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1 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Research Participation in Collider Based Particle Physics Stefan Spanier University of Tennessee, Knoxville
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2 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Cathode Ray Tube electron Experiments 111 years ago … fundamental building block of matter "Could anything at first sight seem more impractical than a body which is so small that its mass is an insignificant fraction of the mass of an atom of hydrogen?" J.J. Thompson: Cathode rays are material constituents of atoms! bend in electric and magnetic field Nobel Prize 1906 G.P. Thompson: electrons have wave character Nobel Prize 1937
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3 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Particle Accelerator as Microscope Length to be resolved R R 1/Particle Energy 1eV = kinetic energy an electron gains in a electric field of 1 Volt 1.0 V + - - > 100 MeV ~ keV > 10 MeV > 100 GeV
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4 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 u c t d s b d s b u c t e - e e e + ___ ___ __ _ Charge + 2/3 - 1/3 0 Charge + 1/3 - 2/3 0 +1 Quarks Leptons mass particles anti-particles Standard Model does not ‘predict’ any of the masses (parameters); How do masses come about? Latest addition 1995 Tevatron at Fermilab The Standard Model Building Blocks
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5 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 How particles acquire masses … The Higgs particle mass generation The Higgs Field
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6 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Electric Magnetic Photons m= 0 Weak W +,W -,Z 0 m= 80, 90 GeV Strong Gluons m = 0 Gravity Gravitons ? Maxwell electroweak ~100 GeV Standard Model Planck energy ~ 10 19 GeV today’s accelerators just about … ~ 10 15 GeV ? GUT scale coupling constants unify Higgs mechanism Forces Seems unnatural ?
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7 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 GUT Force relative coupling Strong S 1 0.12 Electromagnetic 1/137 1/128 Weak W 10 -6 Gravity G 10 -39 Behavior of coupling constants supports idea, but no common intersection? introduce e.g. Supersymmety ? least understood 1 strength weak strong
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8 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Supersymmetry ??? Simplest super-symmetric model has 105 new parameters … Boson Fermion symmetry Spin ½ quarks spin 0 squarks Spin ½ leptons spin 0 sleptons Spin 1 gauge bosons spin ½ gauginos Spin 0 Higgs spin ½ Higgsino Many particles to search for! What mass scale? Supersymmetry is broken...no scalar with mass of electron Observation: -as missing mass (energy) if non-interacting (lightest neutralino) - from decay into the lower mass standard particles
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9 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 What is dark matter? How are particle physics & cosmology connected? What is dark energy? Where did the anti-matter go? (CP Violation) Stars and galaxies are only 0.1% Neutrinos are ~0.1–10% Electrons and protons are ~5% Dark Matter ~25% Dark Energy ~70% The Cosmic Connection
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10 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 The LHC Machine and Experiments LHCf totem High Energy factor 7 increase w.r.t. present accelerators High Intensity (# events/reaction/time) factor 100 increase High Energy factor 7 increase w.r.t. present accelerators High Intensity (# events/reaction/time) factor 100 increase Proton-proton collisions at 14 TeV 27 km in circumference, 50-150m deep
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11 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 LHC superconducting dipole magnet Energy stored/beam: 360 MJ Energy stored in magnets: 700GJ Particle losses fatal ! Superconducting magnets: 1232 dipole magnets (bending) T=1.9 K (superfluid Helium) B – field > 8 Tesla ~500 quadrupole (focus)magnets LHC in LEP tunnel
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12 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 LHC – Beam 1 first + second turn
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13 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 A Higgs Event in the Compact Muon Solenoid Luminosity = 10 34 cm -2 s -1 = 10 7 mb -1 Hz Interaction rate = 8 x 10 8 Hz Interactions/crossing = 25 (~1000 charged particles) pp ++ -- -- ++ Higgs event + ~25 minimum bias events Simulation H Z
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14 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 The CMS Detector Muon chambers RPCs, DT (barrel), CSC (end) Superconducting coil 4Tesla, 20000A, -270 o C Iron return yoke EM Calorimeter #80k PbWO 4 crystals Width: 22m Diameter: 15m Weight: 12,500 tons Hadron Calorimeter Brass + scintillator Vacuum chamber Central Tracker 66M Si-Pixel 10M Si-Strip Area: 220 m 2 Very forward calorimeter
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15 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 The Pixel Detector Barrel layers at radii = 4.3cm, 7.3cm and 10.2cm Disks at +/-z = cm and cm Pixel cell size = 100x150 µm 2 ~1m 2 of silicon / 66 Million pixels ~15k front-end chips and ~1 m 0.3 m z
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16 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 The Pixel Detector Principle ~285 m After 1 st year z B Primary signal electrons; Lorentz force smears charges Resolution: within square: ~25 m Charge sharing: 10 – 15 m MIP 29000 e -
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17 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Pixel Diamond Detector – New Technology Pixel Luminosity Telescope prototype pixel readout at UTK
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18 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 Computing 15 Million Gigabytes of data each year (about 20 million CDs!) GRID Node at UTK 10 GBit/s connection; 246 processors + 50TByte storage
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19 Stefan Spanier, 22 October 2008 The Commissioning / Operation
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