Overview
Ph135c is a seminar course in various
and sundry topics in non-accelerator particle physics such as dark
matter,
double-beta decay, searches for electron and neutron electric dipole
moments, neutrino oscillations, ultra-high-energy cosmic rays,
etc. The name is a bit of a misnomer, as we will include
some accelerator-based topics. But the point is to
cover areas that might not be seen in a typical particle physics
course but which are of growing importance to the overlap between
particle physics, cosmology, and astrophysics. We will especially
be focused on work that is sensitive to new physics beyond the standard
model.
The course is aimed at upperclass undergraduates and
first-year graduate students who would like to have a better idea of
what is going on in current research on these topics. Older
students, postdocs, etc. are welcome, too. Younger undergraduates
may attend if they can demonstrate sufficient background knowledge to
keep up with the class.
Quick Links
Announcements
- 2007/06/07
- All movies and talks posted.
- Thanks for your nice talks this term!
Vital Information
Location:
469 Lauritsen NOTE CHANGE OF
LOCATION
Time: TuF 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm NOTE CHANGE OF DAY
Instructor: Prof. Sunil
Golwala, 311 Downs, Mail Code 59-33, golwala at caltech.edu
Teaching Assistants: Sean
Tulin, 02 Kellogg, Mail Code 106-38, tulin at caltech.edu
Office Hours: By appointment.
Course Material,
Plan, Grading, and References
The class material will be adapted to class's interests. Here are
some topics we could cover:
- Dark matter: motivation, WIMP/neutralinos, axions, other
candidates. Theory, direct and indirect searches.
- Neutrino mass and oscillations: theory of oscillations,
experimental evidence, theory of neutrino mass, sterile neutrinos,
cosmological implications, neutrinoless double-beta decay
- Precision measurements sensitive to beyond-the-standard-model
physics:
- Electron electric dipole moment
- Neutron electric dipole moment
- muon g-2
- neutrino magnetic moment
- Particles in astrophysics:
- neutrinos and axions in supernovae and
the sun
- cosmic rays
- gamma rays
- neutrinos
- Nonstandard theories of gravity and tests thereof.
This course will be run in seminar/journal club fashion, focusing
primarily on reading and presenting recent papers -- reviews and
original work -- on the topics we will cover. Most classes will
be occupied with student presentations and discussion of the
assigned papers. Grades will be based on the presentations and
class participation. There will be no homework sets or
exams.
A basic background in particle physics will help, but a rigorous one is
not
needed. I will spend the first week lecturing on general
background information. Some texts will be placed on reserve at
the library to help you get up to speed (below), but even the most
recent texts are rather old and so do not cover the most recent
developments.
Some good reviews on supersymmetry:
- Martin, A
Supersymmetry Primer: Good and up-to-date basic primer on
SUSY. The first section (10 pp) is a good qualitative run-through
of supersymmetry that anyone can read. The rest fills in the
details and will probably only be of interest to those with a basic
background in field theory and a desire to learn the theory in some
detail.
- Rosiek, Complete
Set of Feynman Rules for the MSSM: In addition to all the Feynman
diagram rules, this paper also writes out the Lagrangian in its full
glory, separated in a way to make it reasonably comprehensible.
Discusses the particle and field content in great detail. The
first four sections are quite readable, the remainder becomes tougher
but probably worth skimming through to identify all the interactions.
- Chung et al.,
The Soft Supersymmetry-Breaking Lagrangian, Theory and Applications:
Though the title does not make it evident, this review paper begins
with a short but good summary of supersymmetry. Then focuses on
mechanisms for breaking supersymmetry. Also contains good
sections on: CP violation, which is relevant for EDM experiments and
for axions; dark matter, both theory and detection; baryogenesis;
inflation; collider signatures; and extensions to minimal supersymmetry.
- Vuk
Mandic Ph. D dissertation (Berkeley, 2004): contains a good
pedagogical chapter on supersymmetry (Ch. 2), as well as some
calculations of expectations for dark matter direct detection
experiments.
Dark Matter:
- S.
Golwala Ph. D dissertation (Berkeley, 2000): If I may say so,
Chapters 1 and 2 are a good pedagogical review of the evidence for dark
matter, candidates, and details of direct and indirect detection of
WIMPs. But somewhat out of date.
- Vuk
Mandic Ph. D dissertation (Berkeley, 2004): A more recent summary
of evidence for dark matter, candidates, and detection methods.
- Jungman,
Kamionkowski, and Greist, Supersymmetric Dark Matter:
Classic though out-of-date review (1995). The introductory
sections are quite good, but don't let yourself get buried in details.
- Bertone, Hooper,
and Silk, Particle Dark Matter: Evidence, Candidates, and Constraints:
As the title says, a review of the evidence for dark matter as well as
a survey of direct and indirect detection constraints.
- Overduin and
Wesson, Dark Matter and Background Light: Similar in content to
Bertone, Hooper, and Silk.
- Hooper and Profumo,
Dark Matter and Collider Phenomenology of Universal Extra Dimensions:
UED is one class of extra-dimensions theories developed to resolve the
hierarchy problem. This paper reviews the basic theory and then
discusses implications for dark matter searches and collider
experiments.
- Gaitskell,
Direct Detection of Dark Matter: Review of the experimental
situation in direct detection of dark matter.
- Fairbairn et al.,
Stable Massive Particles at Colliders: Review of signatures of a
variety of stable massive particles, include SUSY and extra-dimensions
particles, at colliders.
- See also the Formaggio and Martoff review below.
- Some slides on direct detection
techniques
- Asztalos
et al., Searches for Astrophysical and Cosmological Axions: Fairly
recent Annual Review on searches for axions. Good theory summary,
has references on theory.
- Raffelt,
Astrophysical Axion Bounds: As the name says, bounds on the axion
from astrophysical searches.
- Raffelt, Axions --
Motivation, Limits, and Searches: Largely duplicates other axion
articles, but some unique information on axion conversion in
astrophysical magnetic fields.
- Zitoukas
et al., First Results from the CERN Axions Solar Telescope: A
search for axions from the sun using conversion to x-rays in a high
magnetic field.
- Zavattini
et al., Experimental Observation of Optical Rotation Generated in
Vacuum by a Magnetic Field: Claimed detection of optical rotation
of polarization of light passing through a vacuum permeated with a
transverse magnetic field, possibly due to interactions with axions.
Extra Dimensions:
References on neutrinos:
- Zuber,
Neutrino Physics: Relatively recent and up-to-date textbook on
neutrino physics. Sean has a copy also.
- Mohapatra and
Smirnov, Neutrino Mass and New Physics: Annual Review on neutrino
masses and mixings.
- See also the PDG sections below.
- Hannestad,
Primordial Neutrinos: Annual Review on the relation between
neutrinos and cosmology, esp. neutrino dark matter and constraints on
neutrino mass from cosmology.
- Buchmuller,
Peccei, Yanagida, Leptogenesis as the Origin of Matter: CP
violation in the neutrino sector is frequently invoked as a means to
obtain lepton asymmetry in the early universe, which then engenders
baryon asymmetry. These asymmetries give leptogenesis and
baryogenesis, the present matter-antimatter imbalance in the
universe. This Annual Review article summarizes the situation.
- Gomez-Cadenas,
Harris, Physics Opportunities at Neutrino Factories: Annual review
(old, 2002) on studies of neutrino physics at a future possible
neutrino factory -- neutrino mass and mixing, CP violation, etc.
- Elliott,
Vogl, Double-Beta Decay: Annual Review on double-beta decay.
A bit old (2002). Errata.
- Kusenko, Sterile
Neutrino Dark Matter (Kellogg Seminar, 2007): Very recent talk on
sterile neutrinos as a dark matter candidate. Makes a compelling
case. Lots of references included. See also Asaka, Shaposhnikov, and
Kusenko (2006).
Related topics:
You may also find it useful to read the relevant review sections in the
Particle Data Group's
Review of
Particle Properties (2006), available
here.
Especially useful will be the following sections (links are to PDFs):
As a final important point, please don't feel obligated to learn every
theoretical detail about the topics we study. The working
experimentalist usually chooses topics to work on not through an
incredibly detailed understanding of the theory, but by relatively
simple considerations of what kind of experiments are important to do
and also enjoyable to work on. The fine level appreciation of the
theory usually only comes later after many years of working in a field.
Presentation Guidelines
Aim your presentation for senior undergrads/first year grad students --
people with a basic knowledge of classical and quantum physics, but no
other significant background material. Physics colloquia are a
good example of the right level. Don't feel obligated to explain
everything from first principles, but explain enough that your listener
can follow along the line of reasoning behind a given topic.
Focus at least half of your time on how the experiments are done,
especially why they are hard and what clever things the
experimentalists have had to do to achieve their goals.
If possible, make your presentations electronically so we can easily
post them online (PPT or PDF only). Otherwise, you will have to
scan them for posting. All the rooms we use will have electronic
projectors.
Make an appointment with me or Sean to discuss the material well ahead
of your presentation slot. You will no doubt have many questions
after a first reading of the material, we can help you work through
those. We don't need to review your presentations (which, no
doubt, you will be working on the night before), but we do want to help
you understand the material and to focus your presentations on the most
interesting parts.
We will do Q&A in the following manner. Questions are welcome
during the presentations -- the more interruptions, the better.
The speaker may not have the answers immediately, so we will have a
recording secretary for each session document all the questions and
forward them to the speaker. The speaker should dig up the
answers as best he/she can by the next class session and we can spend
the first 30 minutes of the next class answering those questions, and
any others that may have occurred to the audience in between the two
sessions. After this is done, the speaker should provide a
written listing of the questions and answers for posting on the web
page.
Course Calendar,
Reading Materials, and Topic Assignment
Note: links may be to e-journals for which Caltech has a
subscription. You will need to be on the Caltech campus network
or log in through the library proxy service to access these.
Tuesday
Class
|
Friday
Class
|
Mar
27
Course Plan
Review of Standard Model
Brief Summary of Candidate Topics
(instructor lecture)
Slides (pdf)
(updated 3/30/07)
|
Mar
30
Universal Extra Dimensions
Supersymmetry
(instructor lecture)
Slides (pdf)
|
Apr
3
NO CLASS
|
Apr
6
NO CLASS
|
Apr
10
Example presentation by TA Sean
Tulin
469 Lauritsen starting today
Talk (notes and ppt) and answers to
questions
QuickTime movie
Secretary: Sunil Golwala
|
Apr
13
NO CLASS
|
Apr 17
Electron g-2
Nick Hutzler
Talk
Q&A
QuickTime Movie
Refs:
measurement
paper
interpretation
paper
Nature
blurb
Odom
dissertation
review of
theoretical calculations
Secretary: Ersen Bilgin
|
Apr
20
Neutron EDM
Matt Eichenfield
Talk
no questions to be posted
QuickTime Movie
Refs:
SNS
nEDM Experiment Proposal
Best Current Limits
Secretary: Alex Himmel
|
Apr
24
Astronomical Evidence for Dark
Matter
Matt Ferry
Talk
QuickTime Movie
bullet cluster movie
movie simulating evolution of
cluster
Secretary: Gary Cheng
Refs: See Dark Matter refs
|
Apr
27
WIMP/Neutralino Dark Matter
Direct Detection and/or
Accelerator Signatures
Chris Rogan
Talk
QuickTime Movie
Secretary: Nick Hutzler
Refs: See Dark Matter refs
Also: CDMS II recent results (spin-ind, spin-dep)
XENON recent results talks (Aprile, Gaitskell)
WARP recent results
|
|
May
8
Neutrino Theory
Alex Himmel
Talk
Q&A
Quicktime movie
Secretary: Prashant Saraswat, Ning Bao
Refs: See Neutrino Refs above
|
May
11
NO CLASS
|
May
15
Precision Tests of
Short-Range
Gravity
Justus Brevik
Talk
Quicktime movie
Secretary: Michael Mendenhall
Refs:
Adelberger,
Heckel, Nelson Experimental Review
UWash group
recent results 1
UWash group
recent results 2
Stanford
group recent results
Recent
Casimir effect measurement
|
May
15/18
Double Beta Decay
Michael Mendenhall
Talk
Quicktime movie
1
Quicktime movie
2
Secretary: Justus Brevik
Refs: See Neutrino Refs above |
May
18
Baryogenesis
Prashant Saraswat/Ning Bao
Talk
Quicktime movie
Secretary: Sunil Golwala
Refs:
Dine
and Kusenko Review
Evidence
for matter-domination
Dolgov Review
Trodden
EW Baryogenesis
Buchmuller
Review
|
May
22
TeV Gamma-Ray Astronomy,
incl. WIMP annihilation
Chelsea Sharon
Talk
Quicktime movie
Secretary: Matt Eichenfield
Refs:
Ong
review paper
See also Bertone,
Hooper, and Silk for a starting point on WIMP annihilation
Bertone
summary paper
|
May
22/25
Neutrino Astronomy
incl. WIMP annihilation
Scott Wilbur
Talk
Quicktime movie 1
Quicktime movie 2
Secretary: Caryn Bullard
Refs:
Halzen
review paper
Hooper
review paper
See also Bertone,
Hooper, and Silk for a starting point on WIMP annihilation
|
May
25
UHE Cosmic Rays
Dalziel Wilson
Talk
Quicktime movie
Secretary: Matt Ferry
Refs:
Torres,
Anchordorqui review paper
HiRes Experiment
website @ Columbia
Recent
HiRes
results on GZK cutoff
Comparison
of AGASA, HiRes, and Auger spectral measurements
Auger Observatory website
Auger
Observatory Progress Report
(see references therein)
|
May
29
Extra Dimensions
Prashant Saraswat, Ning Bao
Talk
Quicktime movie
Secretary: Chris Rogan
Refs: See Extra Dimensions Refs |
May
29/Jun 1
Tests for CPT Violation
Michael Kolodrubetz
Talk
Quicktime
movie 1
Quicktime
movie 2
Secretary: Scott Wilbur
Refs:
Kostolecky
web page
Hooper et
al paper on Lorentz and CPT violation in high-energy neutrinos
See Michael's web
page for more
|
Jun
1
Neutrino Oscillations
Gary Cheng
Talk
Quicktime movie
Secretary: David Moore
Refs: See Neutrino Refs above |
|
Announcements
Archive
- 2007/06/02
- All movies posted, still waiting on a few talks.
- Thanks for your nice talks this term!
- 2007/05/19
- Movies and talks through 5/18 posted.
- 2007/05/16
- Movies through 5/15 posted. Talks mostly up to date too.
- 2007/05/04
- Exotic dark matter talk and movie posted.
- Muon g-2 movie posted.
- 2007/04/30
- 4/27 slides and movie posted
- 2007/04/27
- 4/17 slides and Q&A posted
- 2007/04/25
- 2007/04/23
- Moved g-2 presentation to week of May 1/4; added baryogenesis
presentation on May 18.
- Couple more refs added in dark matter (Jungman et al) and
neutrinos (Zuber, Kusenko)
- 2007/04/21
- 2007/04/19
- Presentation schedule filled out with remaining subjects.
Since we seem to need only ~1hr per topic, the additional talks will be
split between Tuesday and Friday sessions. Please double-check
your talk date -- I may have moved you from Friday to
Tuesday/Friday. Speakers with split talks should try to think of
a good stopping point midway through the talk. We may add a talk
of this type during the week of May 1/4.
- I am going to require
that speakers meet with me prior to their talks so that I can confirm
that all the important points are being hit and the material is being
covered to the depth I would like. Please email me to arrange a
time to meet at least 1 day prior to your presentation. You don't
have to have the presentation complete, but you should have a good
outline of what you will discuss.
- Many more references added, both under Course Material and under Course Calendar.
- 2007/04/18
- QuickTime fast-start is nominally working -- you should see
movies start to play only a few seconds after downloading. Have
tested it on Windows also, though you'll need the QuickTime plug-in
(link provided in browser if you don't already have it).
- 4/17 lecture movie posted.
- 2007/04/17
- Notes and question answers for 4/10 lecture posted.
Sorry, still working on how to get the movie to stream.
- 2007/04/10
- More reference material added. 4/10 lecture movie posted,
notes and question answers to come.
- 2007/04/07
- Added some additional references on background material, esp.
supersymmery. More to come.
- 2007/04/02
- We have 3-4 more presentations for which there are no dates
left. Let me know your preference among two options:
- We split some of the classes into two talks, at a cost in
depth of presentation, time for questions, and fairness.
- We add some additional sessions at irregular times.
- 2007/03/31
- Forgot that I will be out of town Apr 13. Schedule
shifted accordingly. There are still a couple students with no
topic assigned, so evening makeup classes may be necessary. Let
me know if you have conflicts as currently written.
- Recording secretary assignments made. Let me know if you
have conflicts.
- Figured out how to force browser to always refresh page!
- 2007/03/30
- More updates to presentation schedule.
- First week lecture slides posted.
- SUSY refs will be posted soon.
- 2007/03/29
- More topics have been assigned, tentative calendar set
up. Let me know about any problems with calendar.
- There are 9 students (whom I know of) without topics and only 6
unassigned classes. It may be necessary to share some topics
between
two presenters or split some class periods into two presentations.
- 2007/03/28
- Class location changed to 469 Lauritsen, class days change from
TuTh to TuF. Class on Fri Mar
30 will still be held in 107 Downs, the next class will be on Apr 10 in
469 Lauritsen.
- See new section on Presentation Guidelines.
- Course reserve list request has been sent in.
- Kellogg
seminar this week (Friday, 4 pm) is on dark matter, should be
interesting.
- Some topics have been assigned and the first week of
presentations has been set.