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Nobel Prize in Physics Shared for
Work that Unifies Forces of Nature
Understanding of broken symmetry has been crucial to the
standard model of particle physicsThe 2008 Nobel Prize in
physics has been awarded to three theoretical physicists who
developed the concept of symmetry breaking. The theory highlights
how three of the four seemingly disparate forces in nature
fall under the same umbrella. The work forms a cornerstone
of the standard model of particle physics.
Half of the $1.4 million prize goes to Yoichiro Nambu of
the University of Chicagos Enrico Fermi Institute. He
began formulating his mathematical description of a type of
symmetry violation, known as spontaneous broken symmetry,
as early as 1960.
The other half is shared by Japanese researchers Makoto Kobayashi
of the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization in Tsukuba
and Toshihide Maskawa of Kyoto Universitys Yukawa Institute
for Theoretical Physics. Kobayashi and Maskawa discovered
the origin of another type of symmetry violation that had
been observed but not explained. Their work successfully predicted
that nature must have at least three families of quarks, which
are the fundamental building blocks of matter such as neutrons
and protons.
The accomplishments of the winners tie in to the most
essential ideas in our understanding of modern physics,
says physicist Brian Greene of Columbia University in New
York City.
The basic laws of physics seem to be incredibly symmetric,
Greene adds, but to get the kinds of things that were
used to in the word around us stars, planets and people
that symmetry needs to be reduced in order for that
kind of structure to emerge.
Its like adding paint to a blank canvas, notes Greene.
On a bare canvas, every point is the same as every other
theres complete symmetry. But to see the beauty of a
painting emerge, a painter adds splashes of color, which reduces
the symmetry, and thats what needed to happen
in the universe, he says. The cosmos began as a hot
uniform sea of particles in which all the laws of physics
had melded into one, but transformed and cooled into a rich
tapestry.
Nambu discovered that symmetries in nature can be hidden
and spontaneously broken. That idea of hidden symmetries
has now become a guiding principle in understanding nature
at its deepest level, says Turner.
One way to understand spontaneously broken symmetry is to
imagine a round dinner table at which the place settings are
symmetric. Theres a napkin to the left and right of
each dinner plate, so either side looks the same. But once
a diner reaches for a napkin to the left, he determines the
choice for everyone at the table, and the symmetry is broken.
In the early 1960s, Nambu was studying the phenomenon of
superconductivity, in which electric current, below a certain
temperature, suddenly flows without any resistance. Below
this critical temperature, electrons, which normally repel
each other, abruptly bind up in pairs. It took Nambu two years
to develop the concept of spontaneous symmetry breaking in
order to explain how superconductivity works. He then rapidly
applied the idea to particle physics.
Nambu was the first to apply the idea of a spontaneously
broken symmetry in elementary particle physics that
is, a symmetry that is an exact property of the underlying
equations of the theory, but is not realized in the solutions
of these equations, and hence not easily apparent in the properties
of elementary particles, says Steven Weinberg of the
University of Texas at Austin, who shared the 1979 Nobel Prize
in physics. Nambus idea has proved crucial in
understanding the properties of particles that interact through
the strong nuclear force, in particular pi mesons, he
says, adding that it has also helped unify the weak and electromagnetic
interactions.
Nambu discovered a mechanism embedded in the laws of physics
that allowed the character of symmetries to change as the
universe evolved. In technical parlance, Nambu introduced
a scalar field, which Greene likens to a ubiquitous mist.
We dont know its there, it has no manifest
features, but the laws of physics know about that mist and
it plays the role of reducing symmetry, says Greene.
His study of this broken symmetry not only paved the
way for hidden symmetry in particle physics more broadly,
Turner says, but also explained why the pi meson is
so much lighter than all the other mesons.
Kobayashi and Maskawa examined a very different sort of symmetry
violation. They were trying to explain a set of puzzling experiments,
first performed by James Cronin and Val Fitch in the mid 1960s.
In those experiments, subatomic particles called K mesons
didnt behave the same if the particles were replaced
by their antiparticles and the same experiment took place
in a looking-glass universe, where right and left were interchanged.
(Cronin and Fitch went on to win the 1980 Nobel Prize for
the experiment.)
In 1972, Kobayashi and Maskawa found that this puzzling asymmetry
could be explained if the family of elementary particles was
expanded to include at least three families of quarks. At
the time, only three quarks were known up, down and
strange. The up and down form one family. Missing members
of the other families were subsequently discovered in experiments.
The charm quark (partner of the strange quark) was discovered
in 1974; the bottom quark (1977) and the top quark in (1994)
make up the third family.
Their theory also suggested that physicists could observe
a symmetry violation in another type of elementary particle,
the B-meson, which is ten times heavier than a K meson, or
kaon. Because the broken symmetry involving the B meson occurs
rarely, physicists built giant B factories, one
at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in California and
the other at the KEK Accelerator Laboratory in Tsukuba, Japan.
These factories each produced more than a million B mesons
a day. In 2001, both experiments confirmed the B meson violation
that Kobayashi and Maskawa had predicted nearly three decades
earlier.
Source:
ScienceNews
Date: October 02, 2008

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