PHY 4822L (Advanced Laboratory):
Introduction
Elementary
particles are everywhere around us [1,2]. Apart from the standard matter
particles proton, neutron and electron, hundreds of other particles have been
found [3], produced in cosmic ray interactions in the atmosphere or by
accelerators. Hundreds of charged particles traverse our bodies per second, and
some will damage our DNA, one of the reasons for the existence of a
sophisticated DNA repair mechanism in the cell.
Figure
1: Photograph of the interaction between a high-energy p--meson from the Berkeley
Bevatron accelerator and a proton in a liquid hydrogen bubble chamber, which
produces two neutral short-lived particles L0 and K0 which decay into charged particles a bit further.
Figure
2: illustration of the interaction, and identification of bubble trails and
variables to be measured in the photograph
in Figures 3 and 4.
The
data for this experiment is in the form of a bubble chamber photograph which shows
bubble tracks made by elementary particles as they traverse liquid hydrogen. In
the experiment under study, a beam of
low-energy negative pions (p- beam) hits a hydrogen (p for proton) target in the form of a container with liquid
hydrogen normally kept just below its boiling point (T = 20 K). As the pions enter the detector a piston slightly
decompresses the liquid so it becomes "super-critical'' and starts
boiling, and bubbles form, first at the
ionization trails left by the charged particles traversing the liquid.
The
reaction shown in Figure 1 shows the production of a pair of neutral
particles (that do not leave a ionized trail in their wake), which
after a short while decay into pairs of charged particles:
p - + p ® L0
+ K0 ,
where
the neutrals decay as follows:
L0 ® p + p -,
K0
® p+ + p-.
In
this experiment, we assume the masses of the proton (mp = 938.3 MeV/c2) and the pions (mp+ = mp- = 139.4 MeV/c2) to be known
precisely, and we will determine the masses of the L0 and the K0, also in these mass energy
units.
Momentum measurement
In
order to “reconstruct” the interaction completely, one uses the conservation
laws of (relativistic) momentum and energy, plus the knowledge of the initial
pion beam parameters (mass and momentum). In order to measure momenta of the
produced charged particles, the bubble chamber is located inside a magnet that
bends the charged particles in helical paths. The 1.5 T magnetic field is
directed up out of the photograph. The momentum p of each particle is directly proportional to the radius of
curvature R, which in turn can be calculated from a
measurement of the “chord length” L
and sagitta s as:
R =
[L2/(8s)] + [s/2] ,
Note that the above is strictly true only if all momenta
are perfectly in the plane of the photograph; in actual experiments stereo
photographs of the interaction are taken so that a reconstruction in all three
dimensions can be done. The interaction in this photograph was specially
selected for its planarity.
In
the reproduced photograph the actual radius of curvature R of the track in the bubble chamber is multiplied by the
magnification factor g, r = gR.
For the reproduction in Figure 3, g
= height of photograph (in mm) divided by 173 mm.
The
momentum p of the particles is
proportional to their radius of curvature R
in the chamber. To derive this relationship for relativistic particles we begin
with Newton's law in the form:
F
= dp/dt = e v×B (Lorentz force).
Here
the momentum (p) is the relativistic momentum m v g, where the relativistic g-factor is defined in the usual way
g = [Ö(1- v 2/c2)]-1.
Thus, because the speed v is constant:
F = dp/dt = d(mvg)/dt = mg dv/dt = mg
(v2/R)(-r) = e v B (-r) ,
where
r
is the unit vector in the radial direction. Division by v on both sides of the last equality finally yields:
mgv /R
= p /R = e B ,
identical
to the non-relativistic result! In
“particle physics units” we find:
p c (in
eV) = c R B , thus
p (in MeV/c) = 2.998•108
R B •10-6 =
300 R (in m) B (in T) |
(1) |
Measurement of angles
Draw
straight lines from the point of primary interaction to the points where the L0 and the K0 decay. Extend the lines
beyond the decay vertices. Draw tangents to the four decay product tracks at
the two vertices. (Take care drawing these tangents, as doing it carelessly is
a source of large errors.) Use a protractor to measure the angles of the decay
product tracks relative to the parent directions (use Fig. 3 or 4 for
measurements and Fig. 2 for definitions).
Analysis
The
laws of relativistic dynamics relevant to this calculation are written below.
We use the subscripts zero, plus, and minus to refer to the charges of the
decaying particles and the decay products.
p+sinq+ = p-sinq- |
(2) |
p0
= p+cosq+ + p-cosq- |
(3) |
E0
= E+ + E-,
where E+ = Ö(p+2c2
+ m+2c4) ,
and E-
= Ö(p-2c2 + m-2c4) |
(4) |
m0c2 = Ö(E02 - p02c2) |
(5) |
Note
that there is a redundancy here. That is, if p+, p-,
q+, and q- are all known, equation (2)
is not needed to find m0.
In our two-dimensional case we have two equations (2 and 3), and only one
unknown quantity m0, and
the system is over-determined. This is fortunate, because sometimes (as here)
one of the four measured quantities will have a large experimental error. When
this is the case, it is usually advantageous to use only three of the variables
and to use equation (2) to calculate the fourth. Alternatively,
one may use the over-determination to "fit'' m0, which
allows to determine it more precisely.
K0 decay
4.
Estimate
the error in your result from the errors in the measured quantities.
L0 decay:
1.
The
proton track is too straight to be well measured in curvature. Also, q+ is small, and the value of mL is quite sensitive to this
measurement. Assume that q+ = (0.32±0.05)° (check this with your
protractor). Measure r-
and q-.
2.
Calculate
mL and its error the same way
as for the K0.
3.
Finally,
compare your values with the accepted mass values (the world average) [3], and
discuss.
Bonus question: (25% extra credit)
Calculate the momenta for both neutral particles,
and hence find their lifetimes, both in the laboratory, and in their own
rest-frames. Compare the latter with the accepted values [3].
References:
[1] G.D. Coughlan and J.E. Dodd: “The ideas of particle physics”, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge 1991
[2] “The Particle Adventure”,
http://particleadventure.org/
[3] Review of Particle Physics, by the Particle Data Group, European Physical Journal 15, 1 - 878 (2000) (available on WWW: http://pdg.lbl.gov)
[4] Kenneth Krane: Modern Physics, 2nd ed. ; John Wiley & Sons, New York 1996
Note: Experiment adapted from PHY 251 lab at SUNY at Stony Brook (Michael Rijssenbeek)
Figure 3 : Photograph of the
interaction between a high-energy p--meson from the Berkeley
Bevatron accelerator and a proton in a liquid hydrogen bubble chamber. The
interaction produces two neutral particles L0 and K0, which are short-lived and decay into charged
particles a bit further. The photo covers an area (H•W) of 173 mm •
138 mm of the bubble chamber. In this enlargement, the magnification
factor g = (height (in mm) of the photograph )/173 mm.
Figure 4 : Negative of
photograph of Fig. 3.