ATOM
Operated near Geneva by CERN (The European
Laboratory for Particle Physics) the accelerator is more than four miles long
and one the largest machines even built. It produces temperatures as high as
7,000 trillion degrees Celsius.
The subatomic particles
make 43,000 times each second, the circuit of Super Proton Synchrotron.
The magnets guide
a stream of protons around the beam line at nearly the speed of light (300,000 km per second = 186,82 miles per
second) before they collide with a beam of antiprotons whirling in the opposite
direction. The impacts are so violent –like volleys of cannonballs smashing
into matter, creating subatomic particles that fly wildly in all directions.
Most of this particles are short –lived, some last only a trillionth of a
trillionth of a second before vanishing.
It a world where
matter and energy are interchangeable, where empty space is not really empty
and where gravity is overwhelmed by stronger forces that bind together matter.
Your every breath
holds a trillion trillion atoms. Protons, carrying a positive electric charge
and electrically neutral particles called neutrons cluster within the atom’s
central region or nucleus –one hundred-thousandth the diameter of the atom.
Whirling around the nucleus is a third subatomic particle, the electron, which
caries a negative charge. Some particles exist so briefly that they are not
real but virtual.
Paradoxically,
exploring the smallest things in the universe requires the largest machines on
earth.
In 1808 the
chemist John Dalton argued that for each chemical element there is a
corresponding atom and that all else is made from combinations of those atoms.
Pierre Curie indicated that atoms had a internal structure. J.J. Thomson, which
identified electrons, charged prticles much smaller than the hydrogen atom. The
uncuttable was cut; there was a subatomic world.
Max Plank’s
assumption in 1900: Energy was not exchanged in a continuous flow but
individual packets, or quanta; energy moved not like a river but like
raindrops. In 1905 Albert Einstein was developing what would become his special
relative theory equating energy and mass.
Niels Bohr
proposed that electrons behaved in quantum fashion. They remained in fixed
orbits and moved from one orbit to another –in quantum leaps – when the emitted
or absorbed energy.
Enrico Fermi, who
studied electrons and gases before building the first fission reactor that led
to atomic bomb and nuclear power.
Werner Heisenberg
formulated the uncertainty principle: It is impossible to measure simultaneously
both the precise momentum and position of a subatomic particle.
Paul Dirac’s
mathematics predicted antimatter. Carl Anderson confirmed this idea in 1932,
with his discovery of a positive electron or positron, a particle just like an
electron but with positive rather than a negative charge. When matter and
antimatter meet, they annihilate each other in a burst of radiation. For every
type pf particle there must also be an antiparticle. This quirk of nature has
led physicists to speculate about encounters between the universe and an
anti-universe.
To hit an atom’s
with a charged particle is something like playing pool in the dark on a table
as big as Texas .
The cue ball, a proton with positive charge, is shot at nearly the speed of
light. Fortunately, the player can fire many cue balls at the same time. At
least one of the objects balls, the nuclei, will be hit by a proton. Score is
done by observing what other subatomic particles are created out of the energy transformed
into matter by the force of the collision.
We now know that
electrons do not orbit the nucleus in a two dimensional plane as planets orbit
about the sun. Orbit is a term left over from what has become and outdated view
of atoms.
How can an
elephant closely inspect an ant except by destroying it? If the parts of atoms seem always elusive,
their behavior is statistically predictable to high degree of accuracy and
sufficient for detailed scientific study.
Carbon 12 is of
particular interest, for its atomic weight has been established as the basis
for the weights of all other atoms.
Two miles long and
as straight as the laser beam used align it; the accelerator hurls electrons at
99.99 % the speed of light. However, collisions in an electron accelerator are
easier to analyze.
Almost every home
has a primitive accelerator: the television picture tube. Inside it electricity
heats a metal filament, boiling off negatively charged electrons and
accelerating them through a positively charged wire grid. A magnet then steers
them at the phosphorus –coated TV screen, which glows from the collisions.
One way to boost
energy is to fire two beams of particles in opposite directions around a ring,
so that they slam together. We are repeating one of the miracles of the
universe- transforming energy into matter.
The atoms of all
the elements then known were described as combinations of protons, neutrons and
electrons-held to be the fundamental building blocks of matter.
At the center of
each atom, in this view, was a nucleus of neutral neutrons and positive
protons, the number of protons identifying the element. The lightest was the
hydrogen, with one proton. The heaviest naturally occurring element, uranium,
had 97 protons.
For each proton in
the nucleus, there was negative charged electron, gyrating around the atom’s
core at a distance 50,000 times the diameter of the nucleus. If a hydrogen
atom’s nucleus were the size of a tennis ball, its electron would be two miles
away.
Antimatter poses a
mystery: If particles vanish when they meet their opposites and if every
particle can have an antiparticle, why is the world made only of matter? Where
has all the antimatter gone? During the first split second after the big bang,
there was a small excess of matter over antimatter. Particles and antiparticles
collided, annihilating each other and leaving behind only radiation and surplus
matter. This residual particle make up almost everything in the universe today:
stars, galaxies, the sun system, the Milky Way, the earth, the moon and us.
Ernest O. Lawrence
Constantly uncovered new particles. By the early 1960 dozens were known. Three
smaller building blocks were discovered by Murray & Zweig at the CERN,
named quarks. Now the protons and neutrons- could be explained as combinations
of quarks, bonded together according to their color.
A proton consist
of two up quarks with positive charge of two –thirds each and one down quark
with negative charge of one third; together they yield a single positive
charge. In the same way, one up and two down quarks combine to form a neutral
neutron. Quarks apparently exist only in trios or in quarks/antiquarks pairs.
“Remember energy
is matter and matter is energy” Nearly all the several hundred known subatomic
particles are made of quarks, bound together by what physicist calla the strong
nuclear force. The exceptions are called leptons. The best lepton (slight) is the electron,
first identified in 1897. Muons, discovered in 1937, have about 200 times as
much mass of the cosmic radiation that constantly bombards earth. The other
leptons are neutrinos –little neutral ones-
Several million
neutrinos, traveling at the speed of light, are flying through your body al
this instant. Nothing stops them.
The W and Z
particles carry the weak force, one of three forces governing the behavior of
atoms, breaking down each neutron in the nucleus of a radioactive atom into a
proton, an electron and an antineutrino. Other gauge particles, called photons,
impart the electromagnetic force (responsible for keeping electrons in orbit
around the nucleus), about 100,000 time more powerful than the weak force. Most
powerful of all –a hundred times than the electromagnetic force – is the strong
force.
Besides these
three forces, the other known force at work in the universe is the gravity. It
is by far weakest –the strong force is some 1 followed by 38 zeros times more
powerful. A still undetected particle, the graviton, may be the carrier of
gravity, which has no meaningful role inside atoms. Without gravity, however,
there would be no universe, since it binds together stars & galaxies, holds
the earth in orbit, and keeps our feet planted on the ground.
Maxwell discovered
that electricity and magnetism are two aspects of the same force. Today some
physicists believe that the universe’s four forces are but manifestations of a
single and deeper force.
None of these
theories yet embrace the universal fourth force, gravity. But they do predict
that protons decay into other particles, because the strong force that binds a
proton together and the weak force that causes radioactive decay may spring
from the same basic interaction. But if proof is found that protons decay, it
will mean that the matter is inherently unstable – nothing lasts forever.
Besides predicting
proton decay, grand unified theories attempt to trace the history of the
universe back to its creation in the big bang some 15 thousand millions years
ago. Since then the cosmos has been constantly expanding. Today the visible
universe is growing every second by a volume equal to that of the Milky Way
galaxy.

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