1 / 21

How Particles Interact

How Particles Interact. Particle Physics Lesson 5. Today’s Objectives. Describe how forces are caused by particle exchange. State that for the electromagnetic force, virtual photons are the exchange particles Draw Feynman Diagrams for the following interactions:

yadid
Download Presentation

How Particles Interact

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How ParticlesInteract Particle Physics Lesson 5

  2. Today’s Objectives • Describe how forces are caused by particle exchange. • State that for the electromagnetic force, virtual photons are the exchange particles • Draw Feynman Diagrams for the following interactions: • Neutron-neutrino interaction • Proton-antineutrino interaction • β− decay • β+ decay • Electron capture

  3. Homework • Know what exchange particles do  PPQ • Learn the four fundamental forces of nature and their exchange particles. • Learn the Feynman diagrams for the following interactions: • Neutron-neutrino interaction • Proton-antineutrino interaction • β− decay • β+ decay • Electron capture

  4. How Hard Am I Trying?

  5. What does the Evidence show? I have about half the homework – which I have marked – it was done pretty well  target grade performance. Does this mean half the class is on track to get a Target Grade -3 or -4?

  6. Solve the Following charge flowing into a junction = charge flowing out

  7. Video In Search of Giants (12 of 15) QED - The Jewel of Physics.wmv

  8. Exchange Particles

  9. What causes forces? • Newton’s 2nd Law states that force is equal to the rate of change of momentum. • Momentum is calculated by multiplying the mass and the velocity of a particle. • Richard Feynman (1918 – 1988) came up with the idea that the forces are transmitted by exchange particles.

  10. Feynman Diagram • Is a pictorial representation of what is going on.  • First devised by American particle physicist Richard Feynman (1918 – 1988). • The forces between electrically charged particles are thought to be transmitted by photons, which are emitted and absorbed by the particles. 

  11. Weak Nuclear Force • Which force is involved when a neutron changes to a proton or proton  neutron? • Can’t be electromagnetic because neutrons have no charge. • Must be weaker than the strong force otherwise it would affect stable nuclei. • Therefore it is called the weak nuclear force.

  12. Weak Nuclear Force II • Due to the exchange of particles called W bosons. • They are unlike photons in that they have:- • Non zero rest mass • A very short range (less than 0.001 fm!) • Are positively or negatively charged.

  13. Four Fundamental Forces

  14. Feynman diagrams • They were developed by Richard Feynman to decribe the interactions in quantum electrodynamics (QED). • The diagrams are used to describe a variety of particle interactions. • Virtual particles are represented by wavy or broken lines and have no arrows. • Graphical ways to represent exchange forces, time is upward but the lines don’t represent the paths the particles take.

  15. Neutron-Neutrino Interaction

  16. Proton-Antineutrino Interaction

  17. β− decay

  18. β+ decay

  19. Electron Capture

  20. Exchange Particles Exchange particles do the following:- Transfer momentum Transfer Energy Transfer Charge (in the case of W+ and W- bosons.)

  21. Summary The are four fundamental forces of nature: gravity, electromagnetic, strong & weak. Each force is thought to have a corresponding exchange particle that transfer the momentum. Feynman diagrams are a way of summarising the interactions.

More Related