Introduction to Modern Physics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Introduction to Modern Physics

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Title: Introduction to Modern Physics


1
Introduction to Modern Physics
A (mainly) historical perspective on - atomic
physics - nuclear physics - particle physics
2
Start of Modern Physics
Electron discovery 1897 Atomic
Physics Nuclear Physics Particle
Physics STANDARD MODEL ?? Theory of Everything
??
A modest goal !
3
A lesson from history!!
At the end of the 19th century CLASSICAL
PHYSICS Mechanics Newton 1687 Electromagnetism
Maxwell 1848 Plusa few loose ends!! The End
of Physics ??
4
Thenattempt to predict Blackbody Radiation
DISASTER !!
Electromagnetic radiation
5
Electromagnetic Radiation
6
Electromagnetic Radiation
7
c ? f
Frequency vibrations/second
Speed of light 3 x 108 meter/second or 30cm (1
foot) per nanosecond
Wavelength (meter)
8
Theories of Blackbody Radiation
Classical disaster !
Quantum solution
9
Plancks Quantum Theory
I(?,T) ?-5 / (ehc/?kT - 1)
The oscillators in the walls can only have
certain energies NOT continuous!
10
About the same time the electron was
discovered.
11
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12
So about 100 years ago people believed in the
existence of atoms - electron is part
of an atom? - atoms emit radiation
strangely? - what else is in an atom?
- atoms emit electromagnetic waves?
13
Then 1905 !! Einsteins Miraculous Year - to
be celebrated this year as the Year of Physics
http//www.wyp2005.org/
http//www.einsteinyear.org/
14
Example
15
The Photoelectric Effect
Light tiny particles!
Wave theory takes too long to get enough
energy to eject electrons Particle theory energy
is concentrated in packets -gt efficiently ejects
electrons!
16
An application of the photoelectric effect
17
So matter contains electrons and light can be
emitted in chunks so what does this tell us
about atoms??
Possible models of the atom
Which one is correct?
18
The Rutherford Experiment
Electric potential V(r) 1/r
19
The correct model of the atom
but beware of simple images!
20
Probability of finding electrons in a hydrogen
atom
Results from quantum theory
21
Atomic signatures
Rarefied gas
Only discrete lines!
22
How atomic light emmision works
A photon!
23
But why dont all our atoms collapse??!!
24
if waves can be particles, perhaps particles
can be waves
? h/mv
SELF DESTRUCTS!
OK !
25
Electrons as waves an application
A GEM foil
26
1920s Full description of atomic behavior -gt
Quantum Mechanics
Weird stuff!!
Ghosts!??
27
so things get fuzzy at the atomic/quantum
level in fact we can no longer be certain of
anything!
?x ? (wavelength)
?p h/?
(?x) (?p) h
Heisenbergs Uncertainty Principle
28
On to the Nucleus 1930s
Existence of protons Rutherford/neutral atoms
1932 Chadwick discovers the neutron
29
Note the relative scales!
Nucleus baseball
Atom city
30
Nucleus
Atomic mass number
A
X
Nuclide
Z
Atomic number
e.g. Uranium-235
235
U
92
31
A N Z
so normally N gt Z
32
The most important graph in all of science
Why there are stable nuclei
Why the Sun shines
33
Why dont nuclei fall apart??
Two Protons


Repel

No charge
No charge
No charge
No charge
34
So there MUST be a NEW FORCE
The Strong Nuclear Force
Pions Gluons more later!
35
Nuclei can also decay
Alpha decay e.g.
Alpha particle
Beta decay n -gt p e ?
Gamma decay e.g.
36
Applications of Nuclear Physics
Fission
limitless energy ??
Fusion
37
Applications of Nuclear Physics
e
e- -gt 2?
PET
MRI
38
Or
39
But still open questions remain Whats
inside a proton/neutron? What causes Beta
decay? What other elementary particles
exist? What other forces exist? Why is
the proton mass 1800x the electron mass?
Where does mass come from?
40
Introduction to High Energy Physics Research (or
how to chase quarks and get paid for it)
41
Structure of Matter
Matter
Molecule
Atom
Nucleus
Quark
Baryon
(Hadron)
u
10-14m
cm
10-10m
10-15m
10-9m
lt10-19m
protons, neutrons, mesons, etc. p,W,L...
top, bottom, charm, strange, up, down
Chemistry
Atomic Physics
Nuclear Physics
Electron
Mass
(Lepton)
proton 1 GeV/c2
lt10-18m
High Energy Physics
42
How do we DO Particle Physics
Use collisions of elementary particles!
?
43
Definition Study of matter and forces at the
most fundamental level Why HEP? Investment in
basic research has always returned major economic
dividends. 50 GNP related to modern
physics - must keep up flow of new knowledge
or economy/society will stagnate.
?
44
History of Particle Physics
Nuclear Physics
Atomic Physics
Quantum Mechanics
Relativity
Particle Physics
45
Ingredients -gt discovering particles e, p,
n, ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? -gt understanding properties
of interactions Electromagnetic ? e
scattering Weak nuclear neutron decay
Strong nuclear proton-antiproton scattering
(Gravity ??) -gt Finding -gt Combining forces
e.m. weak ? strong ?? gravity ???
patterns
46
How do we do particle physics?
Theory
Experiment
Phenomenology
A constant interplay of ideas/experiment
47
Start of Modern Physics
Electron discovery 1897 Atomic
Physics Nuclear Physics Particle
Physics STANDARD MODEL ?? Theory of Everything
??
A modest goal !
48
What do we know now (2004)?
49
A question of Scales Planck scale 10-35
Quarks ? 10-19 m Nucleus 10-14 m
Atom 10-10 m You
1.5m Collider detector 10 m
Accelerator 104 m
50
Early Particle timeline
I am born
My career starts!
51
The recent particle timeline
Revolution!
What next??
52
Pacific Ocean
I280 Junipero Sierra Freeway
2-mile accelerator
Part of Stanford University
53
The Mark I detector where the charm quark was
discovered and a Nobel Prize was won
54
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55
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56
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57
Fermilab - Chicago
58
We have seen that the Standard Model covers a
wide range of phenomena and explains them
well. BUT - no means of generating mass -
matter asymmetry - dark matter - how is
electroweak symmetry broken? - are quarks
composite?
59
Famous scientist as the Higgs
60
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61
Supersymmetry
62
Do all forces become one at high energy??
63
UTA and Particle Physics
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