|
         

|
 |
View from the top
New Lederman Fellow offers first-person description of a high-energy future
Particle physicists strive for
higher and higher energies for
the same reason you would
want to climb the highest
mountain in a mountain range.
As you are ascending, you
catch glimpses of picturesque
canyons and lovely green
valleys down below, but the
view is obscured by other
mountains. Only when you get to the top do you see the full
picture—and the view takes your breath away. I have a thrilling
feeling that we are getting closer than ever to seeing the pieces of
the puzzle called Nature fall together. This is happening at Fermilab.
I wouldn't miss being here for the world.
I am from Minsk in Belarus, which is a small country west of Russia
and east of Poland, and north of Ukraine. I came to the U.S. in 1993,
as an undergraduate exchange student at Kenyon College in Ohio.
The exchange program was supposed to last only a year, but the
college gave me a full scholarship for the following year, so that I
could stay and graduate with the class of 1995. I then went on to
grad school in California.
I never had any doubts that, at this point in my career, I had to be at
Fermilab. Yet when I arrived as a Lederman Fellow, a little over two
months ago, I had no idea what I would be working on for the next
three years or so. As a Fermilab postdoc, I was free to join any
experiment within the Fermilab program; I had 30 days to decide.
Should I study neutrinos? The mysterious cold dark matter? The
properties of the top quark? Cosmic rays? I came to Fermilab to
learn something new and different from what I had studied as a
graduate student; but I knew very little about any of these
experiments. The more I looked into what they did, the more each
one interested me. I was reminded of a feeling I had as a child,
when my parents would take me to a toy store for my birthday and
tell me I could choose any doll I wanted —but no more than one!
I spent the first month at Fermilab driving all over the site, meeting
new people, talking to them about what they did, trying to see
whether I could contribute to their projects. This was great fun. It
also gave me a chance to learn my way around Fermilab—I was
unprepared for how huge it was, much bigger than the laboratory
where I worked as a graduate student. I loved the view from the
15th floor of Wilson Hall. The fall landscape, with trees just starting
to change color, looked so peaceful and serene, and yet the most
dramatic events were happening in the two giant rings down below:
particles accelerating to almost the speed of light, moving faster and
faster. as they circled around the rings—until finally colliding in
tremendous bursts of energy, with new particles born and quickly
destroyed in the process.
It was not an easy decision, but
at the end I chose to join CDF,
one of the two experiments
operating at Fermilab's powerful
proton-antiproton collider, the
Tevatron—the world's
highest-energy particle
accelerator.
I joined CDF while the
experiment was in the midst of
commissioning the upgraded detector for Collider Run II, which
started last spring. The upgraded detector looks very different from
what it was during Run I, lasting from 1992 to 1996, and people
have to make sure that the upgraded detector subsystems function
properly. A few weeks after I joined CDF, the Tevatron shut down
its beams for about seven weeks. This was the last chance for
people to have access to the detector and fix problems before it
would be closed up again for continuous data taking until 2004 or
beyond. My new collaborators worked hectically around the clock,
and there was a great deal of excitement in the air.
However, I was not part of that excitement – not yet. My job was to
decide what I could do at CDF. One system I found especially
intriguing was the trigger, a highly complex electronic structure that
decides whether or not a given proton-antiproton collision is
particularly interesting from a physics point of view. In Run II, there
will be millions of collisions happening each second, and it will be
impossible to record every one of them: not only would it require
some incredibly fast technology for getting the data out, but the data
would fill hundreds of thousands of terabytes (trillions of bytes) of
disk space in just one year.
Fortunately, many collisions are relatively well-understood processes
that can be ignored in favor of something more exciting, and the
trigger must decide what "exciting" means. CDF uses a three-level
trigger system, with each level providing a greater degree of filtering
than its predecessor. In Run II, the second level trigger, in particular,
is designed to identify processes that have never before been
accessible in a proton-antiproton environment. It is therefore
extremely important to make sure that this trigger is capable of
handling the very large number of collisions that are expected when
Run II is in full bloom, and I was delighted when I saw an opportunity
to contribute to this project.
Of course, not everything went smoothly for me during those first
few weeks. There are some things I am still struggling with, but none
of them matter at all when it comes to the main reason I am here at
CDF: the physics. CDF, together with the other Tevatron
experiment, DZero, functions at the highest energy available
anywhere in the world. It is expected that the data set collected
during Run II will be about 10-20 times larger than that accumulated
during Run I, and the Tevatron energy in Run II will be about 10
percent higher.
It was only six years ago, here at the Tevatron, that the top quark
was discovered by analyzing the Run I data. The last quark
predicted by the Standard Model—our current best Theory of
Everything—was now real. This discovery was yet another triumph in
the already glorious 30-year old history of the Standard Model. I find
it somewhat ironic that it may well be here in just a few years that
the Standard Model will be faced with its most serious challenges.
New, unexpected phenomena, a whole world of new particles and
interactions, might be just around the corner; but we have to be at
the energy frontier to get there. As contributor and student, I am
excited and grateful to be part of the search.
###
by Natalia Kuznetsova
On the web:
Lederman Fellowships
CDF
|
 |