well erm thats pretty good I didnt go into nearly that much detailXayma said:I talked about the confirmation of the quarks charges and the finding of them (1990 Nobel Prize) the creation of mass, such as II and III generation particles and the pentaquark. The explanantion of the standard model for original confusing results.
How they are used to test features and the search for not yet found particles (eg the Higgs Boson)
The higgs boson is what gives matter mass. It is though that the quantum entaglement of the Higgs Boson and clumping together is what is mass, at the speed of light it doesnt interact giving 0 mass. Close to it, it interacts strongly (accounting for the reletavistic mass increase).Kazuya said:mm yeah out of all the things Xayma said, I only wrote about 1 (the generations) and I remember hearing the term 'higgs boson' now that I think about it, but i don't know what it is.
That's probably what they're looking for then.
I just talked about diff. accelerators then i described the standard model
Someone loves particle physicsXayma said:The higgs boson is what gives matter mass. It is though that the quantum entaglement of the Higgs Boson and clumping together is what is mass, at the speed of light it doesnt interact giving 0 mass. Close to it, it interacts strongly (accounting for the reletavistic mass increase).
It will be searched for the new accelerators come online.
thaoroxy2001 said:I wrote:
To investigate the nuclear force and the nature of the fundamental particles, the nucleus needs to be disrupted. To do this, energy must be put into the nucleus. This energy input requires Particle accelerators to accelerate the particles, such as protons, to the required energy. If we could accelerate particles to high enough energies we could probe inside the nucleus and perhaps inside the nucleons themselves. Bigger particle accelerators help to provide details of the structure of matter. Also as energy increases we can create heavier particles as energy of the probe particle is converted to matter.
And how Accelerators assists in the investigation of matter:
1)High energy means high speed and from the de Broglie relationship,
this means short wavelength. Smaller wavelengths mean greater resolution adding fine detail to the observations.
2)High energy means high mass particles can be produced (from E=mc2). The vast majority of elementary particles can only be ‘observed’ after their creation in high-energy accelerators; they are not normally ‘visible’ at typical energies.
and gave examples of some accelerators and how they functioned etc.
well....this is what I was taught
I was thinking the same things so i spent about a page on the components of the standard model and the rest on acceleratorsTeleph said:LOL almost exactly what i wrote ....the thing that i'm worried about is do u need to actually like go into details about each group of the standard model ? I just mentioned it as examples but didn't really go into it. I looked at the stimulus and thought they want to talk about particle acceralators so i spent 2 pages drawing and writing out all the particle acceraltors
if only ANYTHING u actually said was in the syllabus... then we would give a fuck. in all other cases, no.Xayma said:I talked about the confirmation of the quarks charges and the finding of them (1990 Nobel Prize) the creation of mass, such as II and III generation particles and the pentaquark. The explanantion of the standard model for original confusing results.
How they are used to test features and the search for not yet found particles (eg the Higgs Boson)