1 / 15

The quest for the smallest particles.

The quest for the smallest particles. How research on elementary particles evolved during the last 40 years. 0. Introduction. World composed of all kinds of different materials Different properties CHAOS Try to order all these materials

Download Presentation

The quest for the smallest particles.

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. The quest for the smallest particles. How research on elementary particles evolved during the last 40 years.

  2. 0. Introduction. • World composed of all kinds of different materials • Different properties • CHAOS • Try to order all these materials • Look at the building blocks of these materials molecules HST 2001

  3. 1800: Millions of different materials are made of thousands of different molecules, in different combinations. How? CHEMISTRY • Look at the building blocks of these molecules atoms! • Different molecules due to different atoms • Mendeleev : elements ( different atoms) organized in his table. • The logic of the tabel is both chemical and physical HST 2001

  4. Different atoms due to different nuclei, which are built of protons and neutrons • Niels Bohr. • Neutron discovered in 1932 • Conservation laws lead to the existence of neutrinos and positrons. HST 2001

  5. Anderson: 1937, discovery of new particles in the higher atmosphere • Cosmic rays, high energy. • More and more « strange » particles. • CHAOS again! HST 2001

  6. Dealing with this chaos. • Many, many particles where discovered. • Accelerators were built to organize collisions to look at the properties of the outcoming particles • They were looking for some order. • First a posteriori attempt: HST 2001

  7. This scheme leads us again to building blocks on a deeper level: 3 quarks were needed at first: up, down en strange; later on they discovered more particles, with other properties, to order these too,... HST 2001

  8. they had to add 3 more quarks :top, bottom and charm. • This is an example of such a scheme • These particles are built of 3 quarks. I’ve been predicted by this scheme, and found later HST 2001

  9. How are the particles ordered now? Hadronen (q) Leptonen (no q) neutrinos e, µ,  e, µ,  mesons (2q) baryons (3q) spin 3/2 of 1/2 Each particle has an antimatter brother HST 2001

  10. HST 2001

  11. HST 2001

  12. But it is not that simple! • There must be a correspondance between the properties of the particles and the properties of quarks. • There are 3 families: why? • Why is there almost no antimatter found? • Why did mass appear at all? • How do these particles interact? HST 2001

  13. For example: HST 2001

  14. Quantum chromo dynamics , QCD, is called the discipline that is doing research to give the answers Questions: • How do these quarks glue together to form protons, neutrons and other particles? • Why are there only particles with 2 or 3 quarks and not more? • Are quarks built of even smaller particles? • ... HST 2001

  15. Scale. • So let’s have one more look at the scales at which we are working: HST 2001

More Related