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1Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Have you ever wondered…. How often you could split a grain of sand into smaller pieces? What the universe is.

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Presentation on theme: "1Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Have you ever wondered…. How often you could split a grain of sand into smaller pieces? What the universe is."— Presentation transcript:

1 1Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Have you ever wondered…. How often you could split a grain of sand into smaller pieces? What the universe is made of? If it is possible to travel backwards in time?

2 2Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt With really powerful microscopes it is possible to see atoms directly

3 3Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt What is the universe made of? Atoms mountaingalaxy The matter in the universe is made up of nearly 100 types of atom (periodic table). The atoms are made of the elementary particles

4 4Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt The constituents of matter Click here to view animation

5 5Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Atoms are tiny - elementary particles inside atoms are even smaller All of the matter in this room is made of up & down quarks (inside protons and neutrons), electrons and neutrinos. These particles are stable. Other much heavier elementary particles exist. They live for fractions of a second and then disintegrate into stable particles.

6 6Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt The Four Forces Lets quarks change identity Elementary particles bind together on all scales from the quarks, through nuclei, atoms, molecules, gases, liquids, solids to planets, stars and galaxies. They do this through four forces

7 7Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt The Standard Model The theories and discoveries of thousands of physicists over the past 100 years have created the Standard Model of Particles and Forces. The Standard Model has been well tested in particle physics experiments. It includes within it all of electricity & magnetism and hence electronic engineering, chemistry, the physics of solids/liquids/gases, nanoscale physics, biophysics, nuclear physics, astrophysics. + antiparticles for each quark and lepton (anti-matter)

8 8Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt All of the elementary particles in the standard model existed for a few instants after the Big Bang. Since then, only the enormous concentrations of energy that can be reached in an accelerator can recreate them. Studying particle collisions is like looking back in time, recreating the environment that existed at the birth of the Universe.

9 9Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Particle Physics is here in 2007 Energy density Particle Physics goal Complete History of the Universe (abridged)

10 10Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Atom smashers: Particle Accelerator

11 11Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt In the LHC, protons are accelerated to 7,000,000,000,000 volts

12 12Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Large Hadron Collider (LHC): 27 km (18 mile circumference, 100 m underground)

13 13Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Energy of the beams new particles of the primordial soup Recipe for making every type of elementary particle

14 14Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt How do we see the collisions? The Eyes of a Insect: 1 billion collisions/second 1,000 particles every 25 nanoseconds We need highly granular detectors that take pictures quickly, and manipulate the resulting data onboard and store it before shipping to a farm of computers

15 15Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt The Eyes of a Piece of Silicon: The length of each side of the square is about the thickness of a piece of paper. Each eye is called a pixel

16 16Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt A Silicon camera we built at Purdue in 1999 We are building a more advanced version of this detector for the LHC

17 17Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt CMS at LHC 21 m 16m 36 Nations 159 Institutions 1940 scientists

18 18Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Transverse slice through CMS detector Click on a particle type to visualise that particle in CMS

19 19Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Discovery of the Higgs or SUSY or... in 2008?

20 20Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt CERN in 2 Minutes Click on the picture below to start the RealPlayer movie

21 21Purdue Physics Funfest 2007 - Kirk Arndt Summary The CMS experiment is under construction and will begin taking data in 2008 We are poised to answer some of the great questions of the 21 st Century Our notion of space and time may be radically altered We may understand how the universe was born and how it will end None of this would be possible without crucial help from computer scientists, electronic & mechanical engineers, many other types of physicists, hi-tech industries, and the tax payers of the world See http://cmsinfo.cern.ch/outreachhttp://cmsinfo.cern.ch/outreach


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