Particle Physics
Michaelmas Term 2011
Prof. Mark Thomson
Handout 1 : Introduction
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Cambridge Particle Physics Courses
PART II
PART III
Particle and Nuclear Physics
Prof Ward/Dr Lester
Major Option
Particle Physics
Prof Thomson
Minor Option
Gauge Field Theory
Dr Batley
Covering most Standard Model
physics, both experiment and
underlying theory
Minor Option
Particle Astrophysics
Profs Efstathiou & Parker
The theoretical principles
behind the SM
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Introductory course
The connection between
particle physics and cosmology
Michaelmas 2011
Course Synopsis
Handout
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1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
6:
7:
8:
9:
10:
11:
12:
13:
14:
15:
Introduction, Decay Rates and Cross Sections
The Dirac Equation and Spin
Interaction by Particle Exchange
Electron Positron Annihilation
Electron Proton Scattering
Deep Inelastic Scattering
Symmetries and the Quark Model
QCD and Colour
V-A and the Weak Interaction
Leptonic Weak Interactions
Neutrinos and Neutrino Oscillations
The CKM Matrix and CP Violation
Electroweak Unification and the W and Z Bosons
Tests of the Standard Model
The Higgs Boson and Beyond
Will concentrate on the modern view of particle physics with the emphasis
on how theoretical concepts relate to recent experimental measurements
Aim: by the end of the course you should have a good understanding of
both aspects of particle physics
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Preliminaries
Web-page: www.hep.phy.cam.ac.uk/~thomson/partIIIparticles/
All course material, old exam questions, corrections, interesting links etc.
Detailed answers will posted after the supervisions (password protected)
Format of Lectures/Handouts:
l will derive almost all results from first principles (only a few exceptions).
In places will include some additional theoretical background in nonexaminable appendices at the end of that particular handout.
Please let me know of any typos: [email protected]
Books:
The handouts are fairly complete, however there a number of decent books:
Particle Physics, Martin and Shaw (Wiley): fairly basic but good.
Introductory High Energy Physics, Perkins (Cambridge): slightly below
level of the course but well written.
Introduction to Elementary Physics, Griffiths (Wiley): about right level
but doesnt cover the more recent material.
Quarks and Leptons, Halzen & Martin (Wiley): good graduate level
textbook (slightly above level of this course).
Before we start in earnest, a few words on units/notation and a very brief
Part II refresher
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Preliminaries: Natural Units
S.I. UNITS: kg m s are a natural choice for everyday objects
e.g. M(Prescott) ~ 250 kg
not very natural in particle physics
instead use Natural Units based on the language of particle physics
From Quantum Mechanics - the unit of action :
From relativity - the speed of light: c
From Particle Physics - unit of energy: GeV (1 GeV ~ proton rest mass energy)
Units become (i.e. with the correct dimensions):
Energy
Time
Momentum
Length
Mass
Area
Simplify algebra by setting:
Now all quantities expressed in powers of
Energy
Time
Momentum
Length
Mass
Area
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
GeV
To convert back to S.I. units,
need to restore missing factors
of
and
5
Preliminaries: Heaviside-Lorentz Units
Electron charge defined by Force equation:
In Heaviside-Lorentz units set
and
NOW: electric charge
has dimensions
Since
Unless otherwise stated, Natural Units are used throughout these
handouts,
,
, etc.
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Review of The Standard Model
Particle Physics is the study of:
MATTER: the fundamental constituents of the universe
- the elementary particles
FORCE: the fundamental forces of nature, i.e. the interactions
between the elementary particles
Try to categorise the PARTICLES and FORCES in as simple and
fundamental manner possible
Current understanding embodied in the STANDARD MODEL:
Forces between particles due to exchange of particles
Consistent with all current experimental data !
But it is just a model with many unpredicted parameters,
e.g. particle masses.
As such it is not the ultimate theory (if such a thing exists), there
are many mysteries.
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Matter in the Standard Model
In the Standard Model the fundamental matter is described by point-like
spin-1/2 fermions
LEPTONS
QUARKS
m/GeV
0.3
m/GeV
e
First
Generation 1
1 0.0005 d
1/3
+2/3 0.3
Second
Generation 2
1 0.106
1/3
+2/3 1.5
Third
Generation 3
1 1.77
1/3
+2/3 175
0
0
0
The masses quoted for the
quarks are the constituent
masses, i.e. the effective
masses for quarks confined
in a bound state
0.5
4.5
In the SM there are three generations the particles in each generation
are copies of each other differing only in mass. (not understood why three).
The neutrinos are much lighter than all other particles (e.g. 1 has m<3 eV)
we now know that neutrinos have non-zero mass (dont understand why
so small)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Forces in the Standard Model
Forces mediated by the exchange of spin-1 Gauge Bosons
Force
Boson(s)
JP
m/GeV
EM (QED)
Photon
Weak
W / Z
80 / 91
Strong (QCD)
8 Gluons g 1
Gravity (?)
Graviton?
2+
Fundamental interaction strength is given by charge g.
Related to the dimensionless coupling constant
e.g. QED
(both g and are dimensionless,
but g contains a hidden
)
In Natural Units
Convenient to express couplings in terms of which, being
genuinely dimensionless does not depend on the system of
units (this is not true for the numerical value for e)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Standard Model Vertices
Interaction of gauge bosons with fermions described by SM vertices
Properties of the gauge bosons and nature of the interaction between
the bosons and fermions determine the properties of the interaction
STRONG
q
EM
q
g
Only quarks
Never changes
flavour
Prof. M.A. Thomson
WEAK CC
WEAK NC
u
All charged
fermions
Never changes
flavour
All fermions
Always changes
flavour
Michaelmas 2011
q
Z
All fermions
Never changes
flavour
10
Feynman Diagrams
Particle interactions described in terms of Feynman diagrams
e.g. scattering
e.g. annihilation
e+
IMPORTANT POINTS TO REMEMBER:
time runs from left right, only in sense that:
LHS of diagram is initial state
RHS of diagram is final state
Middle is how it happened
anti-particle arrows in ve time direction
Energy, momentum, angular momentum, etc.
conserved at all interaction vertices
All intermediate particles are virtual
i.e.
(handout 3)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
INITIAL
e+
e
FINAL
time
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Special Relativity and 4-Vector Notation
Will use 4-vector notation with
as the time-like component, e.g.
(contravariant)
(covariant)
with
In particle physics, usually deal with relativistic particles. Require all
calculations to be Lorentz Invariant. L.I. quantities formed from 4-vector
scalar products, e.g.
Invariant mass
Phase
A few words on NOTATION
Four vectors written as either:
Four vector scalar product:
Three vectors written as:
or
or
or
Quantities evaluated in the centre of mass frame:
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
etc.
12
Mandelstam s, t and u
In particle scattering/annihilation there are three particularly useful
Lorentz Invariant quantities: s, t and u
Consider the scattering process
3
2
(Simple) Feynman diagrams can be categorised according to the four-momentum
of the exchanged particle
s-channel
e
t-channel
e
u-channel
Can define three kinematic variables: s, t and u from the following four vector
scalar products (squared four-momentum of exchanged particle)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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Example: Mandelstam s, t and u
Note:
(Question 1)
e.g. Centre-of-mass energy, s:
e+
e
This is a scalar product of two four-vectors
Lorentz Invariant
Since this is a L.I. quantity, can evaluate in any frame. Choose the
most convenient, i.e. the centre-of-mass frame:
Hence
Prof. M.A. Thomson
is the total energy of collision in the centre-of-mass frame
Michaelmas 2011
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From Feynman diagrams to Physics
Particle Physics = Precision Physics
Particle physics is about building fundamental theories and testing their
predictions against precise experimental data
Dealing with fundamental particles and can make very precise theoretical
predictions not complicated by dealing with many-body systems
Many beautiful experimental measurements
precise theoretical predictions challenged by precise measurements
For all its flaws, the Standard Model describes all experimental data !
This is a (the?) remarkable achievement of late 20th century physics.
Requires understanding of theory and experimental data
Part II : Feynman diagrams mainly used to describe how particles interact
Part III: will use Feynman diagrams and associated Feynman rules to
perform calculations for many processes
hopefully gain a fairly deep understanding of the Standard Model
and how it explains all current data
Before we can start, need calculations for:
Interaction cross sections;
Particle decay rates;
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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Cross Sections and Decay Rates
In particle physics we are mainly concerned
with particle interactions and decays, i.e.
transitions between states
these are the experimental observables of particle physics
Calculate transition rates from Fermis Golden Rule
is number of transitions per unit time from initial state
to final state
not Lorentz Invariant !
is Transition Matrix Element
is the perturbing
Hamiltonian
is density of final states
Rates depend on MATRIX ELEMENT and DENSITY OF STATES
the ME contains the fundamental particle physics
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
just kinematics
16
The first five lectures
Aiming towards a proper calculation of decay and scattering processes
Will concentrate on:
e
e
e+e +
e q e q
e+
(e qe q to probe
proton structure)
Need relativistic calculations of particle decay rates and cross sections:
Need relativistic treatment of spin-half particles:
Dirac Equation
Need relativistic calculation of interaction Matrix Element:
Interaction by particle exchange and Feynman rules
+ and a few mathematical tricks along, e.g. the Dirac Delta Function
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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Particle Decay Rates
Consider the two-body decay
Want to calculate the decay rate in first order
perturbation theory using plane-wave descriptions
of the particles (Born approximation):
2
as
where N is the normalisation and
For decay rate calculation need to know:
Wave-function normalisation
Transition matrix element from perturbation theory
Expression for the density of states
All in a Lorentz
Invariant form
First consider wave-function normalisation
Previously (e.g. part II) have used a non-relativistic formulation
Non-relativistic: normalised to one particle in a cube of side
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Michaelmas 2011
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Non-relativistic Phase Space (revision)
Apply boundary conditions (
):
Wave-function vanishing at box boundaries
quantised particle momenta:
a
a
Volume of single state in momentum space:
Normalising to one particle/unit volume gives
number of states in element:
Therefore density of states in Golden rule:
with
Integrating over an elemental shell in
momentum-space gives
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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Dirac Function
In the relativistic formulation of decay rates and cross sections we will make
use of the Dirac function: infinitely narrow spike of unit area
a
Any function with the above properties can represent
e.g.
(an infinitesimally narrow Gaussian)
In relativistic quantum mechanics delta functions prove extremely useful
for integrals over phase space, e.g. in the decay
and
express energy and momentum conservation
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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We will soon need an expression for the delta function of a function
Start from the definition of a delta function
Now express in terms of
and then change variables
where
x
From properties of the delta function (i.e. here only
non-zero at
)
x
Rearranging and expressing the RHS as a delta function
(1)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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The Golden Rule revisited
Rewrite the expression for density of states using a delta-function
since
Note : integrating over all final state energies but energy conservation now
taken into account explicitly by delta function
Hence the golden rule becomes:
the integral is over all allowed final states of any energy
For dn in a two-body decay, only need to consider
one particle : mom. conservation fixes the other
However, can include momentum conservation explicitly by integrating over
the momenta of both particles and using another -fn
Energy cons.
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Mom. cons.
Density of states
22
Lorentz Invariant Phase Space
In non-relativistic QM normalise to one particle/unit volume:
When considering relativistic effects, volume contracts by
a
a
a
a/
Particle density therefore increases by
Conclude that a relativistic invariant wave-function normalisation
needs to be proportional to E particles per unit volume
Usual convention:
Normalise to 2E particles/unit volume
Previously used
normalised to 1 particle per unit volume
Hence
is normalised to
per unit volume
Define Lorentz Invariant Matrix Element,
, in terms of the wave-functions
normalised to
particles per unit volume
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Michaelmas 2011
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For the two body decay
Now expressing
in terms of
gives
Note:
uses relativistically normalised wave-functions. It is Lorentz Invariant
is the Lorentz Invariant Phase Space for each final state particle
(prove
this in Question 2)
the factor of
arises from the wave-function
normalisation
This form of
is simply a rearrangement of the original equation
but the integral is now frame independent (i.e. L.I.)
is inversely proportional to Ei, the energy of the decaying particle. This is
exactly what one would expect from time dilation (Ei = m).
Energy and momentum conservation in the delta functions
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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Decay Rate Calculations
Because the integral is Lorentz invariant (i.e. frame independent) it can be
evaluated in any frame we choose. The C.o.M. frame is most convenient
In the C.o.M. frame
Integrating over
now
and
since the -function imposes
2
For convenience, here
is written as
Writing
Prof. M.A. Thomson
using the -function:
Michaelmas 2011
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Which can be written
in the form
(2)
where
and
Note:
determines the C.o.M momenta of
the two decay products
i.e.
imposes energy conservation.
for
Eq. (2) can be integrated using the property of function derived earlier (eq. (1))
where
is the value for which
All that remains is to evaluate
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Michaelmas 2011
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giving:
But from
, i.e. energy conservation:
In the particles rest frame
(3)
VALID FOR ALL TWO-BODY DECAYS !
can be obtained from
(Question 3)
(now try Questions 4 & 5)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
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Cross section definition
no of interactions per unit time per target
incident flux
Flux = number of
incident particles/
unit area/unit time
The cross section, , can be thought of as the effective crosssectional area of the target particles for the interaction to occur.
In general this has nothing to do with the physical size of the
target although there are exceptions, e.g. neutron absorption
here
is the projective area of nucleus
Differential Cross section
d = no of particles per sec/per target into d
incident flux
d
e
e
Prof. M.A. Thomson
or generally
with
integrate over all
other particles
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example
Consider a single particle of type a with velocity, va, traversing a region of area
A containing nb particles of type b per unit volume
In time t a particle of type a traverses
region containing
particles of type b
va
vb
Interaction probability obtained from effective
cross-sectional area occupied by the
particles of type b
Interaction Probability =
Rate per particle of type a =
nb v
Consider volume V, total reaction rate =
=
As anticipated:
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Rate = Flux x Number of targets x cross section
Michaelmas 2011
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Cross Section Calculations
Consider scattering process
1
Start from Fermis Golden Rule:
where
3
2
is the transition matrix for a normalisation of 1/unit volume
Now
For 1 target particle per unit volume
the parts are not Lorentz Invariant
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Michaelmas 2011
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To obtain a Lorentz Invariant form use wave-functions normalised to
per unit volume
particles
Again define L.I. Matrix element
The integral is now written in a Lorentz invariant form
The quantity
can be written in terms of a four-vector
scalar product and is therefore also Lorentz Invariant (the Lorentz Inv. Flux)
(see appendix I)
Consequently cross section is a Lorentz Invariant quantity
Two special cases of Lorentz Invariant Flux:
Centre-of-Mass Frame
Target (particle 2) at rest
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Michaelmas 2011
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22 Body Scattering in C.o.M. Frame
We will now apply above Lorentz Invariant formula for the
interaction cross section to the most common cases used
in the course. First consider 22 scattering in C.o.M. frame
Start from
3
1
Here
The integral is exactly the same integral that appeared in the particle decay
calculation but with
replaced by
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Michaelmas 2011
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In the case of elastic scattering
For calculating the total cross-section (which is Lorentz Invariant) the result on
the previous page (eq. (4)) is sufficient. However, it is not so useful for calculating
the differential cross section in a rest frame other than the C.o.M:
because the angles in
refer to the C.o.M frame
For the last calculation in this section, we need to find a L.I. expression for
Start by expressing
in terms of Mandelstam t
i.e. the square of the four-momentum transfer
Prof. M.A. Thomson
Michaelmas 2011
Product of
four-vectors
therefore L.I.
33
Want to express
in terms of Lorentz Invariant
where
x
In C.o.M. frame:
3
2
4
giving
therefore
hence
Finally, integrating over
Prof. M.A. Thomson
(assuming no
Michaelmas 2011
dependence of
) gives:
34
Lorentz Invariant differential cross section
All quantities in the expression for
are Lorentz Invariant and
therefore, it applies to any rest frame. It should be noted that
is a constant, fixed by energy/momentum conservation
As an example of how to use the invariant expression
we will consider elastic scattering in the laboratory frame in the limit
where we can neglect the mass of the incoming particle
E1
m2
e.g. electron or neutrino scattering
In this limit
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Michaelmas 2011
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22 Body Scattering in Lab. Frame
The other commonly occurring case is scattering from a fixed target in the
Laboratory Frame (e.g. electron-proton scattering)
First take the case of elastic scattering at high energy where the mass
of the incoming particles can be neglected:
e.g.
1 e
e 3
X 4
Wish to express the cross section in terms of scattering angle of the e
Integrating
over
therefore
The rest is some rather tedious algebra. start from four-momenta
so here
But from (E,p) conservation
and, therefore, can also express t in terms of particles 2 and 4
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Note E1 is a constant (the energy of the incoming particle) so
Equating the two expressions for t gives
so
Particle 1 massless
using
gives
In limit
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In this equation, E3 is a function of :
giving
General form for 22 Body Scattering in Lab. Frame
The calculation of the differential cross section for the case where m1 can not be
neglected is longer and contains no more physics (see appendix II). It gives:
Again there is only one independent variable, , which can be seen from
conservation of energy
i.e.
Prof. M.A. Thomson
is a function of
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Summary
Used a Lorentz invariant formulation of Fermis Golden Rule to
derive decay rates and cross-sections in terms of the Lorentz
Invariant Matrix Element (wave-functions normalised to 2E/Volume)
Main Results:
Particle decay:
Where
is a function of particle masses
Scattering cross section in C.o.M. frame:
Invariant differential cross section (valid in all frames):
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Summary cont.
Differential cross section in the lab. frame ( m1=0)
Differential cross section in the lab. frame (m1 0)
with
Summary of the summary:
Have now dealt with kinematics of particle decays and cross sections
The fundamental particle physics is in the matrix element
The above equations are the basis for all calculations that follow
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Appendix I : Lorentz Invariant Flux
NON-EXAMINABLE
Collinear collision:
To show this is Lorentz invariant, first consider
Giving
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Appendix II : general 22 Body Scattering in lab frame
NON-EXAMINABLE
again
But now the invariant quantity t:
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Which gives
To determine dE3/d(cos ), first differentiate
(AII.1)
Then equate
to give
Differentiate wrt. cos
Using (1)
Prof. M.A. Thomson
(AII.2)
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It is easy to show
and using (AII.2) obtain
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