Current research in particle physics
Experiments
Testing the Standard Model
Electroweak theory, which describes the electromagnetic and weak forces, and quantum chromodynamics, the gauge theory of the strong force, together form what particle physicists call the Standard Model. The Standard Model, which provides an organizing framework for the classification of all known subatomic particles, works well as far as can be measured by means of present technology, but several points still await experimental verification or clarification. Furthermore, the model is still incomplete.
Prior to 1994 one of the main missing ingredients of the Standard Model was the top quark, which was required to complete the set of three pairs of quarks. Searches for this sixth and heaviest quark failed repeatedly until in April 1994 a team working on the Collider Detector Facility (CDF) at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Illinois, announced tentative evidence for the top quark. This was confirmed the following year, when not only the CDF team but also an independent team working on a second experiment at Fermilab, code-named DZero, or D0, published more convincing evidence. The results indicated that the top quark has a mass between 170 and 190 gigaelectron volts (GeV; 109 eV). This is almost as heavy as a nucleus of lead, so it was not surprising that previous experiments had failed to find the top quark. The discovery had required the highest-energy particle collisions available—those at Fermilab’s Tevatron, which collides protons with antiprotons at a total energy of 1,800 GeV, or 1.8 teraelectron volts (TeV; 1012 eV).
The discovery of the top quark in a sense completed another chapter in the history of particle physics; it also focused the attention of experimenters on other questions unanswered by the Standard Model. For instance, why are there six quarks and not more or less? It may be that only this number of quarks allows for the subtle difference between particles and antiparticles that occurs in the neutral K mesons (K0 and K̄0), which contain an s quark (or antiquark) bound with a d antiquark (or quark). This asymmetry between particle and antiparticle could in turn be related to the domination of matter over antimatter in the universe. Experiments studying neutral B mesons, which contain a b quark or its antiquark, may eventually reveal similar effects and so cast light on this fundamental problem that links particle physics with cosmology and the study of the origin of matter in the universe.
Testing supersymmetry
Much of current research, meanwhile, is centred on important precision tests that may reveal effects that lie outside the Standard Model—in particular, those that are due to supersymmetry. These studies include measurements based on millions of Z particles produced in the LEP collider at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) and in the Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in Menlo Park, California, and on large numbers of W particles produced in the Tevatron synchrotron at Fermilab and later at the LEP collider. The precision of these measurements is such that comparisons with the predictions of the Standard Model constrain the allowed range of values for quantities that are otherwise unknown. The predictions depend, for example, on the mass of the top quark, and in this case comparison with the precision measurements indicates a value in good agreement with the mass measured at Fermilab. This agreement makes another comparison all the more interesting, for the precision data also provided hints as to the mass of the Higgs boson.
The Higgs boson is the particle associated with the mechanism that allows the symmetry of the electroweak force to be broken, or hidden, at low energies and that gives the W and Z particles, the carriers of the weak force, their mass. The particle is necessary to electroweak theory because the Higgs mechanism requires a new field to break the symmetry, and, according to quantum field theory, all fields have particles associated with them. Researchers knew that the Higgs boson must have spin 0, but that was virtually all that could be definitely predicted. Theory provided a poor guide as to the particle’s mass or even the number of different varieties of Higgs bosons involved. However, after years of experiments, the Higgs boson was found in 2012 at the Large Hadron Collider. Its mass was quite light, about 125 GeV.
Further new particles are predicted by theories that include supersymmetry. This symmetry relates quarks and leptons, which have spin 1/2 and are collectively called fermions, with the bosons of the gauge fields, which have spins 1 or 2, and with the Higgs boson, which has spin 0. This symmetry appeals to theorists in particular because it allows them to bring together all the particles—quarks, leptons, and gauge bosons—in theories that unite the various forces (see below Theory). The price to pay is a doubling of the number of fundamental particles, as the new symmetry implies that the known particles all have supersymmetric counterparts with different spin. Thus, the leptons and quarks with spin 1/2 have supersymmetric partners, dubbed sleptons and squarks, with integer spin; and the photon, W, Z, gluon, and graviton have counterparts with half-integer spins, known as the photino, wino, zino, gluino, and gravitino, respectively. If they indeed exist, all these new supersymmetric particles must be heavy to have escaped detection so far.