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Recreating the Big Bang with the World’s Largest Machine

Discover the fascinating world of particle physics and the construction of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. Explore the building blocks of matter, the mysteries of antimatter and dark matter, and the search for the Higgs particle.

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Recreating the Big Bang with the World’s Largest Machine

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  1. Recreating the Big Bang with the World’s Largest Machine Dr Paul Newman Particle Physics Group The University of Birmingham Admissions Talk 2nd December 2008

  2. Somewhere in Switzerland… Situated on the Swiss-French border, near Geneva Is the World’s largest physics laboratory

  3. French Alps Geneva CERN Deep underground, they are building the World’s largest machine The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Which will accelerate sub-atomic particles to 0.999999991 the speed of light ….

  4. ALICE Large Hadron Collider …. and collide them together in four cathedral-sized caverns around the 27 km ring. Creating sub-atomic explosions, and conditions that existed less than a billionth of a second after the Big Bang. In massive particle detectors 600 million times per second

  5. The LHC WHY? HOW? Let’s start at the beginning…..

  6. in metres Building Blocks of Matter We know • All matter around us is made of atoms. • Atoms consist of a positive nucleus (containing 99.98% of the atom’s mass) and a cloud of electrons. • Nuclei consist of protons and neutrons. • The protons and neutrons are made of three quarks.

  7. Neutron Proton -1/3 -1/3 +2/3 +2/3 d d U U +2/3 -1/3 U d Elementary Particles • Protons and neutrons are made from two types of quarks: Up (u) and Down (d). • u-quarks have electric charge +2/3 while d-quarks have charge –1/3 (electron has electric charge -1 in these units).

  8. Family of Particles So, there is a family of particles: Up quark (u) Down quark (d) Electron (e-) Electron neutrino (e) Mass ~ 0.003 ~ 0.006 = 0.0005 < 10-8 ? (relative to the mass of a single proton) Everything around us (the whole Periodic Table) is made up of these four particles. So, that’s nice and simple then!

  9. We don’t know why! BUT…. Nature supplies us with two extra families that are very much heavier: charm top up quarks down strange bottom e   leptons  e 

  10. The Standard Model } c t u quarks s b d }   e leptons   e

  11. The Weak Force } c t u quarks s b d }   e leptons   e W+ W- Z0

  12. The Electromagnetic Force } c t u quarks s b d }   e leptons    e Photon

  13. The Strong Force } c t u quarks s b d }   e leptons   g e gluon Gravity too weak to even consider an the atomic scale

  14. u-2/3 Antimatter • Every fundamental particle has its antiparticle. • These have the same mass but opposite charge. e+ e- positron electron up quark u+2/3 up anti-quark Etc.

  15. u-2/3 Boom Antimatter • If a particle and antiparticle each of mass, m collide they annihilate with the production of energy, E in the form of radiation – the total mass (2m) is converted into energy). • E = 2mc2 (using the famous equation: E = mc2) u+2/3 • The opposite is also true; given enough energy, one can create matter with equal amounts of antimatter.

  16. Big Bang • So far, our experiments show that equal amounts of matter and anti-matter are produced when energy is converted into matter – for every up quark created, an up anti-quark is also created etc. • So, equal amounts of matter and anti-matter should have been created during the Big Bang. • But we live in a universe made from matter. • Where did all the anti-matter go?

  17. Dark Matter The visible Universe (made from u, d, e, ) only accounts for about 4% of its measured mass. What makes up the rest?

  18. Other Questions – What is Mass? In the mid 1960s, British physicist Peter Higgs came up with a theory on why some particles have mass. He proposed a new heavy particle, now called the Higgs, which generates a Higgs field. Particles who ‘feel’ this field gain mass. Light particle don’t feel this field strongly, heavy particles do.

  19. Higgs • Mass is really a measure of how difficult it is to accelerate an object (F=ma). • The heavier it is, the more force is needed to accelerate it. • The Higgs field makes it more difficult for particles to be accelerated thus giving them mass. • It’s a bit like walking through treacle! Just one problem with the theory … We haven’t seen the Higgs yet.

  20. Many More Questions … What is mass? What about gravity? How many dimensions? Where did all the antimatter go? 4 forces? 12 matter particles? Why no free quarks? Mini black holes? What about the other 96% of the universe …..

  21. How do we find answers? ….….powerful particle accelerators

  22. LHC Tunnel Now, being commissioned

  23. LHC - Facts • 27 km circumference • Each proton goes around the 27km ring over 11,000 times a second. • Energy of proton beam in LHC > 0.3 GJ (family car travelling at 1000 mph) • Energy stored in magnets > 1 GJ • Super-conducting magnets cooled to ~ 1.9 K(colder than Outer Space).

  24. Detecting Particles Used Bubble Chambers in the old days • Only 1 event / second • Photos scanned by hand • No selection on events

  25. ATLAS Detector (one of the four main LHC detectors) Modern Detectors

  26. Summary • Particle physics has discovered much about how the Universe works • Still many outstanding questions • The World’s largest machine (LHC) will add to this knowledge • Huge challenges ahead • But LHC will find new & exciting physics • We will learn more about the very early Universe • Birmingham will play an important role in this. • Thank you for listening.

  27. Particle Physics Spin-offs Education Research Medical Imaging For every £10 spent on NHS, only 1p is spent on particle physics. No, PET scanners, no MRS scans, no cancer killing particle beams etc. without particle physics Computing Technology

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