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Chapter 31

Chapter 31. Particle Physics. Atoms 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.

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Chapter 31

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  1. Chapter 31 Particle Physics

  2. Atoms 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

  3. Discovery 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

  4. Elementary 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

  5. Fundamental 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

  6. Nuclear Force • Holds nucleons together • Strongest of all the fundamental forces • Very short-ranged • Less than 10-15 m • Negligible for separations greater than this

  7. Electromagnetic 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

  8. Weak 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

  9. Gravitational 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

  10. Explanation 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

  11. Forces and Mediating Particles

  12. Paul Adrian Maurice Dirac • 1902 – 1984 • Understanding of antimatter • Unification of quantum mechanics and relativity • Contributions of quantum physics and cosmology • Nobel Prize in 1933

  13. Antiparticles • Every particle has a corresponding antiparticle • From Dirac’s version of quantum mechanics that incorporated special relativity • An antiparticle has the same mass as the particle, but the opposite charge • The positron (electron’s 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

  14. Dirac’s 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

  15. Dirac’s 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

  16. Dirac’s 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 electron’s antiparticle is now called a positron

  17. Pair 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

  18. Pair 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

  19. Annihilation • 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

  20. Antimatter, 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

  21. Hideki 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

  22. Mesons • 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

  23. Mesons, 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 1930’s • Actually discovered multiple particles • Pi meson (pion) • Muon • Not a meson

  24. Pion • 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

  25. Muons • 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

  26. Richard 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

  27. Feynman 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

  28. Feynman 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

  29. The 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 photon’s excess energy is less than the uncertainty in its energy • The virtual photon can exist for short time intervals, such that ΔE » / 2Δt

  30. Feynman Diagram – Proton and Neutron (Yukawa’s 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

  31. Nucleon Interaction – More About Yukawa’s 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

  32. Nucleon 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

  33. Nuclear 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

  34. Feynman 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

  35. Classification 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

  36. Hadrons • 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

  37. Leptons • 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

  38. Leptons, 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

  39. Conservation 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

  40. Conservation 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

  41. Conservation 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

  42. Conservation 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

  43. Conservation 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

  44. Conservation 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

  45. Conservation 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

  46. Strange Particles • Some particles discovered in the 1950’s 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

  47. Strangeness • 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

  48. Bubble ChamberExample of Strange Particles • The dashed lines represent neutral particles • At the bottom, - + p  Λ0 + K0 Then Λ0  - + p and

  49. Creating 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

  50. Measuring 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 particle’s lifetime can be calculated from the length of its track and its speed

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