The Four Fundamental Forces: 1. Gravity
The Four Fundamental Forces: 1. Gravity
The Four Fundamental Forces: 1. Gravity
1. Gravity
Weaker 1. 2. Announcements Exam#3 next Monday. HW10 will be posted today. Solutions will be posted Sat. afternoon or Sunday AM. (Im not collecting HW#10) Q&A session on Sunday at 5 pm. Tentative course grades will be posted by Tuesday evening. You can do no worse than this grade if you skip the final (but you could do better if you take it) Final Exam, Friday, May 2 10:15 12:15 in Stolkin.
2. Weak Force
3. 4. 5.
3. Electromagnetic force
6.
Stronger
4. Strong Force
All other forces you know about can be attributed to one of these!
The photon is the mediator of the electromagnetic interaction The photon can only interact with objects which have electric charge So, the photon can mediate interactions between quarks and charged leptons.
e+
e+ g
Electron-Positron Scattering
eImportant Points
etime
The photon may be emitted (absorbed) by either the e+ (e-) or the e- (e+). In this interaction (scattering), the incoming particles are deflected but the electron & positron in the final state are the same ones as the initial state. After emission or absorption of the photon, the charge of the e+ cannot be replaced by an e- since the emission (or absorption) of a photon (Q=0) cannot produce a change in electric charge.
e-
e+
The electron and positron annihilate into pure energy in the form of a photon The photons energy is equal to the sum of the electron & positron energies. In this process, the photon must break back into a particle & its antiparticle. The combined energy of the particle and anti-particle must be equal to the energy of the photon. You can flip the arrangement of the e+ or e- in the initial or final state, but you must have one e+ and one e- on each side of the photon.
Conservation Laws
In any physical process, total energy and total charge is always conserved throughout.
Initial (e+e-) Final (e+e-)
e+
e-
e+
e-
e-
e+
eg
Energy 10 GeV
Q 0
Energy
e+
Notice that total energy and total charge never changed !!! - Conservation Laws are Key ! - They allow you to predict things!
Energy
Q +1 -1 0
Q +1 -1 0
e+ eTotal
e+ eTotal
Example 1
Suppose you collide a 4 [GeV] electron into a 4 [GeV] positron and they annihilate. What is the energy of the produced photon?
A) 8 [GeV]
B) 4 [GeV]
C) 16 [GeV]
D) 0 [GeV]
If the photon splits into an up quark and a second particle, which of the following is true? A) The other particle is an electron B) The other particle is a positron. C) The other particle is a d quark. D) The other particle is an anti-up quark. E) The other particle is an anti-down quark. What is the heaviest quark which can be produced ? A) c (1.5 GeV/c2) B) b (4.7 GeV /c2) C) t (175 GeV /c2) D) s (0.2 GeV /c2)
e+e- qq
Initial (e+e-)
Final (uu)
e+
q/q
u
Q
+2/3 -2/3 -1/3 +1/3 +2/3 -2/3
eEnergy
g
Q +1
d d c c
e+
5 GeV
eTotal
5 GeV
10 GeV
-1
0
Energy
b
b
Q
5 GeV
5 GeV
4.7
4.7
0.3
0.3
-1/3
+1/3
10 GeV
Example 2
e+ q
e-
Suppose you wanted to have a top quark and top antiquark in the final state. Which of the following choices are capable of producing this final state with reference to this figure? (mass of top quark is 175 GeV/c2)? A) Energy(electron) = 175 [GeV] B) Energy(electron) = 300 [GeV] C) Energy(electron) = 175 [GeV] D) Energy(electron) = 200 [GeV] and Energy(positron) = 0 [GeV] and Energy(positron) = 50 [GeV] and Energy(positron) = 175 [GeV] and Energy(positron) = 200 [GeV]
Example 3
e+
t+
Assume the energy of the electron and positron are each 3 [GeV].
e-
t-
Suppose you wanted to have a t+ and t- lepton in the final state (mass of t lepton is ~1.8 [GeV/c2])?
1) How much kinetic energy does the t+ have after the collision? A) 3 [GeV] B) 1.8 [GeV] C) 1.2 [GeV] D) 0 [GeV]
2) If the leptons were a pair of muons (m~0.1 [GeV]), how much total energy would each have? A) 0.1 [GeV] B) 3.0 [GeV] C) 2.9 [GeV] D) 6 [GeV] 3) What property is it that quarks, e, m, and t have that allow the photon to produce them?
e+
e-
1. Where did you get the quarks and antiquarks in the first place ? (Not at Wal-Mart, I can assure you)!
And, antiquarks?
u
d u
Proton-Antiproton Collisions
u d u u u d u u d u u d u u d u u
At high energies, the collisions actually occur between the quarks in the protons and the antiquarks in the antiproton! That is, quark-antiquark collisions !
Summary of EM Interactions
1. The Photon is the mediator of the EM Interaction. - This means that EM interactions occur via photons.
For the Strong Interactions, we conjecture that: Quarks have an additional charge called color charge or just color for short. A force carrier, called the gluon mediates the interaction between objects which carry color charge (that is, the quarks)
The most striking difference between the gluon and the photon is: The gluon carries color charge, but the photon does not carry electric charge. Gluons can interact with other gluons !!!!
EM
Photon (g)
0 None +, All objects with electrical charge Infinite ( 1/d2)
Strong
Gluon (g)
0 Yes, color charge red, green, blue All objects with color charge 10-14 [m] (inside hadrons)
Range
Experiments show that there are 3 colors; not 2, not 4, but 3. Again, this does not mean that if you could see quarks, you would see them as being colored. This color that we refer to is an intrinsic property and color is just a nice way to visualize it.
MESONS q q q GREEN + ANTIGREEN = COLORLESS RED + ANTIRED = COLORLESS BLUE + ANTIBLUE = COLORLESS
Hadrons observed in nature are colorless (but there constituents are not)