Coming of Age in the Milky Way (48 page)

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Authors: Timothy Ferris

Tags: #Science, #Philosophy, #Space and time, #Cosmology, #Science - History, #Astronomy, #Metaphysics, #History

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It was in this fevered context that the two laboratories raced to test the predictions of the electroweak theory. The new force-carrying particles postulated by the electroweak theory, the W
+
W
-
, and Z°, were massive, meaning that it would take a lot of energy to bring them into existence in an accelerator collision. In 1971, no accelerator could yet summon up sufficient energy to create W and Z particles, if they existed. In the meantime, however, the experimentalists could hope to discern the existence of the Z indirectly, by identifying the effects, in accelerator collisions, of “neutral currents.” This consisted of searching through thousands of accelerator events for evidence of the few neutral current interactions in which the Z° would have played a role. Encouraged by Weinberg’s estimation that such events “are just on the edge of observability,” a team working under the experimental physicist Paul Musset at the CERN accelerator began staying up nights, examining thousands of photographs of particle interactions. After a year’s work they were finally rewarded when the myopic Musset, who scrutinized the particle tracks with his nose almost touching the print, discerned a kink in the recorded path of a particle that gave away its identity as a pion rather than a muon, indicating that it had emerged from a neutral current reaction. Salam learned of the result shortly after arriving at Aix-en-Provence, where he was to attend a physics conference. He was lugging his suitcase to a student hostel near the train station when a car stopped next to him. Musset looked out and said, “Are you Salam?” Salam said yes. “Get into the car,” Musset said. “I have news for you. We have found neutral currents.”
26

This was welcome news to Salam, Glashow, and Weinberg, but it nevertheless fell short of fully vindicating the electroweak theory, for other theories also predicted the existence of neutral currents. The Weinberg-Salam theory surpassed its predecessors in predicting the mass of the carriers of the electroweak force—about 80 GeV for the Ws and 90 GeV for the Z. (A GeV is one billion electron volts; in this context, it is convenient to express
mass in terms of energy.) The Ws and Zs were known collectively as intermediate vector bosons. To produce enough intermediate vector bosons to make their detection likely would require a particle accelerator with a minimum energy of some 500 to 1,000 GeV.

Neither accelerator could reach this level, but both were hurriedly being souped up to approach it, by means of a daring new technique involving the collision of protons, not with a stationary target, but with an oncoming stream of antiprotons. The universe, so far as we can tell, contains only trace amounts of antimatter—this in itself is one of nature’s more intriguing broken symmetries —but antimatter can be created in accelerator collisions, and by the 1970s accelerator engineers were beginning to talk of collecting the antiprotons they created and then colliding them with protons coming the other way. Since matter and antimatter particles annihilate each other when they meet, the result would be to greatly boost the effective power of the accelerator.

Fermilab approached the problem methodically. They would first install new magnets to increase the power of the accelerator to 1,000 GeV (equal to one teraelectron volt, or one TeV), and only thereafter take on the more hazardous business of trying to make and store antimatter. CERN proceeded in a more intrepid fashion, going for a matter-antimatter collider right away. Wilson, with his customary gentility, wished them well: “May they reach meaningful luminosity and may they find the elusive intermediate boson,” he wrote. “We will exult with them if they do.”
27
CERN officials, with equal courtliness, described the Fermilab plan as “a project of great vision being attacked with courage and enthusiasm.”
28
But behind the pleasantries raged a fierce competition between rival teams of the world’s brightest and most egocentric scientists and engineers.

Of these, few were brighter—and none more egocentric—than Carlo Rubbia, the driving force behind the CERN effort. Born in northern Italy in 1934 of Austrian parents, Rubbia was by nature an internationalist (“I have an accent in every language,” he said) who felt at home cajoling and browbeating the scores of scientists who made up his enormous research teams, among them Italian, French, English, German, and Chinese researchers, a Finn, a Welshman, and a Sicilian. A driven man, Rubbia traveled ceaselessly, flying from CERN to Harvard to Berkeley to Fermilab to Rome so incessantly that friends who monitored his progress calculated
that he had a lifetime average velocity of over forty miles per hour. (“Ah,” he said, settling into his seat one morning, “my first flight of the day!”) Massive and energetic and constantly in motion, he resembled nothing so much as a human proton: Like Rutherford, who told his tailor, “Every year I grow in girth,
and
in mentality,” Rubbia ballooned in size until, by 1984, he was boasting that his form now approached the perfection of a Platonic sphere.

Rubbia’s hopes of winning a Nobel Prize rested on a conception concocted by an austere CERN engineer named Simon van der Meer. Van der Meer was convinced that one could make antiprotons (albeit at a rate of only one hundred-billionth of a gram of them per day) and keep them in storage until enough had accumulated to collide them with protons in significant numbers. Storing anti-matter
would be a tricky business, akin to the old conundrum of how to bottle a universal solvent: If an antiproton made contact with a particle of ordinary matter, both would instantly annihilate. Van der Meer proposed to handle the problem by constructing an antiproton accumulator, a small ring in which the antiprotons could be kept circling for days, suspended in a vacuum in an electromagnetic field. To keep the antiprotons concentrated in tight, secure bundles, Van der Meer proposed a technique called stochastic cooling—stochastic meaning statistical, and cooling meaning reducing random motions among the particles. As little clumps of antiprotons whirled around the storage ring, sensors would detect the drift of those that strayed, and computers would then send a correcting message across the ring to adjust the magnets on the opposite side to correct for the drift. Since the antiprotons were moving at close to the speed of light, the computation would have to be done very quickly, whereupon the message would be sent speeding across the diameter of the storage ring just in time to configure the magnets before the antiproton bundle arrived via the longer, roundabout route. Once a sufficient supply of antiprotons had been collected and concentrated, they could be released into the main ring, accelerated to terminal velocity, and steered into a headlong collision with bunches of protons coming the other way.
*

 

An accelerator speeds subatomic particles—in this case, protons—around a ring, then diverts them to a target inside a detector.

 

The building of a proton-antiproton collider fed via stochastic cooling represented one of the most audacious endeavors in an age of high technology. Van der Meer himself considered the idea so radical that he originally did not even try to publish it. Many accelerator experts predicted that stochastic cooling would not work, and that if it did, the matter and antimatter bundles would blow each other up the first time they collided, rather than producing the repeated collisions—some fifty thousand of them per second—that would be required to flush out the intermediate vector bosons. (The accelerator would only just get into the energy range of the intermediate vector bosons, and the physicists had to rely upon quantum probabilities to deliver up a detection event.) There were snickers in the audience when Rubbia first proposed constructing an antimatter collider; when he brought up the idea at Fermilab he
was invited to leave; and when he and two colleagues submitted a paper on it, the editors of the
Physical Review Letters
, a leading journal, refused to publish it. But Rubbia kept pushing, despite the high stakes—one hundred million dollars to build the antimatter accumulator and to modify the accelerator, plus another thirty million dollars to build the detectors—and he made it a habit to project an air of robust assurance, keeping his reservations to himself. “Let’s be serious,” he said later. “If we had spelled out these doubts before the project was launched, nobody would have given us the money for it. … I was scared stiff the beam wouldn’t work.”
29

 

A collider sends particles of matter speeding in one direction and particles of antimatter in the opposite direction, smashing them into one another at detector sites located where the beams intersect.

 

In the end, CERN took the gamble. For three years, while the antiproton ring was being constructed, Rubbia busied himself building the detector, an instrument with the bulk and weight of a Wall Street bank vault, ten meters long by five meters wide and weighing two thousand tons, buried underground and straddling
the accelerator tunnel. He worked himself to new depths of exhaustion and twice was nearly electrocuted, but he seldom faltered and he kept learning as he went along. “Look at this place,” he said with pride, once the giant detector was completed. “I know the function of every switch in here.”
30

Tests of the proton-antiproton collider began in 1982, and to nearly everybody’s astonishment, the thing worked. The protons and antiprotons collided as promised, producing tiny, intense bursts of energy, and subatomic particles came reeling out of the explosions, peppering the onionskin layers of the detector. Out of a billion such interactions emerged five that held clear evidence of the existence of the elusive W particle. On January 20, 1983, Rubbia stood in the CERN auditorium, in front of a long blackboard bleached with the technicolor palimpsests of thousands of rubbed-out equations, and told his colleagues that the W particle had been detected and the electroweak theory thus confirmed. Detection of the Z soon followed, and the masses of both bosons matched the predictions of the electroweak unified theory. Weinberg, Glashow, and Salam had been right; we live in a universe of broken symmetries, where at least two of the fundamental forces of nature, electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force, have diverged from a single, more symmetrical parent.

The battle of the big accelerators continued in the years that followed. Enormous boring machines toiled in Rembrandtesque gloom beneath the French countryside, digging a tunnel seventeen miles in circumference for a CERN accelerator that would collide electrons with their antimatter opposite numbers, the positrons. Proton accelerators continued to grow as well. The original CERN proton-antiproton machine had achieved an energy of 640 GeV; in America, Fermilab’s proton-antiproton collider, which went into operation in 198S, soon was climbing toward an energy of over 1 TeV. Two years thereafter, the United States began planning a “superconducting super collider” that would attain energies of 20 TeV, flushing out particles forty times more massive than any previously detectable. With a ring fifty miles or more in circumference, the super collider would be the largest machine ever constructed.

The theorists, meanwhile, kept sifting through the particle zoo in search of further hidden symmetries. A number of grandly titled
“grand unified” theories (GUTs for short) were written that purported to identify the electroweak and strong nuclear forces as partners in a single, broken gauge symmetry group. The GUTs made a curious prediction: They implied that the proton, always assumed to be stable, instead decays. Its half-life was estimated at some 10
32
years. That’s a long time—a thousand billion times the age of the universe—but the prediction could be tested by keeping watch on 10
32
protons, one of which ought then to decay each year on the average. To test the grand unified theories, protons accordingly were gathered together, in the form of thousands of tons of filtered water in a tank in a salt mine near Cleveland and in a lead mine in Kamioka, Japan, a thirty-five-ton block of concrete in an iron mine in Minnesota, sheets of iron in a gold mine in India, and stacks of steel bars adjacent to a highway tunnel under Mont Blanc. (The experiments were conducted deep underground to minimize contamination by cosmic rays.) Light-sensing devices were attached to computers programmed to record the telltale flash of light that would be produced by a spontaneously disintegrating proton.

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