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Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader
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Page 1: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

Nuclear Physics

UConn Mentor ConnectionMariel Tader

Page 2: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

2

The Standard Model

Describes three of the four “fundamental” forces

• Electromagnetism, weak and strong interactions

• There are 12 different kinds of elementary particles

Page 3: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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The Forces

• Electromagnetism: why opposites attract• Biology/ Chemistry

• Strong Force: holds quarks together• Weak Force: mediates fundamental

particle decay• (Gravity): not included in Standard

Model

Page 4: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Electroweak Theory

• Electromagnetism and weak force are two different aspects of the same force: electroweak

• The two merge into the same force at high energies and close distance

Page 5: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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The particles

• 6 Quarks: make up protons, neutrons, etc.

• 6 Leptons: electrons,neutrinos, etc.

• Force carriers: gluons for strong

force, etc.• Weak force’s range

• The three generations

Page 6: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Antimatter

• Each type of particle has a comparable anti-particle

• The same properties, except charge• The mystery: why so much more

matter?• Annihilation: matter and antimatter

collide a Z boson/gluon/photon form decay into new

matter/ antimatter pair

Page 7: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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The Nucleus

• Quarks: come in threes (protons/ neutrons/ etc.) or twos (mesons)

• Gluons: hold quarks together, force carrier particle for strong force

Page 8: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Quantum Numbers

• Electric Charge: all particles except quarks have integer charge, quark charges add to whole numbers

• Flavor: different kinds of quarks/ leptons• Spin: goes by 1/2s, particles/ nuclei• Lepton/baryon numbers, etc.• Color Charge: gets its own slide• Angular momentum/ momentum: location• Weak Charge: strength of weak force

Page 9: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Color Charge

• Why quarks come in threes or twos: neutral charge

• Why quarks stay together: color force field

• Quark: 1 of 3 colors• Anti-quark: 1 of 3 anti-colors• Gluon color charges: 1 color and 1

anti-color combination

Page 10: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Bosons and Fermions

• Pauli Exclusion Principle: “two particles can’t have identical sets

of quantum numbers”• Fermions: obey Pauli• Bosons: violate Pauli

Page 11: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Radiation

• Unstable nuclei decay• Alpha: release of 2 protons/2

neutrons (helium nucleus)• Beta: release of an electron• Gamma: release of photons (as

gamma rays)• Neutron radiation: like it sounds

Page 12: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Fundamental Particle Decay• Unlike atoms, fundamentals can

not break into constituents• To become a less massive

particle:1. Emit a force carrier (W boson)

“virtual” 2. W boson immediately decays into

lighter particles

Page 13: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Virtual Particles

• Can not be detected directly• Can break “conservation of

energy” for a very short time

You can not see virtual particles, but you can see the before and after

Page 14: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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The Project

• Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator

• The collaboration• Will be the first to observe and

study exotic mesons• Will begin 2014

Page 15: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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gluex

• GlueX hopes to learn about quarks, gluons, and confinement by creating exotic mesons

• How we “see” the gluons:Polarized beam liquid hydrogen target exotic mesons final particles and radiation data deciphered

Page 16: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Bremsstrahlung

• German for “braking radiation”• A radiation particle interacts with

atoms and creates more radiation, while

losing the corresponding energy

Atom

Page 17: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Coherent Bremsstrahlung

• Must be in a crystal• Particle/crystal must be in

correct alignment• A few specific wavelengths are

prevalent, “peaks”

Page 18: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Reciprocal Lattice Vectors

• Bravais Lattice: repeating crystalline arrangements of points

• Reciprocal Lattice: made from the vectors perpendicular to three of the vectors of the original• Used as a simple geometric model that

can interpret diffraction in crystals

Page 19: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Framing the Crystal

• A frame would produce too much unwanted bremms.

diamond is mounted on tiny carbon fibers• The resonant frequency of the fibers should be known, to minimize rotation

Page 20: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Vibration

• Interference: two or more superimposed waves create a new wave pattern: need coherent bremss.

• Resonant frequency: An objects natural frequency of vibration

• Gluonic flux tube vibration is like a string

Page 21: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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The Carbon Wire

• The theoretical model vs. the experimental data

• How we modeled it• The glue ball equation

• How we measured it• Uncertainty bars

Amplitude vs Frequency

0.E+00

1.E-05

2.E-05

3.E-05

4.E-05

5.E-05

6.E-05

7.E-05

8.E-05

61.8 61.9 62 62.1 62.2 62.3 62.4 62.5

frequency (Hz)

Am

plitu

de (m

)

Page 22: Nuclear Physics UConn Mentor Connection Mariel Tader.

UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Polarization• The orientation of the wave’s electric/

magnetic fields • Transverse wave: polarization is

perpendicular to wave’s direction• Linear Polarization: the electric or magnetic field is oriented in one direction, i.e. no rotation (chirality)

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UConn Mentor Connection 2010, Mari Tader

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Putting it all together• The process: Electron beam diamond

wafer polarized photons hit mesons detectors