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Painless physics: a particle dialogue
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What are the first particles you
learned about in physical
science in 7th grade? Probably
electrons, protons and
neutrons.
The electron, the first subatomic
particle to be observed, was
discovered by J. J. Thompson
in 1897. About 15 years later,
the hydrogen's nucleus was
identified as a proton; in another
15 years, the neutron was discovered. Since then, scientists have
split open the proton and neutron to find a treasure chest of new
particles. But electrons, protons and neutrons remain the basics of
matter in the universe, the constituents of every atom.
What are these three foundation particles, how do we define them,
how do they fit into the theory of elementary particle physics, the
Standard Model—and how do we use them to explore the subatomic
world? All particles that make up matter fit into two classes: hadrons
and leptons. The word hadron comes from the Greek hadros,
meaning "robust." Protons and neutrons, heavyweights in the
Standard Model, are hadrons. The term lepton comes from the
Greek leptos, meaning "thin." Electrons are 2,000 times lighter than
protons. Appropriately, they are members of the lepton family.
Hadrons and leptons, for all their differences, form a stable
partnership in all forms of matter.
What are these particles made of? One way to find out is to split
them open. A hadron has messy stuff inside, like an egg. Drop an
egg on the counter, and yolk and white come spilling out of the
cracked shell. Throw it against a wall and the yolk breaks open with
egg innards flying everywhere. Throw one egg at another and get
twice the impact, and twice the mess—all mixed together. You might
be better off just tapping the shell open with a spoon to see what's
inside an egg.
Smashing hadrons
But this sort of gentle tapping does not work for hadrons. They are
too small, and their shells are too tough, so we are forced to resort
to the smash-it-open method. What we find inside looks different,
too—it's not as simple as an egg. At low energies, when we're just
lobbing it at a target, the proton appears to be made of three
quarks, called valence quarks; specifically, two up quarks and one
down quark. But throw it harder and other particles can pop out as
well.
Here at Fermilab, we collide protons at higher energies than
anywhere else in the world. This is a messy business, just like egg
smashing, necessitating the huge CDF and DZero detectors.
Protons traveling near the speed of light in the Tevatron are so
energetic that, upon impact, they split apart into many pieces that
themselves spray far out in all directions. At about four stories tall,
each detector provides dense material to contain these particle
products, so we can count them, measure them and see where they
went flying.
What do we see? At Tevatron energies, we find a whole particle sea
in there, with quark and anti-quark pairs—the quark sea—in addition
to the three valence quarks. The valence and sea quarks can also
recombine to form other particles such as pions, a new type of
hadron discovered in 1947. With two valence quarks instead of
three, the pion is a different class of hadron from the proton and
neutron. The lighter pion is known as a meson, from the Greek
mesos, or middle. Hadrons with three quarks, such as protons, are
known as baryons (Greek: varys, or heavy). There are a total of six
quarks, paired in twos according to properties they have in common.
All six can combine in many different ways to form groups of two
(mesons) and groups of three (baryons). There are many more
particles in the hadron families than those I've mentioned, including
perhaps, some we have not even discovered yet.
Loner leptons
The lepton family is small by
comparison, both in numbers and size,
comprising only six elementary particles.
Three leptons are electrically charged:
the electron, the heavier muon, and the
still heavier tau. Three are electrically
neutral and unusually small: the electron
neutrino, the muon neutrino and the tau
neutrino. These neutrinos have
properties in common with their
respective charged lepton siblings and are therefore paired with
them. Like the quarks, leptons appear to be structureless,
fundamental particles, the building blocks of matter. Unlike the clingy
quarks, which appear only in groups as mesons or baryons, the
leptons are real individualists, preferring to be on their own.
Since leptons are structureless (as far as we know), they are a
good tool for probing hadrons. They allow us to crack the shell and
see what's inside. Colliding a lepton and a hadron is a lot like firing a
tiny bullet at an egg. A small enough bullet may not even crack the
whole egg open but rather pass right through leaving a little hole and
taking a little bit of the inside. Fire lots of tiny bullets at the egg and
you can map out the entire inside. In this way, leptons have proven
to be a very precise way to find out what's inside hadrons.
So far we've seen that hadrons are bigger, messier and more
complicated than leptons. They are also more talkative. In the
Standard Model, particles interact by exchanging special particles
that carry forces. The electromagnetic force is transferred by
exchange of the photon. The strong force exchanger is the gluon; the
weak force exchangers are the W and Z particles. Neutrinos, the
uncharged leptons, are particularly shy. They will talk with other
particles only via the weak force. The charged leptons are a little
more outgoing and will interact via the weak force or the
electromagnetic force. Hadrons are gregarious by comparison,
willing to interact via any of the three Standard Model forces—weak,
electromagnetic or strong.
Hadrons and leptons look different, behave differently and, in
general, have very different personalities. But their ability to work
together has stood the test of time in forming the stable constituents
of every atom in the universe as we know it. So far.
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by Bonnie Fleming
Lederman Fellow, MiniBooNE experiment
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