The Quantum Universe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Quantum Universe

Description:

The Quantum Universe – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:103
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 60
Provided by: johnwom
Category:
Tags: iaea | quantum | universe

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Quantum Universe


1
The Quantum Universe
  • John Womersley
  • Director of Particle Physics
  • Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK

2
What is the universe made of?
  • A very old question, and one that has been
    approached in many ways
  • The only reliable way to answer this question is
    by observation and direct enquiry of nature,
    through experiments
  • The scientific method is one of the greatest
    human inventions

3
The structure of matter
  • Centuries of experimentation and subsequent
    theoretical synthesis have led to an
    understanding of
  • Molecules, made of atoms electrons orbiting
    nuclei
  • Chemistry the interactions of these electrons
  • Nuclear physics nuclei made of protons and
    neutrons
  • Quarks the components of protons and neutrons
  • Culminates in what we call the Standard Model
  • A theory of matter and forces
  • A quantum field theory describing point-like
    matter particlesquarks and leptons which
    interact byexchanging force carrying
    particlesphotons, W and Z, gluons

4
So we understand what matter is made of,
then?Yes but there are two big problems.
First a problem with whats in the Standard
Model
5
a revolução está vindo!
6
the revolution is coming
  • The standard model makes precise and accurate
    predictions
  • It provides an understanding of what protons,
    neutrons, atoms, stars, you and me are made of
  • Its spectacular success in describing phenomena
    at energy scales below 1 TeV is based on
  • At least one unobserved ingredient
  • the Higgs Boson
  • Whose mass is unstable in quantum mechanics
  • requires additional new forces or particles to
    fix
  • And in any case has an energy density 1060 times
    too great to exist in the universe we live in
  • The way forward is through experiments at
    particle accelerators

7
Why accelerators?
  • Todays universe is cold and empty only the
    stable relics and leftovers of the big bang
    remain. The unstable particles have decayed away
    with time, and the symmetries that shaped the
    early universe have been broken as it has cooled.
  • But every kind of particle that ever existed is
    still there, in the quantum fluctuations of empty
    space. Empty space still knows about all the
    equations, all the symmetries that governed the
    formation of the universe.

8
  • We use particle accelerators to pump sufficient
    energy into a point in space to re-create the
    short-lived particles and uncover the forces and
    symmetries that existed in the earliest universe.
  • Accelerators, which were invented to study the
    structure of matter, are also tools to study the
    structure of space-time, the fabric of the
    universe itself
  • With current accelerators we are exploring the
    forces that governed the universe when it was
    about one trillionth of a second (one picosecond)
    old

9
Fermilab
10
  • Fermilabs Tevatron collider started operations
    in 1988
  • Run I 1992-95
  • Run II 2001-09 50 more data, increased
    energy

11
Detectors
CDF
D-Zero
  • Surround the collision points with arrays of
    instrumentation to intercept the particles
    produced
  • large (thousands of tons)
  • complex (many subsystems, 106 107 channels of
    electronics)
  • designed and built by collaborations of
    university and laboratory physicists

12
Tracker
Superconducting Magnet
protons
antiprotons
3 LayerMuon System
Electronics
13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
Proton-antiproton collisions
  • Proton beams can be accelerated to very high
    energies (good)
  • But the energy is shared among many constituents
    quarks and gluons (bad)
  • To select high-energy collisions look for
    outgoing particles produced with high momentum
    perpendicular to the beamline (transverse
    momentum)
  • Do this 2½ million times a second, as the
    collisions happen
  • triggering

Transverse momentum
16
Computer programs reconstruct the particle
trajectories and energies in each collision (each
event)
17
Displaced vertex tagging
  • The ability to identify b-type quarks is very
    important
  • signatures for the Higgs boson and many other
    interesting things
  • b quark forms a B-meson, travels 1mm before
    decaying

18
Silicon sensor
Wire bonds
Silicon sensor
HDI (flex circuit readout)
SVX2e readout chips
19
Measuring ladder position after insertion
Zeiss coordinate measuring machine at Fermilabs
Silicon Detector Facility
20
What do physicists actually do?
  • Design and build hardware
  • Detectors, electronics
  • Write software
  • Operate the detector
  • Interpret data
  • Present, refine, discuss our results among
    ourselves
  • Publish papers

21
The work of many peopleExample The DØ
detector was built and is operated by an
international collaboration of 670 physicists
from 80 universities and laboratories in 19
nationsgt 50 non-USA 120 graduate students
22
Second big problem whats not in the
Standard Model
23
Meanwhile, back in the universe
  • What shapes the cosmos?
  • Old answer the mass it contains, through gravity
  • But we now know
  • There is much more mass than wed expect from the
    stars we see, or from the amount of helium formed
    in the early universe
  • Dark matter
  • The velocity of distant galaxies shows there is
    some kind of energy driving the expansion of the
    universe, as well as mass slowing it down
  • Dark Energy
  • We do not know what 96 of the universe is made
    of!

24
Dont let the bright lights fool you The stars
are only a few percent of whats out there The
galaxies and the entire universe itself have been
shaped by invisible dark matter and dark
matter is not any of the standard model particles
we are familiar with
25
A Quantum Universe
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
1018 m
1026 m
26
A Quantum Universe
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
Quantum Field Theory (Standard Model)
Standard Cosmology Model
Consistent understanding?
1018 m
1026 m
27
WIMPs
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
Quantum Field Theory (Standard Model)
Standard Cosmology Model
Dark Matter
Consistent understanding?
?
28
  • Dark Matter ? low rate, small energy deposits
  • Very sensitive detectors
  • Well shielded
  • Underground to avoid cosmic rays

29
Boulby Underground facility
ZEPLIN II liquid xenon detector in shield and
associated gas system Interactions in the xenon
  • UK Dark Matter program
  • Designed and constructed a series of experiments
  • Currently commissioning the ZEPLIN II detector
    over half a mile underground
  • Uses Liquid Xenon to measure scintillation light
    and ionisation from dark matter

30
  • Intriguingly, dark matter points to the same
    place where the standard model starts to break
    down

31
WIMPs
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
Quantum Field Theory (Standard Model)
Standard Cosmology Model
Dark Matter
Supersymmetry
Consistent understanding?
?
32
What is this Supersymmetry?
  • A proposed enlargement of the standard model
  • We know all the particles have corresponding
    antiparticles
  • If supersymmetry is correct, they would also have
    new, but much more massive relatives called
    superpartners
  • Theoretically this is very nice
  • eliminates mathematical problems in standard
    model
  • allows unification of forces at much higher
    energies
  • provides a path to the incorporation of gravity
    and string theory
  • These nice properties come at a cost lots of new
    particles!
  • multiple Higgs bosons
  • squarks and gluinos, sleptons, charginos and
    neutralinos
  • their masses depend on unknown parameters
  • None of these particles has yet been seen but
    they are expected to be within reach of current
    accelerators
  • Lightest supersymmetric particle has all the
    right properties for cosmic dark matter

33
How would we make a discovery?
  • Standard model predicts how many events expected
    as a function of missing ET
  • Supersymmetry models modify this prediction
    more events expected
  • We found one very high missing-ET event in the
    first year of data
  • Will we find more?

34
Indirect searches for new particles
  • Measure the rate of the rare decay of Bs and Bd ?
    ????
  • In the Standard Model, cancellations lead to a
    very small decay probability
  • 3 ? 10-9 and 10-10
  • New particles (e.g. SUSY) contribute additional
    ways for this to happen, increase probability
  • up to 10-6

Mass of muon pairs
Carry out a blind analysis
  • Current best limits
  • Observe no events
  • Probability (Bs ? ????) lt 2 ? 10
  • Probability (Bd ? ????) lt 5 ? 10-8
  • Will keep getting better

35
Time to revisit the Higgs Boson
  • Photons of light and W and Z particles interact
    with the same strength
  • Electroweak unification
  • Yet while the universe (and this room) is filled
    with photons, the W and Z are massive and mediate
    a weak force inside atomic nuclei
  • Where does their mass come from?
  • This Higgs field has never been seen. Is this
    picture correct?
  • A question to be answered experimentally
  • One clear prediction there is a neutral particle
    which is a quantum excitation of the Higgs field
  • The Higgs boson

36
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
Quantum Field Theory (Standard Model)
Standard Cosmology Model
Dark Energy
Higgs Field
Consistent understanding?
37
Does there have to be a Higgs?
  • No one has seen this particle so why do we
    think it exists?
  • The W and Z have mass
  • Precision measurements of Top quark and W
    properties
  • Ultimate test WW scattering
  • probability becomes gt 1 as energy
    increases unless there is a Higgs
  • This is a real experiment cant have a
    nonsense answer
  • The Higgs doesnt have to be a single elementary
    particle.
  • But something has to play its role

q
W
X
W
q
38
(No Transcript)
39
(No Transcript)
40
Higgs searches
  • Current searches at the Tevatron are 20-100 times
    less sensitive than will be needed to find a
    Higgs
  • We will get a factor 20 more data, but by itself
    that wont be enough
  • Experiments are improving their techniques
  • should be able to say something interesting,
    provided the mass of the Higgs is low enough

41
The Top Quark
  • The top quark offers an indirect window on to the
    Higgs
  • Because it is the most massive particle known, it
    interacts most strongly with the Higgs
  • Precise measurements of the top mass can tell us
    about the Higgs mass
  • Measurements of the way the top quark is produced
    and how it decays may hint at new phenomena
    associated with the Higgs
  • The top is in principle just a very heavy quark
    so we can calculate its behavior in detail
  • Look for any surprises, anomalies

42
How to catch a Top quark
43
Top production
  • If the top is just a very heavy quark, we can
    precisely calculate its expected production rate
    (cross section) in proton-antiproton collisions

PLB 626, 35 (2005)
L230 pb-1
?1 secondary vertex tag
Expected Top Signal
Looks very much as expected
44
Top mass
  • Because its mass is so large, the top quark
    should decay very rapidly (yoctoseconds) into a W
    boson and a b quark the W decays even more
    rapidly into either two quarks or a lepton
    neutrino
  • The top mass can be reconstructed from the energy
    of the b and of the W decay products
  • It can be measured quite precisely at the 2-3
    level
  • In the Standard Model, the top mass W mass and
    Higgs are all related
  • Hence we can check if it is allconsistent yes,
    so far
  • And get an indirect measurementof the Higgs mass
  • Points to a rather light Higgs

45
How does top decay?
  • Does it really decay always to a W plus a
    b-quark?
  • Can test by using the silicon detector to
    identify b quarks
  • Distinguish b from?b by charge of particles seen
  • All consistent with SM
  • i.e. 100 top ? Wb
  • Does it decay to a W through the normal weak
    interaction?
  • Can test by measuring the angular distribution of
    the W decay
  • All consistent with standard weak decays

46
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
Quantum Field Theory (Standard Model)
Standard Cosmology Model
Quantum GravityInflation
SupersymmetryExtra Dimensions
Consistent understanding?
Superstrings!
47
What? Extra dimensions?
  • String theories predict that there are actually
    10 or 11 dimensions of space-time
  • The extra dimensions may be too small to be
    detectable at energies less than 1019 GeV
  • To a tightrope walker, the tightrope is
    one-dimensional he can only move forward or
    backward
  • But to an ant, the rope has an extra dimension
    the ant can travel around the rope as well

48
Detecting extra dimensions
  • If there are particles than can travel around the
    extra dimension(s), wed interpret this motion as
    being additional mass
  • If the dimension is small, the motion would be
    quantized
  • would look like a series of new, more massive
    relatives of a known particle
  • Kaluza-Klein modes
  • But what if none of the known particles can enter
    the extra dimension except for gravity?
  • We (the things we are made of) may be trapped on
    a (31)-dimensional brane the surface of a 10
    or 11 dimensional universe
  • This could explain why gravity seems so weak
  • Extra dimensions could be large even infinite
  • The energies required to see them could be much
    lower
  • within reach of current accelerators?

49
We are searching
  • Look for a Kaluza-Klein excitation of the
    graviton
  • Assumed to decay to two electrons or photons

Putative signal
data
  • Look for enhancement to the production of pairs
    of high energy photons or electrons
  • See no deviation from 31 dimensions
  • We can set limits on the size and properties of
    extra dimensions

50
Where do we go from here?
51
The Large Hadron Collider
14 TeV proton-proton collider at CERN
Magnets being installed
Over half the dipole magnets completed
First beam in 2007
52
The ATLAS and CMS detectors
CMS mid-2005
PbWO4 crystals
Final Barrel assembly at CERNSeptember 2005
ATLAS mid 2005
53
The International Linear Collider
  • Discoveries at the Tevatron or LHC will leave us
    more questions than answers
  • Have we really discovered the Higgs
  • Right quantum numbers?
  • Does it couple to mass?
  • Have we really discovered supersymmetry?
  • Superpartners have same properties as their
    partners?
  • Have we really discovered dark matter?
  • Does it have the right properties?
  • An electron-positron linear collider is the way
    to answer these questions

54
  • The ILC is a high priority for the US Department
    of Energy, provided it is affordable and
    scientifically justified
  • Seen as a fully international project
  • Northern Illinois (near Fermilab) is a candidate
    site
  • Just to show the scale

Fermilab site
US study version 47 km long
55
International Linear Collider
  • 500 GeV, upgradeable to 1 TeV
  • Accelerator technology chosen
  • Global design group established

Professor Barry BarishCaltech
  • Timeline
  • 12/05
  • Baseline configuration (done)
  • 12/06
  • Reference design report with cost estimate
  • 2008
  • Technical design report
  • 2010
  • Construction decision?

56
Conclusions
  • We have theory the standard model which
    makes precise and accurate predictions but which
    we know is incomplete
  • theoretically points to the Higgs boson (or
    something else)
  • experimentally dark matter and dark energy
  • By connecting experiments at particle
    accelerators and in underground labs with
    astronomical observations we can understand far
    more about the universe than from either approach
    alone
  • What is the cosmic dark matter? Is it leftovers
    of Supersymmetry?
  • Is the universe filled with energy? How does
    this relate to the Higgs field?
  • What is the structure of space and time? Are
    there extra dimensions?

57
The quantum universe is a wonderful
placePerhaps the most wonderful aspect is that
it is possible for us to understand it
58
Questions, comments
59
Particle Physics Experiments Accelerators Undergro
und
Astronomy Experiments Telescopes Satellites
Quantum Field Theory (Standard Model)
Standard Cosmology Model
Matter dominates
Small CP violationin quark decays
Consistent understanding?
Not really
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com