1 / 37

Fundamental physics in our time Gerhard Schäfer Institute of Theoretical Physics

Fundamental physics in our time Gerhard Schäfer Institute of Theoretical Physics. from quantum to cosmos(2), bremen, june 10 - 13, 2007. from quantum to cosmos. In 1968 J. Schwinger formulated empirical scaling laws that interconnect the cosmos, the laboratory, and the atoms

moral
Télécharger la présentation

Fundamental physics in our time Gerhard Schäfer Institute of Theoretical Physics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fundamental physics in our timeGerhard SchäferInstitute of Theoretical Physics from quantum to cosmos(2), bremen, june 10 - 13, 2007

  2. from quantum to cosmos In 1968 J. Schwinger formulated empirical scaling laws that interconnect the cosmos, the laboratory, and the atoms , Does the quantum stabilize the cosmos?

  3. from quantum to cosmos empirical law (Zel`dovich 1967/68):

  4. goals of fundamental physics (FP) • FP is exploring the basic aspects of Nature • Space and time • Particles and fields • FP aims at • Finding more comprehensive concepts and laws • Testing the existing ones • Resolving basic inconsistencies • FP includes • Unification of the fundamental forces • Discovery of new particles and fields • Test of GR and of the equivalence principle • Verification and exploration of black holes • Detection and observation of gravitational waves

  5. current problems in FP Mathematical problems • Grav. waves astrophysics • Global aspects of spacetime • Unification of all forces • Phase transitions Conceptual problems • Dark Energy & Dark Matter • Big Bang & Inflation • Black Holes • Irreversibility of phys. proc. Experimental problems • Gravitational Waves • Black Holes • Big Bang & Inflation • Dark Energy & Dark Matter Need for Space Missions

  6. Why missions in space? • Space conditions • Infinitely long gravity-free environment • Large gravitational potential differences • Large velocity differences • Quiet environment • Straight view to the Universe

  7. frame theories • Special RelativityEinstein 1905 • General RelativityEinstein 1915 • Quantum Theory Heisenberg 1925Schrödinger 1926Dirac 1927 non-relativistic relativistic

  8. special relativity (SR) • Fundamental principle: constancy of speed of light c = universal constant • Unification of space and time: spacetime • Poincare´ group; causality cone • Proper time and action

  9. universally constant general relativity (GR) • Fundamental principle: Equivalence Principle • Unification of inertia and gravity: curved spacetime • Group of coordinate transformations; horizons • Proper time and spacetime metric

  10. quantum theory (QT) • Fundamental principle: Superposition Principle • Unification of particles and waves: probability amplitudes • Unitary group; coherence • Antimatter

  11. Spin in SR & GR & QT • SR: min. transvers. extension of body with massm and spin S • GR: radius of ring singularity of Kerr BH • QT: Compton wavelength • QT: transversal extension of massless particle

  12. dynamical theories • electrodynamics [U(1)]: photon quarks, leptons (charged) infinite range • weak int. th. [SU(2)]: Z-, W-bosons quarks, leptons • chromodynamics [SU(3)]: gluon quarks • U(1) x SU(2) - unified theory [Higgs boson] • GR [GL(4)]: gravitation infinite range

  13. from microphysics to macrophysics • Transition from coherence to incoherence • Transition from time to temperature: • Arrow of time: • No quantization of time: negative prob.

  14. GR and the quantum • Unification of gravity with electro-weak and strong interaction • Observation: General Relativity • is effective theory (low-energy limit): : vacuum-expectation valueof fundamental field at present epoch • - term is of vacuum-energy type with pressure

  15. GR and the quantum • Unification-Ansatze: String and brane theories in higher-dimensional spacetimes with non-trivial topologies • However, the effective cosmological constant is infinitesimal by particle-physics standards • Quintessence scenarios

  16. B B B A A B A A t cosmology • Curvature • Hubble parameter • Deceleration parameter

  17. cosmology

  18. Energy and Matter in the Universe accelerated expansion at present epoch

  19. inflation area

  20. inflation - inflaton • action of massive scalar field • action of 3-dimensional spaces (space-slices)

  21. `´square root`´ of GR • square root of metric: tetrad field invariance group: local Lorentz group [S0(3,1),SL(2,C)] • connection to SUSY (unification of fermions and bosons)

  22. string theory • action of point particle (m = m[i] = m[pg] = m[ag]) • action of global part of 3-dimensional spaces • action of string

  23. Univ. free fall • Lorentz invariance • Univ. grav. red shift • Constancy of fund. const. Einstein‘s Equivalence Principle metric gravity Einstein field eqn Grav. field Matter Geodetic eqn the structure of gravity • Foundations of GR

  24. equivalence principle (EP) • Why testing the EP in Space? • The EP is deduced from experimental facts by `infinite‘ extrapolation. • Present fundamental physics framework is incomplete. • The most sensitive low-energy tests of new, gravity-related theories are those involving the EP. • There exist theoretical models which predict a violation of the EP at a level that is smaller than the presently tested level of about 10-13 but could be within reach of a Space experiment.

  25. universality of free fall g • Action of point mass: • Violation of EP: fundamental field • Acceleration of mass 1: • cosmological value

  26. test of EP – the concept • Why testing the EP in Space?

  27. Metric gravity the structure of gravity • Framework: PPN-formalism (variable G included)

  28. the structure of gravity • Non-cosmological effects of the gravitational field • Perihelion shift • Deflection of light • Grav. redshift • Time delay • Gravitomagnetism • Gravitational waves • Black holes

  29. the binary pulsar • Hulse-Taylor pulsar (PSR B1913 + 16)

  30. polarization of gravit. wave in GR

  31. gravitational wave detectors in space • Fundamental Physics with gravitational-wave detectorsin space • Gravitational waves • Black holes/strong-field GR • direct confirmation of existence of Black Holes • Measurement of Lense-Thirring effect better than 1% • Cosmological background: • Direct signature of cosmic strings and/or inflation • Observation of conditions close to Big Bang • Measurement of total density of the Universe,determination of all dark matter

  32. black holes Schwarzschild radiusHorizon

  33. Einstein-Rosen bridge

  34. Schwarzschild geometry

  35. GR and the quantum W. Israel in 2003: You can pick anyone off the street and say `Einstein´. They will at once write . But if you ask what this formula means, the response will be quite different. At best, you may get some mumbling about `atomic bomb´. It is sobbering that after a quarter-century we are in a hardly better position regarding the formula

  36. missions & main FP objectives ASTROD, Bepi-Col., Gaia, LATOR, Cassini, GP-B, LAGEOS: PPN-metric ACES/PHARAO: PPN-metric, foundations of GR GG, MICROSCOPE, POEM, STEP: equivalence principle LISA: gravitational waves, black holes, big bang Constellation-X:black holes, dark matter Planck: dark matter, dark energy GAUGE: unification of forces

More Related