Professor Stephen Watts Some Famous Manchester Science Academics
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
WELCOME TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER and PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY - Professor Stephen Watts Some famous Manchester science academics Sir Bernard Lovell Ernest Rutherford Dame Nancy Rothwell, FRS Current President of UoM Alan Turing was at Manchester from 1948 until his death in 1954. Tom Kilburn and Sir Freddie Williams and Statute on Sackville Street Campus ‘The Baby’ JBCA staff based in Turing Building Physics & Astronomy . One of the largest Physics and Astronomy School in UK . Discovery of Graphene – first 2D crystal. Nobel Prize 2010 for Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov . Many 'firsts' in astronomy (double pulsars etc) . Strong involvement in ATLAS experiment at CERN . Strong involvement in D0 experiment at Fermilab. The University where Rutherford split the atom; Geiger also worked in his research team . Operates Jodrell Bank Observatory ( Lovell Telescope is still 3rd largest steerable telescope in the world) The original Schuster laboratory was in the University main building. New building in 1967 Photon Science Institute (left) Alan Turing Building (Right) Staff housed in Schuster Building + some in PSI + 3rd floor Turing + Jodrell Bank Observatory ( 30 miles away) Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics 3rd Floor of Turing National Graphene Institute: £61m £38m grant from EPSRC £23m from European Union (ERDF) View of the JBO site from the Lovell Telescope – June 2012 See the Mark II Telescope and the SKA Organisation HQ Building under construction Moved in November 2012 Opened 19 April 2013 Square Kilometre Array (SKA) Australia and South Africa Oxford/Cambridge/Manchester Physics and Astronomy/EEE Public Engagement at JBO – new Discovery Centre opened April 2011 Director : Dr Teresa Anderson Teresa elected Chair of the Uk Associate of Science and Discovery Centres http://sciencecentres.org.uk/ JBO was shortlisted as a potential World Heritage Site in 2011 by UK government Flaming Lips (Pop group) + Outreach at JBO July 2011 Hallé Orchestra at Jodrell Bank tonight – Sir Bernard Lovell would be 100 today – sorry no tickets left ! THANKS TO SOME GREAT The discovery of charm SLIDES OF CHRIS DAMERELL Ambleside 21 August 2009 My comments in RED boxes • SPEAR, an ‘unfunded’ unfashionable minor project, built on a parking lot, started running in 1973 • Kjell Johnsen’s visit to SLAC • Purpose? “Measure one number (R) then switch it off” • But the first measurements of R at high energies (above 3 GeV) were unexpectedly a bit too high ... Ambleside School Chris Damerell • ICHEP London July 1974 • Burt Richter skipped the ‘boring’ sessions on resonance physics • In his talk, he described the anomalies in experimental measurement of R, and John Ellis summarised over 20 possible theoretical interpretations • Returning to SLAC, some of Burt’s colleagues convinced the group to perform a scan at reduced energies Ambleside School Chris Damerell The ‘November Revolution’ on 10th November 1974 was followed by the Nobel Prize to Richter and Ting in 1976 Ambleside School Chris Damerell • PS Committee, Mon Nov 11th 1974. After an hour of theoretical discourse: “Ladies and gentlemen, I have no idea what this discovery means, but it’s a disaster for charm” • What had in fact been found was the ground state of charmonium, and the subsequently discovered spectrum satisfied perfectly the expectations of the non-relativistic quark model. The bootstrap theory was dead and buried and Dick Dalitz who had lost 2/3 of his audience at the 1965 ICHEP conference, was in great demand at last! 9.5 GeV 3 GeV Look at the masses, remembering that the baryon resonances had completely run out by ~2 GeV. This was extremely unexpected. The upsilon (b-bbar) was discovered in 1977, but the top quark, at 175 GeV, was tough (found in 1994 at the Tevatron, Fermilab), though in 1984 it had been claimed at 60 GeV (UA1) 21st August 2009 Ambleside School Chris Damerell 12 • Gaillard, Lee and Rosner, ‘Search for Charm’, Rev Mod Phys 47 (1975) 277, written prior to the events of Nov 10th 1974, What was needed was an “electronic emulsion” – silicon detector technology resulted. Initially for vertexing…. ACCMOR (NA11/NA32), DELPHI, ALEPH, OPAL, MARKII, SLD…. Now used for tracking over very large volumes ……… Ambleside School Chris Damerell 13 NA32 – 1984 – Two charge coupled devices ( 22 micron square pixels) A pixel detector provides maximum information per layer, free of ghost hits 1 mm2 of sparsified data, both layers shown together This picture convinced me that charm exists! Also – pixels are vital for 200 GeV ‘jets’, Clean pattern recognition by only two pixel planes pattern recognition Fred Wickens on shift 1984, ‘Do you think this looks like a charm decay?’ [After momentum analysis and particle ID, it proved to be our first D+ ] Ambleside School Chris Damerell Silicon tracking now dominates. CMS Pixel 75m 2011 125m 2022 Largely strips not pixels ATLAS Pixel 83m 2011 638m 2022 15 • The discovery of the charm quark was a key turning point in particle physics. • It inspired the development of silicon detector technology which has gone onto be a vital tool in modern experiments. e.g. Discovery of top needed precise vertexing. • The story of charm is not over – enjoy your conference !.