The Higgs Boson: Searching for the God Particle (12 page)

In the standard model the three forces that act on the quarks and leptons are described by essentially the same mathematical structure. It is known as a gauge-invariant field theory or simply a gauge theory. Each force is transmitted from one particle to another by carrier fields, which in turn are embodied in carrier particles, or gauge bosons.

The gauge theory of the electromagnetic force, called quantum electrodynamics or QED, is the earliest and simplest of the three theories. It was devised in the 1940's by Richard P. Feynman, Julian S. Schwinger and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga.
QED describes the interactions of electrically charged particles, most notably the electron and the positron.
There is one kind of gauge boson to mediate the interactions; it is the photon, the familiar quantum of electromagnetic radiation, and it is massless and has no
electric charge of its own. QED is probably the most accurately tested theory in physics. For example, it correctly predicts the magnetic moment of the electron to at least 10 significant digits.

The theory of the color force was formulated by analogy to QED and is called quantum chromodynamics or QCD. It was developed over a period of almost two decades through the efforts of many theoretical physicists. In QCD particles interact by virtue of their color rather than their electric charge. The gauge bosons of QCD, which are responsible for binding quarks inside a hadron, are called gluons. Like the photon, the gluons are massless, but whereas there is just one kind of photon, there are eight species of gluons. A further difference between the photon and the gluons turns out to be even more important.
Although the photon is the intermediary of the electromagnetic force, it has no electric charge and hence gives rise to no electromagnetic forces of its own (or at least none of significant magnitude).
The gluons, in contrast, are not colorless. They transmit the color force between quarks but they also have color of their own and respond to the color force. This reflexiveness, whereby the carrier of the force acts on itself, makes a complete mathematical analysis of the color force exceedingly difficult.

One peculiarity that seems to be inherent in QCD is the phenomenon of color confinement. It is thought that the color force somehow traps colored objects
(such as quarks and gluons) inside composite objects that are invariably colorless (such as protons and neutrons).
The colored particles can never escape
(although they can form new colorless combinations). It is because of color confinement, physicists suppose, that a quark or a gluon has never been seen inisolation. I must stress that although the idea of color confinement is now widely accepted, it has not been proved to follow from QCD. There may still be surprises in store.

The weak force is somewhat different from the other two, but it can nonetheless be described by a gauge theory of the same general kind. The theory was worked out, and the important connection between the weak force and electromagnetism was established, in the 1960's and the early 1970's by a large number of investigators. Notable contributions were made (in chronological order) by Sheldon Lee Glashow of Harvard University, Steven Weinberg of the University of Texas at Austin, Abdus Salam of the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste and Gerard 't Hooft of the University of Utrecht.

Curiously, the charges on which the weak force acts are associated with the handedness of a particle. Among both quarks and leptons left-handed particles and right-handed antiparticles have a weak charge, but right-handed particles and left-handed antiparticles are neutral with respect to the weak force. What is odder still, the weak charge is not conserved in nature: a unit of charge can be created out of nothing or can disappear into the vacuum. In contrast, the net quantity of electric charge in an isolated system of particles can never be altered, and neither can the net color. The weak force is also distinguished by its exceedingly short range; its effects extend only to a distance of about 10
-16
centimeter, or roughly a thousandth of the diameter of a proton.

In the gauge theory of the weak force both the failure of the weak charge to be conserved and the short range of the force are attributed to a mechanism called spontaneous symmetry breaking, which I shall discuss in greater detail below. For now it is sufficient to note that the symmetry-breaking mechanism implies that the weak charge, and the associated handedness of particles, should be conserved at extremely high energy, where a particle's mass is a negligible fraction of its kinetic energy.

Spontaneous symmetry breaking also requires that the gauge bosons of theweak force be massive particles; indeed, they have masses approximately 100 times the mass of the proton. In the standard model there are three such bosons:
two of them, designated
W
+
and
W
-
, carry electric charge as well as weak charge; the third, designated
Z
0
, is electrically neutral. The large mass of the weak bosons accounts for the short range of the force. According to the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics, the range of a force is inversely proportional to the mass of the particle that transmits it. Thus electromagnetism and the color force, being carried by massless gauge bosons, are effectively infinite in range, whereas the weak force has an exceedingly small sphere of influence.
Spontaneous symmetry breaking has still another consequence:
it predicts the existence of at least one additional massive particle, separate from the weak bosons. It is called the Higgs particle after Peter Higgs of the University of Edinburgh, who made an important contribution to the theory of spontaneous symmetry breaking.

In the past 10 years the successes of the standard model have given physicists a good deal of self-confidence. All known forms of matter can be constructed out of the 18 colored quarks and the six leptons of the model. All observed interactions of matter can be explained as exchanges of the 12 gauge bosons included in the model: the photon, the eight gluons and the three weak bosons. The model seems to be internally consistent; no one part is in conflict with any other part, and all measurable quantities are predicted to have a plausible, finite value. Internal consistency is not a trivial achievement in a conceptual system of such wide scope. So far the model is also consistent with all experimental results, that is to say, no clear prediction of the model has yet been contradicted by experiment. To be sure, there are some important predictions that have not yet been fully verified;
most notably, the tau-type neutrino, the top quark, the weak bosons and the Higgs particle must be found. The first direct evidence of W bosons was recently reported by a group of experimenters at CERN, the European Laboratory for Particle Physics in Geneva.
In the next several years new particle accelerators and more sensitive detecting apparatus will test the remaining predictions of the model. Most physicists are quite certain they will be confirmed.

If the standard model has proved so successful, why would anyone consider more elaborate theories? The primary motivation is not a suspicion that the standard model is wrong but rather a feeling that it is less than fully satisfying.
Even if the model gives correct answers for all the questions it addresses, many questions are left unanswered and many regularities in nature remain coincidental or arbitrary. In short, the model itself stands in need of explanation.

The strongest hint of some organizing principle beyond the standard model is the proliferation of elementary particles.
The known properties of matter are not so numerous or diverse that 24 particles are needed to represent them all. Indeed, there seems to be a great deal of repetition in the spectrum of quarks and leptons. There are three leptons with an electric charge of -1, three neutral leptons, three quarks with a charge of +2/3 and three quarks with a charge of -1/3. Everything is triplicated, and for no apparent reason. A world constructed by choosing one particle from each of the four groups would seem to have all the necessary variety.

As it turns out, all ordinary matter can indeed be formed from a subset that includes just the
u
quark, the d quark, the electron and the electron-type neutrino.
These four particles and their antiparticles make up the "first generation"
of quarks and leptons. The remaining quarks and leptons merely repeat the same pattern in two additional generations without seeming to add anything new. Corresponding particles in different generations are identical in all respects except one: they have different masses. The
d, s
and
b
quarks, for example, respond in precisely the same way to the electromagnetic, color and weakforces. For some unknown reason, however, the
s
quark is roughly 20 times as heavy as the
d
quark, and the
b
quark is approximately 600 times as heavy as the
d
. The mass ratios of the other quarks and of the charged leptons are likewise large and unexplained. (The masses of the neutrinos are too small to have been measured; it is not yet known whether the neutrinos are merely very light or are entirely massless.)

The presence of three generations of quarks and leptons begs for an explanation.
Why does nature repeat itself? The pattern of particle masses is also mysterious.
In the standard model the masses are determined by approximately 20
"free" parameters that can be assigned any values the theorist chooses; in practice the values are generally based on experimental findings. Is it possible the 20 parameters are all unrelated? Are they fundamental constants of nature with the same status as the velocity of light or the electric charge of the electron? Probably not.

A further tantalizing regularity can be perceived in the electric charges of the quarks and leptons: they are all related by simple ratios and are all integer multiples of one-third the electron charge.
The standard model supplies
no reason;
in principle the charge ratios could have any values. It can be deduced from observation that the ratios of one-third and two-thirds that define the quark charges are not approximations. The proton consists of two u quarks and a d quark, with charges of 2/3 + 2/3 - 1/3, or
+ 1. If these values were not exact and the quarks instead had charges of, say,
+.617 and -.383, the magnitude of the proton's charge would not be exactly equal to that of the electron's, and ordinary atoms would not be electrically neutral. Since atoms can be brought together in enormous numbers, even a slight departure from neutrality could be readily detected.

If the particles and antiparticles that make up a single generation are arranged according to their charge, it is found that every value from -1 to + 1 in intervals of one-third is occupied by one particle (or, in the case of zero charge, by two particles, namely the neutrino and the antineutrino). The pattern formed raises still more questions.
Why has nature favored these values of electric charge but no others, such as
+4/3 or -5/3? It is apparent that all particles with integral charge are colorless and all those with fractional charge are colored. Is there some relation between the electric charge of a particle and its color or between the quarks and the leptons? The standard model implies no such relations, but they seem to exist.

Another motivation for looking beyond the standard model is the continuing desire to unify the fundamental forces, or at least to find some relation among them. The cause of parsimony would be served, for example, if two of the forces could be consolidated, as electricity and magnetism were, or if one force could be made a residue of another, as the strong force was made a residue of the color force. Ironically, it may turn out that a simplification of this kind can be attained only by introducing still more forces.

A theory that "goes beyond" the standard model need not contradict or invalidate it. The standard model may emerge as a very good approximation of the deeper theory. The standard model gives a remarkably successful description of all phenomena at distances no smaller than about 10
-16
centimeter. A deeper theory should therefore focus on events at a still smaller scale. If there are new constituents to be discovered, they must exist within such minuscule regions of space. If there are new forces, their action must be effective only at a distance of less than 10
-16
centimeter, either because the force is inherently short-range (following the example of the weak force) or because it is subject to some form of confinement (as the color force is).

The search for a theory beyond the standard model was launched almost 10 years ago, and by now several directions have been explored. One promising direction has led to the models known as grand unified theories, which incorporate the electromagnetic, color and weak forces into one fundamental force.
The essential idea is to put all the quarks and leptons that make up one generation into a single family; new gauge bosons are then postulated to mediate interactions between the colored quarks and the colorless leptons. The theories account for the regularities noted in the distribution of electric charge and explain the exact commensurability of the quark and lepton charges. On the other hand, they do nothing to reduce the number of fundamental constants, they shed no light on the triplication of the generations and they create certain new theoretical difficulties of their own.

There have been several variations on the theme of grand unification. For example, the concept of horizontal symmetry tackles the triplication problem by establishing a symmetry relation among the generations. The mathematically beautiful idea called supersymmetry relates particles whose spin angular momentum is a half-integer (such as the quarks and leptons) to those with integer spin (such as the gauge bosons).
The technicolor theory suggests that the Higgs particle of the standard model is a composite object made up of new fundamental entities; they would be bound together by a new force analogous to the color force and called technicolor. Each of these ideas answers some of the questions that remain open in the standard model. Each idea also fails to answer other questions, raises new difficulties and worsens existing ones, for example by further increasing the number of unrelated arbitrary constants.

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