Transcript Chapter 29
General Physics (PHY 2140)
Lecture 21
Modern Physics
Elementary Particles
Strange Particles – Strangeness
The Eightfold Way
Quarks
Colored Quarks
Electroweak Theory – The Standard Model
The Big Bang and Cosmology
Chapter
Chapter 2930
http://www.physics.wayne.edu/~alan/2140Website/Main.htm
Previously…
Nuclear Energy, Elementary Particles
Nuclear Reactors, Fission, Fusion
Fundamental Forces
Classification of Particles
Elementary Particles
First we studied atoms
Next, atoms had electrons and a nucleus
The nucleus is composed of neutrons and
protons
What’s next?
30.5 The Fundamental Forces in Nature
Strong Force
Short range ~ 10-15 m (1 fermi)
Responsible for binding of quarks into neutrons and protons
Gluon
Electromagnetic Force
10-2 as strong as strong force
1/r2 force law
Binding of atoms and molecules
Photon
Weak force
~ 10-6 times as strong as the strong force
Responsible for beta decay, very short range ~10-18 m
W+, W- and Z0 bosons
Gravitational Force
10-43 times as strong as the strong force
Also 1/r2 force law
Graviton
30.8 Particle Classification
(Classify the animals in the particle zoo)
Hadrons (strong force interaction, composed of quarks)
We already met the mesons (middle weights)
Decay into electrons, neutrinos and photons
Baryons, i.e. the proton and neutron (the
heavy particles)
Still other more exotic baryons:
L, S, X, all are heavier than the proton
Decay into end products that include a proton
Particle Classification – cont.
Leptons
Small or light weight particles
Are point like particles – no internal structure
(yet)
6 leptons
Electron e, muon m, tau t
and their associated neutrinos: ne, nm, nt
Also, their antiparticles
Neutrinos have tiny mass, ~3 eV/c2
Some members of the Zoo
Particle Physics Conservation Laws
So far in Physics we have conservation of energy,
momentum (linear and angular), charge, spin.
Now we add more to help balance particle
reactions
Baryon number:
B = +1 for baryons, -1 for anti-baryons
Eg. Proton, neutron have B = +1
p, n , antiparticles have B = -1
B = 0 for all other particles (non-baryons)
More Conservation Laws
Lepton number
L = +1 for leptons, -1 for anti-leptons
L = 0 for non-leptons
Example for electrons:
Electron e, electron neutrino ne have Le = +1
Anti electron and antineutrino have Le = -1
Other leptons have Le = 0 BUT have their own lepton
numbers, Lm, Lt
Refer to table 30.2
Example neutron decay
Consider the decay of the neutron
n p + e + νe
+
-
Before: B = +1, Le = 0
After: B = +1, Le = +1 -1 = 0
Quiz 30.2
Which of the following cannot occur?
(a)
p+p p+p+p
(b)
n p + e + ne
(c)
μ e + n e + νμ
(d)
π μ +νμ
-
-
-
-
Quiz 30.2 - answer
The disallowed reaction is (a) because
Charge is not conserved:
Q = +2 Q = +1
Baryon number is also not conserved:
B = +2 B = +2-1 = +1
p+p p+p+p
Strangeness
Several particles found to have unusual
(strange) properties:
Always produced in pairs
p- + p+ K0 + L0 but not p- + p+ K0 + n
Decay is slow (indicative of weak interaction
rather than strong) Half-lives of order of 10-10
to 10-8 sec
Members of the strange club: K, L, S
More Strangeness
Explanation lies in the addition of a new
conservation law – Strangeness, S
One of the pair of strange particles gets
S=+1 the other S=-1. All other particles
get S=0. So in the previous reaction,
strangeness is conserved:
Before S=0; After S=+1-1 = 0
Second reaction violates strangeness
Example 30.6: Strangeness Conservation
Consider:
p- + n K+ + S-
Before: S=0+0=0 (no strange particles)
After: K+ has S=+1, S- has S = -1 thus the
net strangeness S = +1-1 = 0
So reaction does not violate law of
conservation of strangeness, the reaction
is allowed
The Eightfold Way
Consulting table 30.2, Take the first 8
baryons and plot Strangeness vs. Charge.
We get an interesting picture. A hexagonal
pattern emerges.
If we do the same for the spin 0 mesons we
also get a hexagonal pattern.
The Eightfold Way
The Original Quark Model (in B/W)
Gell-Mann (1961) proposed hadrons have
structure, i.e. composed of a more
fundamental type of particle.
Quarks have fractional charge e/3 or 2e/3
Three types u, d, s: up, down, strange
Mesons were made of 2 quarks: q, q¯
Baryons were made of 3 quarks
But that wasn’ enough!
Soon after, experimental discrepancies
required the addition of three more quarks
Top, bottom and charm: t, b, c
And three more conservation laws: C, B, T for
charm, bottomness and topness
Properties of Quarks and Antiquarks
Fundamental Particles: Properties
Quarks
Particle
Rest Energy
Charge (e)
u
360 MeV
+2/3
d
360 MeV
-1/3
c
1500 MeV
+2/3
s
540 MeV
-1/3
t
173 MeV
+2/3
b
5 GeV
-1/3
Size of quark: < 10-18 m
Fundamental Particles Properties
continued
Leptons
Particle
Rest Energy
Charge
e-
511 keV
-e
m-
107 MeV
-e
t-
1784 MeV
-e
ne
< 30 eV
0
nm
< 0.5 MeV
0
nt
< 250 MeV
0
Quarks in Mesons and Baryons
We should still
be in B/W!
Color
Because of the Pauli exclusion principle
(all quarks are spin ½ particles) can’t have
three of the same particles occupying the
same state.
Example: - is (sss) so need three
different yet strange quarks
So colored quarks were proposed
Color continued
Three color charges were added
Red, green blue: r, g, b
And…three anti-colors
¯ g,
¯ b¯
antired, antigreen and antiblue: r,
Mesons have a color anticolor pair
Spin is either zero or 1 so can have ↑↑ or ↑↓
Baryons must have three different colors
Spin is ½ so have ↑↑↓ or ↓↓↑
Quarks combinations with color
Total spin is 0 or 1
Total spin is ½ or 3/2
Quantum Chromodynamics
In analogy with photons and the electromagnetic
force, an interaction between colored quarks is
the result of color force – 8 colored gluons.
The general theory is complex but explains
experimental results better.
Numerical results can be very hard to calculate
Opposite colors attract, red-antired, in analogy
with electromagnetism.
Different colors also attract though less strongly
Residual color force is responsible for nuclear
force that bind protrons and neutrons.
Interactions in the Yukawa pion and
quark-gluon models
Yukawa’s pion model
Quark QCD model
In both cases a proton-neutron
pair scatter off each other and
exchange places.
The Standard Model
History of the Universe
and of the four forces
Energy: 1028
Time:
0
1024
10-40
10-35
1021
1017
1013
1011
10-11
eV
sec
Time
Big Bang Model
A broadly accepted theory for the origin and
evolution of our universe.
It postulates that 12 to 14 billion years ago, the
portion of the universe we can see today was only
a few millimeters across. It has since expanded
from this hot dense state into the vast and much
cooler cosmos we currently inhabit.
In the beginning, there was a Big Bang, a
colossal explosion from which everything in
the Universe sprung out.
Experimental Evidence of the Big Bang
Expansion of the universe
Abundance of the light elements H, He, Li
Edwin Hubble's 1929 observation that galaxies were generally
receding from us provided the first clue that the Big Bang theory
might be right.
The Big Bang theory predicts that these light elements should have
been fused from protons and neutrons in the first few minutes after
the Big Bang.
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation
The early universe should have been very hot. The cosmic
microwave background radiation is the remnant heat leftover from
the Big Bang.
Cosmic Microwave Background
99.97% of the radiant energy of the
Universe was released within the first
year after the Big Bang itself and now
permeate space in the form of a
thermal 3 K radiation field.
COBE CMB Measurement
• CMB spectrum is that of a nearly perfect blackbody with a temperature
of 2.725 +/- 0.002 K.
• Observation matches predictions of the hot Big Bang theory
extraordinarily well.
• Deviation from perfect black body spectrum less than 0.03 %
• Nearly all of the radiant energy of the Universe was released within the
first year after the Big Bang.
How did we get from there…
… to here?
Let there be light:
400,000-700,000 years
Mini Review
Coulomb’s law
the superposition principle
F ke
q1 q2
r2
F
The electric field
0
Flux. Gauss’s law.
Q
EA
cos
simplifies computation of electric fields net
o
PE
Potential and potential energy
V VB VA
q
electrostatic force is conservative
potential (a scalar) can be introduced as potential
energy of electrostatic field per unit charge
E
q
Equipotential surfaces
They are defined as a surface in space on which
the potential is the same for every point
(surfaces of constant voltage)
The electric field at every point of an
equipotential surface is perpendicular to the
surface
Capacitance and capacitors
1
Q2 1
U QV
CV 2
2
2C 2
Current and resistance
C 0
Capacitors with dielectrics (C↑ if k ↑)
Current and drift speed
Resistance and Ohm’s law
I is proportional to V
Resistivity
material property
A
, C C0
d
I nqvd A
V IR
I
Q
t
RA
l
Current and resistance
Temperature dependence of resistance
Power in electric circuits
R Ro 1 T To
V
2
P I V I R
R
DC Circuits
V E Ir
EMF
Kirchoff’s rules
I
i 1
Req R1 R2 R3
Resistors in series and parallel
n
RC circuit
2
n
i
0, Vi 0
i 1
q Q 1 et / RC
q Qet / RC
1
1 1
1
Req R1 R2 R3
Charging
Discharging
Magnetism
Induced voltages and induction
Magnetic field
Magnetic force on a moving particle
Magnetic force on a current
Torque on a current loop
Motion in a uniform field
Application of magnetic forces
Ampere’s law
Current loops and solenoids
Magnetic flux
Generators and motors
Self-induction
Energy in magnetic fields
AC circuits
F qvB sin
F BIl sin
F NBIA sin
r mv / qB
B l m I
o
B A BA cos
I
E L
t
Resistors, capacitors, inductors in ac circuits
Power in an AC circuit
Z R2 X L X C
2
X L XC
tan
R
L
N
I
1 2
PEL LI
2
1
XC
, X L 2p fL
2p fC
AC circuits
f0
Resonance in RLC circuits
Transformers
Electromagnetic Waves
v Vm sin 2p ft
c
1
2p
1
mo o
LC
N2
V2
V1
N1
2.99792 108 m s
Modern physics
Introduction
Gallilean relativity
Michelson-Morley Experiment
Relativity
Time dilation, length contraction
Relativistic energy, momentum
Relativistic addition of velocities
vab
vad vdb
v v
1 ad 2 db
c
t
t p
1 v c
2
p
L Lp 1 v 2 c 2
2
mv
1 v c
2
2
mv
KE = mc2 – mc2
Quantum physics
Blackbody radiation
Planck’s hypothesis
Photoelectric effect
X-rays
Wave function
Uncertainty relations
Atomic Descriptions
Atomic Spectra
Bohr’s Atomic Theory
Quantum Mechanics
Quantum Numbers
maxT 0.2898 102 m K
En nhf ,
n 1, 2,3,...
KE hf
hc
min
e V
h
xp
2p
h
E t
2p
2p r n , n 1, 2,3,...
Ei E f hf
mevr n , n 1, 2,3,...
1
1
RH 2 2
n f ni
1
Quantum physics
Electron Clouds (Orbitals)
The Pauli Exclusion Principle
Characteristic X-Rays
Atomic Energy Levels
Lasers and Holography
Nuclear physics
Nuclear properties
Binding energy
Radioactivity
The Decay Process
Natural Radioactivity
Nuclear Reactions
Medical Applications
Radiation Detectors
A
Z
X
4ke Ze2
d
mv 2
r r0 A
1/ 3
Nuclear Energy, Elementary Particles
Nuclear Reactors, Fission, Fusion
Fundamental Forces
Classification of Particles – Making sense of the particle zoo
Conservation Laws
Remember:
Electricity:
Electric field and electric potential are different things
Moreover, field is a vector while the potential is a scalar
Remember the difference between parallel and series
connections
Remember that formulas for capacitors and resistors are “reversed”
Magnetism:
Use right hand rule properly
Special relativity:
If the problem involves speeds close to the speed of light, use
relativistic formulas for momentum, energy, addition of velocities
In particular, KE=mv2/2 is a NONRELATIVISTIC expression for KE
Atomic and nuclear physics:
In the way of handling, nuclear reactions are very similar to
chemical reactions
Good Luck on the Final Exam!