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Lecture 3: The Standard Model

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Lecture 3: The Standard Model

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    1. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 1 Lecture 3: The Standard Model The fundamental model for elementary particles. Point Particles not strings ! No gravity ! What are the 3 families of particles? Whats a Boson, Fermion, Lepton and quark? Is Nature Supersymmetric? What are Higgs particles?? Monopoles???

    2. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 2

    3. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 3 Electrons & muons & Taus oh my. Welcome to the particle ZOO. The standard model is a good theory for the constituents of matter. Almost all the particles predicted have been found experimentally. It is fairly simple, and explains hundreds of particles and their complex interactions with only 6 quarks, 6 leptons and a few force carrying particles. (Double with SUSY.)

    4. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 4 What are the 3 families of particles?

    5. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 5 Details Details ??

    6. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 6 Hadrons, Baryons & Mesons

    7. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 7 Bosons and Fermions A Boson is a particle with integer spin. A photon has spin 1. So does a gluon and W, Z particles. Do not obey the Pauli exclusion principle, obey Bose-Einstein statistics. (eg. Vector bosons are often force carriers. Not Higgs boson though, Higgs Boson has spin =0) A Fermion is a particle with odd integer spin. An electron has spin . Also protons and neutrons all matter particles in fact. Obey Pauli exclusion principle and Fermi-Dirac statistics.

    8. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 8 Leptons and Quarks Leptons and quarks are supposedly indivisible particles. Leptons (Electrons, Muons, Taus, neutrinos & their antiparticles) are stand-alone particles and can be observed in the wild, err naked. Quarks can only be found inside other particles, like Protons and Neutrons (in 3s) and Mesons (in 2s, quark +anti-quark).

    9. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 9 Quarks and Anti-Quarks Baryons and Mesons are colorless.

    10. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 10 What are Protons and Neutrons made of ? What is isotopic spin symmetry? Quarks have both electric and color charge Color charges: Red, green & blue {1,2,3} And Flavors: { u d c s t b } yummy

    11. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 11 Quantum Chromodynamics QCD. Gluons have both color and anti-color, 9 varieties but 1 combination is white which is not allowed which leaves 8 types of gluon.

    12. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 12 A Physicists drawing of the same process; using an up quark.

    13. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 13 When gluons interact with each other You get a GLUEBALL !!

    14. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 14 From QED to U(1) + SU(2) & SU(3) Extension of the local U(1) symmetry of QED to include QCD SU(3), was done by Yang and Mills in 1954. Electroweak theory proven 1983. Larger symmetries involve non-commuting algebra (non-Abelian, ie. AxB is not BxA.) Now called Yang-Mills theories. U(1) gauge symmetry refers to Local phase invariance. (A 1/2 wave plate in front of 1 slit, in a 2 slit interference experiment, is like AB-effect, introduce a B-field between the slits.) U(3) refers to 3 colors, red green blue in QCD. Yang-Mills gauge symmetry U(2) involves isotopic spin which is the interchange of protons and neutrons in the nucleus.

    15. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 15 Higgs Boson adds particle mass These spin-less force particles give other particles their mass. The addition of the Higgs field (a field implies there are associated force particles) again helps to renormalize the theory.. gets rid of infinities. Axions may represent yet another field, with much lighter particles. OK OK too many details

    16. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 16 Renormalized electroweak theory: Weinberg-Salam-Glashow model confirmed, CERN 1983. Heavy W+ W- and Z particles found

    17. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 17 What about Super-symmetry? In order to remove infinities in the theory fermions should transform into bosons and vice versa. (This is a natural consequence of string theory!!) Each particle is predicted to have a super-partner called a sparticle. The partner for the electron (fermion) is the selectron (boson), for photon is photino etc. Each differs from its partner by spin . (More about this in the next lecture)

    18. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 18 Hunting for monopoles Maxwells equations are more symmetric with monopoles. (write on board) GUT requires their existence Monopoles have not been found yet, because they are very massive and rare.

    19. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 19 Where do we stand with the TOE?

    20. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 20 Standard Model Draw-backs A unified theory would consist of a mathematical framework in which all the forces and particles occur naturally. The masses and interaction strengths should be predicted by the theory not input as experimental parameters. Gravity should be included, and it is NOT in the standard model.

    21. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 21 Reading Material: for the quiz Just kidding about the quiz! http://particleadventure.org/particleadventure/index.html Superheavy Magnetic Monopoles Sci. Amer. April p.106 (1982). The search for proton decay Sci. Amer. p.54 June (1985). Is Nature Supersymmetric Sci. Amer. p.52 June (1986) The Higgs Boson Scientific American p.76 Nov (1986) The theory formerly known as Strings Sci. Amer. p.64 June (1998). Gauge theories of the forces between elementary particles, by Gerard t Hooft Sci. Amer., June (1980). Particle Physics: A Los Alamos Primer, Ed. by N. G. Cooper and G. B. West, Cambrige U. Press, 1988. Introduction to Elementary particles, by David Griffiths, Wiley 1987. THE 2 LAST BOOKS ARE EXCELLENT QM and E&M by Griffiths are also excellent!! And I strongly recommend them to students.

    22. Dr. H. Fearn CSUF Physics 22 THE END See you Feb 23rd Lecture 4: Strings and things

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