52
Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

Hadron physicsChallenges and Achievements

Mikhail Bashkanov

University of Edinburgh

UK Nuclear Physics Summer School

I

Page 2: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

OUTLINE OF THE COURSE• Lecture 1: Hadron Physics. Experiments: new toys –

new knowledge (progress in particle detector systems). Research areas: Hadron spectroscopy, meson rare decays (physics beyond SM), structure of hadrons.

• Lecture 2: Baryon spectroscopy, naïve quark model and beyond, molecular states, new horizons with precise measurements.

• Lecture 3: Using EM probes to learn about the nucleon. Nucleon form factors. Radius of the proton.

Page 3: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

3

HADRON PHYSICS

Page 4: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

4

ELECTROMAGNETIC INTERACTIONS

Ze

Ze

Page 5: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

5

ELECTROMAGNETIC INTERACTIONS

Ze

Ze

2

Page 6: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

6

EM -> STRONG INTERACTIONS

2qq

q q

g

Page 7: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

7

QUARKS• Fermions (spin )• 3 colors (red, green, blue)• Parity +1

Page 8: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

8

ENERGY DEPENDENCE OF THE COUPLING CONSTANT

q

Bare quark

Page 9: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

9

ENERGY DEPENDENCE OF THE COUPLING CONSTANT

q

Dressed quark

Page 10: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

10

ENERGY DEPENDENCE OF THE COUPLING CONSTANT

q

Dressed quarkΔ𝑝 ∙ Δ𝑥 ≥h

Low energy probe

Page 11: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

11

ENERGY DEPENDENCE OF THE COUPLING CONSTANT

q

Dressed quarkΔ𝑝 ∙ Δ𝑥 ≥h

High energy probe

Page 12: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

12

ELECTRON MICROSCOPYde Broglie wavelength of probe particle must be ~size of the object you wish to study

Page 13: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

13

STRONG COUPLING CONSTANT

Page 14: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

14

STRONG COUPLING CONSTANT

Perturbative QCDParticle Physics

Nonperturbative QCDNuclear Physics

Page 15: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

15

NUCLEAR VS PARTICLE PHYSICS

Nuclear Physics Particle PhysicsBelow charm threshold Above charm threshold

Nucleon structure Mesons with mass > 1.2 GeV

Light quark baryons (without c/b quarks)

anticolor

Meson Baryon

color

Page 16: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

16

MAJOR DIRECTIONS• Hadron spectroscopy:

• Hadron properties (mass, with, decay branching…)• Hadron structure (, , , meson-baryon molecule…)

• Precision tests of SM:

• Neutron magnetic moment• Neutron electric dipole moment• Muon/electron magnetic moment (g-2)• Rare decays of mesons• …

• Size and structure of nucleon

• Nucleon form factor• Nucleon radius

Page 17: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

17

RECENT PROGRESS IN NUCLEAR PHYSICS

Page 18: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

18

BUBBLE CHAMBERS

Gargamelle Bubble Chamber

Page 19: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

19

MAGNETIC SPECTROMETERS

𝐸2=𝑝2+𝑚2

Time Of Flight->velocity

𝑝=𝑚𝑣

√1−𝑣2

Page 20: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

20

MODERN DETECTORS• Large acceptance (close to 4 coverage)

• Charge and neutral particles

• Magnetic field, drift chambers• Calorimeters

• High luminosity

• High rate, fast triggering• Polarized beams/targets

• Polarimeters

High precision

Page 21: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

21

MODERN DETECTORS

KLOE

WASA

Page 22: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

22

PHOTONSBasics

Page 23: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

23

WHY DO WE USE E/M PROBES?

Pros:• Interaction is understood

(QCD)• Beams are clean• Beams can be polarized• Targets can be polarized

and dense

Cons:• Cross-sections are small• Photon beams were(!)

challenging• Polarized targets are

challenging• Nucleon polarimetry is

complicated

Page 24: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

24

TYPES OF PHOTON POLARIZATION

Linear polarization:

(Electric field vector oscillates in plane)

Circular polarization:

(Electric field rotates Clockwise or anticlockwise)

• Both real and virtual photons can have polarization• Determining azimuthal distribution of reaction products

around these polarization directions gives powerful information.

Page 25: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

25

HOW DO WE GENERATE INTENSE ELECTRON BEAMSMicrotron: (MAMI, JLab)• Electron beam accelerated by RF cavities.• Tune magnetic field to ensure path through

magnets multiple of Wavelength of accelerating field - electrons arrive back in phase with the accelerating field.

• Gives “continuous” beam(high duty factor)

Stretcher ring: (ELSA, Spring8)• Electron beams fed in from linac.

Then accelerated and stored in ring.Useable beam bled off slowly

• Many stretcher rings built for synchrotron radiation – can exploit infrastructure for multiuse (e.g. Spring8)

• Tend to have poorer duty factors, less stable operation and poorer beam properties than microtrons.

Page 26: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

26

REAL PHOTON BEAMS FROM ELECTRON BEAMS

Wide range of photon energies

Good time/position resolution for the tagger

Small radiator-target distance

Bremsstrahlung spectra

Θ𝑐=𝑚𝑒[𝑀𝑒𝑉 ]𝐸𝑒[𝑀𝑒𝑉 ]

[𝑟𝑎𝑑]

E e=855MeV→Θ𝑐=0.6𝑚𝑟𝑎𝑑

Page 27: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

27

POLARIZATION IN REAL PHOTON BEAM

Linear polarization:• crystalline radiator,

e.g. thin diamond.

• orient diamond to give polarised photons in certain photon energy ranges.

𝐸𝑒=1600𝑀𝑒𝑉

Circular polarization:• helicity polarised

electrons.

• bremsstrahlung in amorphous radiator, e.g. copper.

Page 28: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

28

COHERENT BREMSSTRAHLUNG

Page 29: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

29

LINEAR POLARIZATION

Page 30: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

30

COHERENT BREMSSTRAHLUNG

Page 31: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

31

FROZEN SPIN TARGET• available (Mainz) since

05.2010

• Butanol() or D-Butanol

• 3He/4He dilution refrigerator (50mK)

• Superconducting holding magnet

• Longitudinal or transverse polarizations are possible

• Maximal polarization for protons ~90%, for deuterons ~75%

• Relaxation time ~2000 hours

Page 32: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

32

THE POLARIZED TARGET

Page 33: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

33

NUCLEON POLARIMETER𝑛 (Θ ,𝜙 )=𝑛0(Θ)(1+𝐴(Θ) [𝑃 𝑦 cos (𝜙 )−𝑃𝑥sin (𝜙)])

𝐀𝐲

𝚯�⃗�

𝝓

Number of nucleons scattered in the direction

Polar angle distribution for unpolarized nucleons

Analysing powerPolarization

Page 34: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

34

HADRON SPECTROSCOPY

Page 35: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

35

REAL EXPERIMENT

𝑒−

�⃗�

Diamond

𝜸

Target

𝝅+¿ ¿𝝅−𝒑

Θ ,𝜙 ,𝐸

𝚯′ ,𝝓 ′

�⃗� �⃗�→ �⃗� 𝜋+¿𝜋 −¿ Polarimeter

Page 36: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

36

INTERFERENCE

Page 37: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

37

DECAY WIDTH

Mean life time

Decay width

Typical “strong” decay width

Page 38: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

38

NUCLEON EXCITED STATES

Page 39: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

39

DOUBLE POLARIZATION EXPERIMENTS

Page 40: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

40

POLARIZATION OBSERVABLES

Page 41: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

41

RESONANCE HUNTING

Page 42: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

42

MESON PHOTOPRODUCTION CROSS SECTIONS

Page 43: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

43

RARE EVENTSThe Standard Model and beyond

Page 44: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

44

PRECISION IS POWER

• Neutron electric dipole moment

• Muon magnetic moment (g-2)

• rare decays

• ….

Testing Standard Model with precise measurements

Page 45: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

45

ELECTRIC DIPOLE MOMENT

Page 46: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

46

NEUTRON EDM

Page 47: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

47

NEUTRON EDM

SM

SUSY

Page 48: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

48

RARE DECAYS

Page 49: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

49

: CP VIOLATION

𝐵𝑟 ¿

Page 50: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

50

UNIVERSE CONTENT

Page 51: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

51

SEARCH FOR DARK PHOTONDark force:

Dark photon

𝜼 /𝝅𝟎

Page 52: Hadron physics Hadron physics Challenges and Achievements Mikhail Bashkanov University of Edinburgh UK Nuclear Physics Summer School I

52

CONCLUSION

• Enormous progress in nuclear physics

• Precision is a new motto

• Acceptance• Luminosity• Polarization

• Photons are the best

• Experimentally clean• Well understood theoretically