Questions tagged [particle-physics]

Particle physics is the study of the fundamental forces of nature as they are embodied in the interactions of elementary and composite particles at high energies and short time and distance scales. DO NOT USE THIS TAG for point particles in classical mechanics.

When to Use this Tag

should be used for general discussions of high-energy particle physics. DO NOT USE THIS TAG for point particles in classical mechanics.

Relation to Nuclear Physics

Particle physics is distinct from in that it generally involves energies higher than the binding energies of the nucleons, though there is a rich transition region (sometimes denoted "non-perturbative") investigated by physicists from both disciplines.

Experiment

The most visible experimental effort in particle physics in the early 2010s is the recently started (LHC) at CERN. However the discipline is much larger than that encompassing:

  • high energy collider work with the LHC, the Tevatron at Fermilab, and the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)
  • fixed target efforts at many sites
  • studies based on beams, cosmic rays, solar neutrinos, reactor anti-neutrinos, and radioactive decay
  • ultra-high energy cosmic ray shower telescopes
  • direct dark matter detection
  • proton decay monitoring at essentially every large, low back-ground detector used for other purposes
  • a wide variety of astrophysical instruments probing the cosmic microwave background, baryon acoustic resonances, active-galactic nuclei, and the large scale structure of the universe

Experimental particle physics tends to require large, expensive equipment and many experimenters, and as such is mostly carried out by government funded scientists at a few dozen major facilities world wide.

Theory

The core theory of particle physics currently is the so-called which embodies the theories of the strong and electro-weak forces with six quarks coming in three colors ($u$, $d$, $c$, $s$, $t$, $b$), three charged leptons ($e$, $\mu$, $\tau$), three un-charged leptons called neutrinos, and four gauge bosons (the eight color states of the gluon mediating the strong force, the photon ($\gamma$) and weak gauge bosons ($W^{\pm}$ and $Z$) mediating the electo-weak interaction, and the assumed (likely first reported as observed in July 2012)).

The standard model is known to be wrong about the neutrino masses (assumed to be zero, but experimentally shown to mix implying non-zero mass).

Many candidates for beyond the standard model theories exists in several large classes with names like super-symmetry, string theories, and technicolor. Some of these can be shown to be equivalent to other under certain conditions.

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If there were fundamental forces weaker than gravity, would we know about it?

We know that gravity is a very weak force compared to electromagnetic forces and the nuclear forces. We know about the other forces because they're necessary to explain atoms, and we can detect gravity easily, because unlike the other forces it is…
N. Virgo
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What the heck is the sigma (f0) 600?

At one point, I decided to make friends with the low-lying spectrum of QCD. By this I do not mean the symmetry numbers (the "quark content"), but the actual dynamics, some insight. The pions are the sloshing of the up-down condensate, and the other…
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Are there old aged particles?

To measure the lifetime of a specific particle one needs to look at very many such particles in order to calculate the average. It cannot matter when the experimentalist actually starts his stopwatch to measure the time it takes for the particles to…
Jack
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Opposite of particle decay

I have read about particle decay, a process in which one particle becomes several other particles. However, I have not been able to find much information about its opposite: several particles combining into one particle. Is such a process possible,…
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Particle physics plots

I'm having a hard time understanding what some of the plots that are presented by ATLAS/CMS actually show. See for example: http://resonaances.blogspot.com/2011/07/higgs-wont-come-out-of-closet.html What is the y-axis? How would the plot look like…
Jim
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Please explain the physics of a Cloud Chamber

A friend of mine was telling me about building a cloud chamber while he was in graduate school. As I understand it, this allows you to "see" interactions caused by high energy particles going through the cloud chamber. This has fascinated me, and…
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What is the current status of the anomalous muon magnetic moment?

Many years ago, a discrepancy was found between the experimentally measured value of the muon magnetic moment, and the theoretically calculated value. Shockingly, most physicists were blase about it. It was no big deal to them. They dismissed it as…
Jules
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Why are "heavier" particles harder to detect than "lighter" ones?

Something I have read multiple times that I've never intuitively understood is that "heavier" particles are harder to detect than "lighter" ones... For example, I quote from Stephen Hawking's "The Grand Design" in relation to supersymmetry: But…
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How well is the $\rho$ and $\omega$ coupling universality measured?

Is there any good recent experimental data that tests whether the $\rho$ coupling constant depends only on the isospin multiplet of the produced particle? EDIT: I got a downvote, so I should explain the motivation. In the 1960s, Sakurai's idea is…
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Is there Bremsstrahlung radiation for a charged massless particle?

This is a follow up question from: Massless charged particles Since by definition such a particle would interact with photons- resulting in some change in momentum- would the particle emit Bremsstrahlung during this interaction? If it does, it seems…
user1567
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"The Schwarzschild Proton" paper - Is the science valid?

I'm a layman without a university background in physics / math. Since I don't have a background, reading a paper is more of an effort. Consequently, when I come across an interesting paper, I can't really just give it a glance, and see if it is…
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How is the size of the particles is determined?

What is the size of atomic and subatomic particles, like proton, neutron, photon etc? Is it defined based on some quantum characterics as de Broglie wavelength or Compton wavelength?
m0nhawk
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hadron jets from quark-antiquark in colliders

The observation of hadron jets from electron-positron collisions (LEP) is explained (e.g. Wilczek, The Lightness of Being, p 55) as follows- e,p collide and produce a virtual photon. the photon goes into a quark, antiquark pair, and one jet of…
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Why are higher generation of matter unstable?

My secondary school physics textbook has mentioned that protons and neutrons are made up of down and up quarks in different amounts. It has also mentioned that other quarks exist. It states that particles from these quarks are unstable. It also…
Macha
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Pileup subtraction for event reconstruction

In particle physics experiments, pileup occurs when two particles hit the same detector (say a calorimeter) at roughly the same time, resulting in what looks like a single event with higher energy than either one. Naturally, this can be a pain when…
Zeph
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