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«  The incredible progresses of particle physics and cosmology »

«  The incredible progresses of particle physics and cosmology ». Does our knowledge of the laws of microscopic physics help us to understand the universe at large?. P. Binétruy AstroParticule et Cosmologie, Paris. XII International Workshop on « Neutrino Telescopes »

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«  The incredible progresses of particle physics and cosmology »

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  1. « The incredible progresses of particle physics and cosmology » Does our knowledge of the laws of microscopic physics help us to understand the universe at large? P. Binétruy AstroParticule et Cosmologie, Paris XII International Workshop on « Neutrino Telescopes » Venezia, Palzzo Franchetti, 9 March 2007

  2. A microscopic world almost fully explored (in as much as it is known)

  3. All ingredients of the Standard Model as we know it have been understood and confirmed except for the Higgs

  4. All observations on quark mixing are consistent with a single CP-violating phase 

  5. Neutrinos : most of the MNSP mixing matrix is known Atmos. neutrinos Solar neutrinos

  6. Remaining unexplained : • mass hierarchies, i.e. a theory of Yukawa couplings Horizontal symmetries? • strong CP-violating phase i.e.  < 10-9

  7. A universe at large which remains largely unexplained in the context of the Standard Model : • dark matter • acceleration of the universe • matter-antimatter antisymmetry

  8. Dark matter Galaxy rotation curves Lensing

  9. New particles may be valuable candidates 25 109 GeV-1 xf  h2 ~ g*1/2 MP < ann v> Number of deg. of freedom at time of decoupling   h2 ~ 1 mass ~ MEW < ann v>~  EW/MEW2 to be compared with dark h2 = 0.112  0.009 Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (absent in SM)

  10. Recent acceleration of the Universe Supernovae (Sn Ia) : Hubble plot : magnitude vs redshift astro-ph/0402512

  11. Matter-antimatter asymmetry No working astrophysical model • From the point of view of fundamental physics, 3 necessary • ingredients (Sakharov) : • CP violation  • B violation  • out of equilibrium  first order phase transition • mHiggs > 72 GeV 

  12. Will the theories of the microscopic world allow us to understand better the Universe at large?

  13. NO : the vacuum energy (cosmological constant) problem Classically, the vacuum energy is not measurable. Only differences of energy are (e.g. Casimir effect). Einstein equations: R - R g/2 = 8G T geometry energy Hence geometry may provide a way to measure absolute energies e.g. vacuum energy:

  14. R - R g/2 = 8G T +  g   ~ 0.7 ~ 1  -1/2 ~ H0 -1 =10 26 m size of the presently visible universe A very natural value for an astrophysicist ! A high energy theorist would compute the vacuum energy and find -1/2 ~ MW -1~ 10 -18 m electroweak scale or -1/2 ~ mP-1~ 10 -34 m Planck scale Related questions : why now? why is our Universe so large, so old?

  15. Will the theories of the microscopic world allow us to understand better the Universe at large? YES : the example of dark matter

  16. Connecting the naturalness of the electroweak scale with the existence of WIMPs naturalness 3mt2 22v2 6MW2 + 3MZ2 8 2v2 3mh2 8 2v2 mh2 = t2 - g2 - h2 v = 250 GeV |mh2 | < mh2 Naturalness condition : Introduce new physics at t (supersymmetry, extra dimensions,…) or raise mh to 400 GeV range

  17. stable particles in the MEW mass range E New local symmetry Standard Model fermions New fields

  18. stable particles in the MEW mass range E New local symmetry Lightest odd-parity particle is stable New discrete symmetry Standard Model fermions New fields

  19. Example : low energy SUSY E R symmetry Stable LSP R parity Standard Model fermions Supersymmetric partners

  20. Clowe, Randall, Markevitch Bullet proof astro-ph/0611496 Ordinary matter X-rays (Chandra) Dark matter Gravitational lensing

  21. Going beyond : what might the infinitely small tell us in the future about the infinitely large? • discovery of scalar particles • discovery of WIMPs • (discovery of extra dimensions)

  22. Fundamental scalar fields The discovery of the Higgs would provide the first fundamental scalar particle. Scalars are the best remedy to cure cosmological problems: Inflation, dark energy, compactification radius stabilization… Scalars tend to resist gravitational clustering and thus may provide a diffuse background Speed of sound cs2 = p/ ~ c2

  23. Can we hope to test the dark energy idea at colliders? Most popular models based on scalar fields (quintessence) :  has to be very light : m ~ H0~ 10-33 eV V  • exchange would provide a long range force :  has to be extremely weakly coupled to matter HOPELESS FOR COLLIDERS

  24. Dark matter: search of WIMPs at LHC missing energy signal Produced in pair : difficult to reconstruct, in the absence of a specific model

  25. search through direct detection e.g. minimal sugra model

  26. Going beyond : what might the infinitely large tell us in the future about the infinitely small? • cosmological data and neutrino masses • gravitational waves and the electroweak phase transition • high energy cosmic rays and extra dimensions

  27. Testing the scale of (lepton) flavour violations Cosmology  =m /(92.5eV) Baryon asymmetry Neutrino masses m = MEW2 / MF Flavor physics MF ~ 1010 GeV ? Flavour violations Colliders

  28. astro-ph/0310723 baryonh2 darkh2 fraction of  in dark matter WMAP 3 yr: astro-ph/0603449  mi SDSS WMAP

  29. Electroweak phase transition and gravitational waves If the transition is first order, nucleation of true vacuum bubbles inside the false vacuum Collision of bubbles  production of gravitational waves

  30. Pros and cons for a 1st order phase transition at the Terascale: • in the Standard Model, requires mh < 72 GeV (ruled out) • MSSM requires too light a stop but generic in NMSSM • possible to recover a strong 1st order transition by including H6 terms • in SM potential • other symmetries than SU(2)xU(1) at the Terascale (baryogenesis)

  31. . Gravitons of frequency fproduced at temperature Tare observed at a redshifted frequency 1/6 f = 1.65 10-7 Hz --- ( ----- ) ( ---- ) 1 T g  1GeV 100 At production  =  H-1 Horizon length Wavelength g is the number of degrees of freedom

  32. LF band0.1 mHz - 1 Hz Gravitational wave detection Gravitational wave amplitude VIRGO

  33. LF band0.1 mHz - 1 Hz Gravitational wave amplitude VIRGO T in GeV 10 3 10 6 10 9

  34. LF band0.1 mHz - 1 Hz Electroweak breaking scale VIRGO T in GeV 10 3 10 6 10 9

  35. LISA launch > 2015 ESA/NASA mission Three satellites forming a triangle of 5 million km sides

  36. High energy cosmic rays and extra dimensions Black holes Extra dimensions

  37. More than 3 dimensions to our space? Why ask? • Unification of gravity with the other interactions seems to require it : • unification electromagnetism-gravity (Kaluza 1921-Klein 1926) • unification of string theory (>1970) For a theory in D=4+n dimensions with n dimensions compactified on a circle of radius R : mPl2 = MD2+n Rn MD fundamental scale of gravity in D dimensions

  38. matter If MD ~ 1 TeV, possible to produce black holes gravity gauge inter. Relevant scale for a black hole of mass MH is Schwarzschild radius: 1/1+n 1 MBH ( ) rS ~ ----- -------- MD MD Thorne: a black hole forms in a 2-particle collision if the impact parameter is smaller than rS.  ~  rS2

  39. Hawking evaporation of the BH caracterized by the temperature n+1 TH = _______ 4 rS 3+n/1+n MBH 1 ( ) BH~ ----- -------- dE / dt  TH4+n gives MD MD • BH decays visibly to SM particles: • large multiplicity N ~MBH / (2TH) • large total transverse energy • characterisitic ratio of hadronic to leptonic activity of 5:1

  40. Search for BH formation in high energy cosmic ray events Look for BH production by neutrinos in order to overcome the QCD background:  horizontal showers

  41.  ( N  BH) for n=1 to 7 and MD = 1 TeV •  N  BH  MD-2(2+n)/(1+n) n=1 SM ( N  l X) Anchordoqui, Feng, Goldberg, Shapere hep-th/0307228

  42. hep-ph/0206072

  43. Includes inelasticity : MBH ≠ s n=6 Auger : bkgd of 2SM  + 10 hadronic evts xmin = MBHmin/MD MBHmin smallest BH mass for which we trust the semi-classical approximation. hep-ph/0311365

  44. Does our knowledge of the laws of microscopic physics help us to understand the universe at large?

  45. Three and a half scenarios : • The orthodox scenario : discovery of supersymmetry at LHC • Pros : light Higgs • Cons : too orthodox • This would confirm the general features of the « fundamental » • universe as we understand it : role of scalars, nature of dark matter, • string theory probable quantum theory of gravity… • The standard scenario : discovery only of the Higgs • Pros : minimal • Cons : too standard, mass hierachies not addressed • This might be the end of large colliders. Only way of doing high • energy physics might be through neutrinos and astroparticles

  46. The radical scenario : discovery of large extra dimensions • Pros : new ways of breaking symmetries • Cons : why large? • Revolutionize our perspectives on the Universe. String theory • probable quantum theory of gravity. BH production may • overcome any future collider signatures. • The favourite scenario: discovery of something unexpected

  47. In any case, particles will provide a new way of studying the Universe Ideally, one would like to study the same source (*) by detecting the gravitational waves, neutrinos, hadrons and photons emitted : • gravitational waves give information on the bulk motion of • matter in energetic processes (e.g. coalescence of black holes) • high energy photons trace populations of accelerated particules, • as well as dark matter annihilation • protons provide information on the cosmic accelerators that have • produced them • neutrinos give information on the deepest zones, opaque to • photons (e.g. on the origin --hadronic or electromagnetic-- of ). (*) Applies also to the primordial universe!

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