About Color Charge
- Particles with like colors repel and those with
opposite colors attract - Different colors attract, but not as strongly as
a color and its anticolor - The color force between color-neutral hadrons is
negligible at large separations - The strong color force between the constituent
quarks does not exactly cancel at small
separations - This residual strong force is the nuclear force
that binds the protons and neutrons to form nuclei
70Quark Structure of a Meson
- A green quark is attracted to an antigreen quark
- The quark antiquark pair forms a meson
- The resulting meson is colorless
71Quark Structure of a Baryon
- Quarks of different colors attract each other
- The quark triplet forms a baryon
- Each baryon contains three quarks with three
different colors - The baryon is colorless
72QCD Explanation of a Neutron-Proton Interaction
- Each quark within the proton and neutron is
continually emitting and absorbing gluons - The energy of the gluon can result in the
creation of quark-antiquark pairs - When close enough, these gluons and quarks can be
exchanged, producing the strong force
73Elementary Particles A Current View
- Scientists now believe there are three
classifications of truly elementary particles - Leptons
- Quarks
- Field particles
- These three particles are further classified as
fermions or bosons - Quarks and leptons are fermions
- Field particles are bosons
74Weak Force
- The weak force is believed to be mediated by the
W, W-, and Z0 bosons - These particles are said to have weak charge
- Therefore, each elementary particle can have
- Mass
- Electric charge
- Color charge
- Weak charge
- One or more of these charges may be zero
75Electroweak Theory
- The electroweak theory unifies electromagnetic
and weak interactions - The theory postulates that the weak and
electromagnetic interactions have the same
strength when the particles involved have very
high energies - Viewed as two different manifestations of a
single unifying electroweak interaction
76The Standard Model
- A combination of the electroweak theory and QCD
for the strong interaction form the standard
model - Essential ingredients of the standard model
- The strong force, mediated by gluons, holds the
quarks together to form composite particles - Leptons participate only in electromagnetic and
weak interactions - The electromagnetic force is mediated by photons
- The weak force is mediated by W and Z bosons
- The standard model does not yet include the
gravitational force
77The Standard Model Chart
78Mediator Masses
- Why does the photon have no mass while the W and
Z bosons do have mass? - Not answered by the Standard Model
- The difference in behavior between low and high
energies is called symmetry breaking - The Higgs boson has been proposed to account for
the masses - Large colliders are necessary to achieve the
energy needed to find the Higgs boson - In a collider, particles with equal masses and
equal kinetic energies, traveling in opposite
directions, collide head-on to produce the
required reaction
79Particle Paths After a Collision
80The Big Bang
- This theory states that the universe had a
beginning, and that it was so cataclysmic that it
is impossible to look back beyond it - Also, during the first few minutes after the
creation of the universe all four interactions
were unified - All matter was contained in a quark-gluon plasma
- As time increased and temperature decreased, the
forces broke apart
81A Brief History of the Universe
82Hubbles Law
- The Big Bang theory predicts that the universe is
expanding - Hubble claimed the whole universe is expanding
- Furthermore, the speeds at which galaxies are
receding from the earth is directly proportional
to their distance from us - This is called Hubbles Law
83Hubbles Law, cont
- Hubbles Law can be written as v H R
- H is called Hubbles constant
- H 17 x 10-3 m / s ly
84Remaining Questions About The Universe
- Will the universe expand forever?
- Today, astronomers are trying to determine the
rate of expansion - The universe seems to be expanding more slowly
than 1 billion years ago - It depends on the average mass density of the
universe compared to a critical density - The critical density is about 3 atoms / m3
- If the actual density is less than the critical
density, the expansion will slow, but still
continue - If the actual density is more than the critical
density, expansion will stop and contraction will
begin
85More Questions
- Missing mass in the universe
- The amount of non-luminous (dark) matter seems to
be much greater than what we can see - Various particles have been proposed to make up
this dark matter - Exotic particles such as axions, photinos and
superstring particles have been suggested - Neutrinos have also been suggested
- It is important to determine the mass of the
neutrino since it will affect predictions about
the future of the universe
86Another Question
- Is there mysterious energy in the universe?
- Observations have led to the idea that the
expansion of the universe is accelerating - To explain this acceleration, dark energy has
been proposed - It is energy possessed by the vacuum of space
- The dark energy results in an effective repulsive
force that causes the expansion rate to increase