Title: The Standard Model of Particle Physics
1The Standard Model of Particle Physics
EM
STRONG
WEAK
2The Electric Force
In the old days, we believed that force was
transmitted more orless instantaneously by a
field of force.
Lines of force
The proton to the right is repelled by the
electric field created bythe one on the left
(electrical repulsion).
3The New Concept of Force
In the 1960s, a new theory of interactions was
developed.At the heart of it is the concept
that
Richard Feynman, 1918-19881965 Nobel Prize in
Physics
Forces are the result of the exchange of force
carriers between the two particles involved in
the interaction.
The force carrier of the electromagnetic force is
the photon (g)
4The Photon (g)
Property Value
Mass 0
Charge 0
- The photon is the mediator of the
electromagnetic interaction - The photon can only interact with objects which
have electric charge
5As we go through these slides,note that all
particles involved(other than the photon)carry
electrical charge!
6Electromagnetic Interaction (I)
e e- ? e e-(Annihilation)
7Electromagnetic Interaction (I)
e e- ? e e-(Annihilation)
e
e
e
e
g
e-
e-
e-
e-
8Electromagnetic Interaction (II)
e e- ? e e-(Compton
Scattering)
9Electromagnetic Interaction (II)
e e- ? e e-(Compton
Scattering)
e
e
e
e
e
e-
e-
e-
e-
e-
e-
10Electron-Pair Production
g ? e e-(or g Conversion)
11Electron-Pair Production
g ? e e-(or g Conversion)
e
e
e
g
g
e-
e-
e-
12Quark Pair Production
e e- ? q q
Note Two completely different particles in the
final state. Sincequarks have electric charge,
this can in fact happen!
13Quark Pair Production
e e- ? q q
e
q
q
q
g
e-
Note Two completely different particles in the
final state
14Quark Antiquark Annihilation
q q ? e e-
Note Reverse process to quark pair production!
15Quark Antiquark Annihilation
q q ? e e-
e
e
e
g
e-
e-
e-
Note Reverse process to quark pair production!
16Feynman Diagrams
- A great simplification which allows us to
represent these physical processes are
facilitated by Feynman Diagrams. - It turns out, they can also be used to calculate
the probability for the process to occur
(Beyond the scope of this module though). - We will use them more in a qualitative sense to
visualize various processes.
17Feynman Diagrams (Electron Scattering)
Position
time
18Photon Conversion and Emission
19More Feynman Diagrams
Quark PairProduction
q
e
- q can be any quark,as long as there isenough
energy to create2 of em!
g
e-
20Hmmm, Ive got a few question,Mister!
1. Where did you get the quarks and antiquarks in
the first place ? (Not at Wal-Mart, I can
assure you)!
21Where do we get quark and anti quarks from?
Hmmm
Introducing, thePROTON
And, antiquarks?
Introducing, thehumble antiparticleof the
proton, theANTIPROTON
22Proton-Antiproton Collisions
BOOM !
At high energies, the collisions actually occur
between the quarks in the protons and the
antiquarks in the antiproton! That is,
quark-antiquark collisions !
23OK, next question !
1. You said I could create any quark antiquark
pair, as long as there is enough energy to
create them. I dont get it !
24How much energy do I need to create
quark-antiquark pairs?
I will answer this by example
Suppose I collide an e- with E(e-)5 GeV and a
positron with E (e)5 GeV.
What is the total amount of energy available?A)
5 GeV B) 10 GeV C) 25 GeV
D) 0 GeV
5. If all this energy were to go into the mass of
a quark an antiquark, what is the maximum mass
quark you can create ? A) 10 GeV/c2
B) 5 GeV /c2 C) 2.5 GeV /c2 D) 0
25Summary of EM Interactions