Particle Physics
Particle Physics
Particle Physics
A branch of Physics that studies the nature of particles that constitute matter and radiation.
Boundless ascension
CERN
The research programme at CERN covers topics from the basic structure of matter to cosmic
rays and from The Standard Model to supersymmetry. CERN's main focus is particle physics
– the study of the fundamental constituents of matter – but the physics programme at the
laboratory is much broader, ranging from nuclear to high-energy physics, from studies of
joakimprat
Since the 1970s, particle physicists have described the fundamental structure of matter using
an elegant series of equations called the Standard Model. The model describes how
everything that they observe in the universe is made from a few basic blocks called
fundamental particles, governed by four forces. Physicists at CERN use the world's most
powerful particle accelerators and detectors to test the predictions and limits of the Standard
Model. Over the years it has explained many experimental results and precisely predicted a
But the model only describes the 4% of the known universe, and questions remain. Will we
see a unification of forces at the high energies of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)? Why is
gravity so weak? Why is there more matter than antimatter in the universe? Is there more
exotic physics waiting to be discovered at higher energies? Will we discover evidence for a
theory called supersymmetry at the LHC? Or understand the Higgs boson that gives particles
mass?
Physicists at CERN are looking for answers to these questions and more
Scientists at CERN are trying to find out what the smallest building blocks of matter are.
All matter except dark matter is made of molecules, which are themselves made of atoms.
Inside the atoms, there are electrons spinning around the nucleus. The nucleus itself is
generally made of protons and neutrons but even these are composite objects. Inside the
protons and neutrons, we find the quarks, but these appear to be indivisible, just like the
electrons.
Quarks and electrons are some of the elementary particles we study at CERN and in other
laboratories. But physicists have found more of these elementary particles in various
experiments, so many in fact that researchers needed to organize them, just like Mendeleev
This is summarized in a concise theoretical model called the Standard Model. Today, we have
a very good idea of what matter is made of, how it all holds together and how these particles
Quarks
Six quarks:
Million
electron
Volts/c^2
matter.
Down quark -1/3e between 4.5 Stable or Up quark 1/2 ● second lightest quark
being 2:1).
Charm quark +2/3e 95+9-3 Strange quark 1/2 ● Forms basic building blocks of
(95% of the time) ordinary matter.
or down quark
particles.
Top quark +2/3e 173+or-0.4 Bottom quark 1/2 ● Most massive of all observed
Bottom quark -1/3e 4.18 Charm quark or 1/2 ● Third generation quark
Leptons:
An elementary particle of half-integer spin (spin ½) that doesn’t undergo strong interactions. Two
main classes: charged/electron-like leptons and neutral leptons/neutrinos. 6 types: electron, electron
Electron The orientation of the two First Weak force, gravity ● Lightest stable subatomic
circles
● It is a fermion
heavier
● Two forms: negatively charged
anti-particle
● Discovered as a constituent of
Neddermeyer
strong interaction.
charged.
particle-accelerator experiment.
High-energy muon-neutrinos
or neutrons.
heavier
charged anti-particle
containing quarks
nuclei spontaneously dissipate excess energy and undergo a change of one unit of positive
charge without any change in mass number. The three processes are electron emission, positron
**cosmic ray particle “showers” - The discovery of air showers in 1938 implied that the energies
of cosmic-ray particles extended several orders of magnitude above those deduced from the
geomagnetic effects. It arose out of experiments on the nature of particle interactions in which
Any object which is composed of an even number of fermions is a boson, while any particle
which is composed of an odd number of fermions is a fermion. For example, a proton is made
of three quarks, hence it is a fermion. A 4He atom is made of 2 protons, 2 neutrons and 2
A fermion is any particle that has an odd half-integer (like 1/2, 3/2, and so forth) spin. Quarks
and leptons, as well as most composite particles, like protons and neutrons, are fermions. ...
Bosons are those particles which have an integer spin (0, 1, 2...)
Fundamental interactions
particles of matter. The strong force binds quarks together in clusters to make
more-familiar subatomic particles, such as protons and neutrons. It also holds together
the atomic nucleus and underlies interactions between all particles containing quarks.
The strong force originates in a property known as color. This property, which has no
connection with color in the visual sense of the word, is somewhat analogous to
electromagnetic force, so color is the source of the strong force. Particles without
color, such as electrons and other leptons, do not “feel” the strong force; particles with
color, principally the quarks, do “feel” the strong force. Quantum chromodynamics,
the quantum field theory describing strong interactions, takes its name from this
Protons and neutrons are examples of baryons, a class of particles that contain three
quarks, each with one of three possible values of color (red, blue, and green). Quarks
may also combine with antiquarks (their antiparticles, which have opposite color) to
form mesons, such as pi mesons and K mesons. Baryons and mesons all have a net
color of zero, and it seems that the strong force allows only combinations with zero
mesons.
The weak force, also called the weak nuclear interaction, is responsible for particle
decay. This is the literal change of one type of subatomic particle into another. So, for
example, a neutrino that strays close to a neutron can turn the neutron into a proton
called bosons. Specific kinds of bosons are responsible for the weak force,
electromagnetic force and strong force. In the weak force, the bosons are charged
particles called W and Z bosons. When subatomic particles such as protons, neutrons
and electrons come within 10^-18 meters, or 0.1% of the diameter of a proton, of one
another, they can exchange these bosons. As a result, the subatomic particles decay
3. Gravity
Gravity is the weakest of all four fundamental interactions but it has an infinite range.
It is responsible for the attraction between masses and governs the motion of celestial
which states that every object with mass exerts a force of attraction upon every other
object with mass. The Standard Model uses this definition of gravity and it also
energy. This is because the existence of a graviton is yet to be proved and Einstein’s
theory of relativity is the more plausible explanation for the mechanism of the
universe.
4. Electromagnetism
Chemocline
1) Alpha particles:
Have 2 protons and 2 neutrons bound together. Produced by the process of alpha
decay.
2) Electrons:
3) Photons:
Quantum of the electromagnetic field including electromagnetic radiation such as
light and radio waves, and the force carrier for the electromagnetic force.
4) Neutrinos
electrical charge and a very small mass, which might even be zero. Neutrinos are one
of the most abundant particles in the universe. Because they have very little
interaction with matter, however, they are incredibly difficult to detect. Nuclear forces
treat electrons and neutrinos identically; neither participate in the strong nuclear force,
but both participate equally in the weak nuclear force. Particles with this property are
termed leptons. In addition to the electron (and its antiparticle, the positron), the
charged leptons include the muon (with a mass 200 times greater than that of the
electron), the tau (with mass 3,500 times greater than that of the electron) and their
anti-particles.
5) Antiparticles
Subatomic particles that have the same mass as one of the particles of ordinary matter
6) Pions
Any of three subatomic particles: π⁰ , π⁺ , and π⁻ . Each pion consists of a quark and an
antiquark and is therefore a meson. Pions are the lightest mesons and, more generally,
the lightest hadrons. Mesons are hadronic subatomic particles composed of one quark
particle made of two or more quarks held together by the strong force in a similar way
7) Muon
An elementary particle similar to the electron, with an electric charge of −1 e and a
spin of 1/2, but with a much greater mass. It is classified as a lepton. A lepton refers
to any particle that doesn’t take part in the strong interaction. Strong interaction is the
mechanism responsible for the strong nuclear force. It is one of the four known
and gravitation.
8) Kaons
quark model they are understood to be bound states of a strange quark and an up or
down antiquark. The up quark is the lightest of all quarks, a type of elementary
particle, and a major constituent of matter. It, along with the down quark, forms the
neutrons (one up quark, two down quarks) and protons (two up quarks, one down
9) Lambda baryons
The Lambda baryons are a family of subatomic hadron particles containing one up
quark, one down quark, and a third quark from a higher flavor generation, in a
combination where the quantum wave function changes sign upon the flavor of any
10) Quarks
Elementary quantum particles. They make up protons and neutrons. There are 6 types:
a) Charm quarks: The third most massive quark. Found in hadrons (J/ψ meson
for example)
13) Tetraquark
14) Pentaquark
15) Graviton
Dark Matter
Strange quarks ordinarily have extremely short lives, and so far scientists have only seen
them within particle accelerators. However, neutrons are also highly unstable by themselves,
but are stable when they are bound with protons in atoms, said Glenn Starkman, a co-author
of the new report and a theoretical physicist at Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland. So, it could be that strange quarks created soon after the birth of the universe
became bound to other particles to produce stable strange matter. And this might constitute
dark matter.
Relativity
Supersymmetry
Anatoli Bugorski
Higgs Boson
Boom boom in large hadron collider=higgs boson
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