don lincoln fermilab fermilab physics don lincoln

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Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

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Page 1: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Don Lincoln

Fermilab

Fermilab Physics

Don Lincoln

Page 2: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

What’s the Point?High Energy Particle Physics is a study of the smallest pieces of matter.

It investigates (among other things) the nature of the universe immediately after the Big Bang.

It also explores physics at temperatures not common for the past 15 billion years (or so).

It’s a lot of fun.

Page 3: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Periodic Table

All atoms are madeof protons, neutronsand electrons

Helium Neon

u

du u

d d

Proton NeutronElectron

Gluons hold quarks togetherPhotons hold atoms together

Page 4: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

• All particles have ‘anti-particles’, which have similar properties, but opposite electrical charge

Particles– u,c,t +2/3– d,s,b -1/3– e,, -1

Anti-particles– u,c,t -2/3– d,s,b +1/3– e,, +1

Page 5: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

So what’s the deal on antimatter?

Fact

or

Fiction?

WierdoTrekkie-geekthing?

Nope!

Page 6: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

So what’s the deal on antimatter?

+ =

1 gram ofmatter

1 gram ofantimatter

Energy release equivalent to

Hiroshima explosion

Page 7: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

FACT: Fermilab has the largest amount of antimatter anywhere on the planet.

Ummmm…Where’s the exit?

Question:What would happen if you took all of the antimatter ever made at Fermilab and combined it with an equal amount of matter?

Answer:Enough energy to raiseyour 20 oz coffee from room to drinkable temperature

Page 8: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln
Page 9: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Now (15 billion years)

Stars form(1 billion years)

Atoms form (300,000 years)

Nuclei form (180 seconds)

??? (Before that)

4x10-12 seconds

Nucleons form (10-10 seconds)

Quarks differentiate (10-34 seconds?)

Page 10: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

=e2/ħc

Page 11: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory(a.k.a. Fermilab)

• Begun in 1968

• First beam 1972 (200, then 400 GeV)

• Upgrade 1983 (900 GeV)

• Upgrade 2001 (980 GeV)

Jargon alert: 1 Giga Electron Volt (GeV) is 100,000 times more energy than the particle beam in your TV.

If you made a beam the hard way,it would take 1,000,000,000 batteries

Page 12: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Fermilab Facts• Named after Enrico Fermi, the famous Italian physicist

who worked on the Manhattan Project.

• Current Director: Michael S. Witherell

• Fermilab encompasses 6800 acres, much of it used for prairie restoration and preserving open space in the western suburbs.

• Employees about 2000 people.

• Original cost $250,000,000. Approximately the same amount in upgrades over the last 30 years.

• Electric bill between $10,000,000 and $20,000,000

• NO classified work is done here, ask all the questions and take all the pictures you want.

Page 13: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Fermilab’s Wilson Hall

Saint-Pierre Cathedral in Beauvais, France1272 A.D.

Page 14: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Why the Buffalo?

Nah...that’s why we have graduate students....and they’re cheaper....

Radiation Detector?

Page 15: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln
Page 16: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Increasing ‘Violence’ of Collision

ExpectedNumber

ofEvents

Run II

Run I

Increased reach for discovery physicsat highest masses

Huge statistics for precision physicsat low mass scales

Formerly rare processesbecome high statisticsprocesses

1

10

100

1000

The Main Injector upgrade was completed in 1999.

The new accelerator increases the number of possible collisions per second by 10-20.

DØ and CDF have undertaken massive upgrades to utilize the increased collision rate.

Run II began March 2001

Page 17: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

How Do You Detect Collisions?

• Use one of two large multi-purpose particle detectors at Fermilab (DØ and CDF).

• They’re designed to record collisions of protons colliding with antiprotons at nearly the speed of light.

• They’re basically cameras.

• They let us look back in time.

Page 18: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

DØ Detector: Run II

30’

30’

50’

• Weighs 5000 tons• Can inspect 3,000,000

collisions/second• Will record 50

collisions/second• Records

approximately 10,000,000 bytes/second

• Will record 1015 (1,000,000,000,000,000) bytes in the next run (1 PetaByte).

Page 19: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Remarkable Photos

This collision is the most violentever recorded (and fully understood). It required thatparticles hit within 10-19 m or 1/10,000 the size of a proton

In this collision, a top and anti-top quark were created,helping establish their existence

Page 20: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Highlights from 1992-1996 Run

• Limits set on the maximum size of quarks (it’s gotta be smaller than 1/1000 the size of a proton)

• Supported evidence that Standard Model works rather well (didn’t see anything too weird)

• Studied quark scattering, b quarks, W bosons

• Top quark discovery 1995

Page 21: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

The Needle in the Haystack: Run I• There are 2,000,000,000,000,000 possible

collisions per second.

• There are 300,000 actual collisions per second, each of them scanned.

• We write 4 per second to tape.

• For each top quark making collision, there are 10,000,000,000 other types of collisions.

• Even though we are very picky about the collisions we record, we have 65,000,000 on tape.

• Only 500 are top quark events.

• We’ve identified 50 top quark events and expect 50 more which look like top, but aren’t.

Run II

×10

Page 22: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Top Quark Run I: The Summary• The top quark was discovered in 1995• Mass known to 3% (the most accurately known

quark mass) • The mass of one top quark is 175 times as heavy

as a proton (which contains three quarks)

Why??

?

Page 23: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

In 1964, Peter Higgs postulated a physics mechanism which gives all particles their mass.

This mechanism is a field which permeates the universe.

If this postulate is correct, then one of the signatures is a particle (called the Higgs Particle). Fermilab’s Leon Lederman co-authored a book on the subject called The God Particle.

top

bottom

Undiscovered!

Page 24: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Particle gains mass Higgs boson manifests

In 1993, William Waldegrave,the British Science Minister,Announced a contest, the prize for which was none other than a bottle of very good champagne.

                                                   

The contest? Explainhow the Higgs mechanism works in simple terms.

The winner:David Miller

Page 25: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

How do you find a Higgs Boson?

Go to a CD storewww.higgsboson.com

Go to Fermilab

The Challenge:

Higgs is 10 rarer than the top quark was.

We will have 10 times more data to look through.

So it’s a wash….

Except…things that look like a Higgs Boson, but aren’t are much more common.

Bottom line

It’s going to be hard!

Page 26: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Data-Model Comparison

Page 27: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Data-Model Comparison

Page 28: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

Run II: What are we going to find?

I don’t know!

Improve top quark mass and measure decay modes.

Do Run I more accurately

Supersymmetry, Higgs, Technicolor, particles smaller than quarks, something unexpected?

Page 29: Don Lincoln Fermilab Fermilab Physics Don Lincoln

What’s up for the rest of today?1. Q & A

2. Then choicea. For those more interested in the tour, the docents

will take you to the 15th floor, plus tour some of the accelerators and control room.

b. For those more interested in asking questions, I’ll hang around for a while. The down side is you can then only see the 15th floor.

3. After the tour, there are other scientists, with different fields of expertise on the 15th floor, who can answer other questions.