Details

Physics at the Terascale


Physics at the Terascale


1. Aufl.

von: Ian Brock, Thomas Schörner-Sadenius

160,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-VCH
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 04.05.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9783527634972
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 514

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Beschreibungen

Written by authors working at the forefront of research, this accessible treatment presents the current status of the field of collider-based particle physics at the highest energies available, as well as recent results and experimental techniques.<br> It is clearly divided into three sections; The first covers the physics -- discussing the various aspects of the Standard Model as well as its extensions, explaining important experimental results and highlighting the expectations from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The second is dedicated to the involved technologies and detector concepts, and the third covers the important - but often neglected - topics of the organisation and financing of high-energy physics research.<br> A useful resource for students and researchers from high-energy physics.<br>
PART I The Physics<br> 1. Setting the Scene<br> 2. The Standard Model: Our Picture of the Microcosm<br> 3. Electroweak and Standard Model Tests: The Quest for Precision<br> 4. Hard QCD: Still going strong<br> 5. Monte Carlo Generators and Fixed-order Calculations: Predicting the (Un)expected<br> 6. The Higgs Boson: Still Elusive after 40 Years<br> 7. Supersymmetry<br> 8. Quark Flavour Physics<br> 9. Top Quarks: The Peak of the Mass Hierarchy?<br> 10. Beyond SUSY and the Standard Model: Exotica<br> 11. Forward and Diffractive Physics: Of Rapidity Gaps and Small Angles<br> <br> PART II The Technology<br> 12. Accelerators: The Particle Smashers<br> 13. Detector Concepts: From Technologies to Physics Results<br> 14. Tracking Detectors: Following the Charges<br> 15. Calorimeters: Precise Energy Measurements<br> 16. Muon Detectors: Catching Penetrating Particles<br> 17. Luminosity Determination: Normalising the Rates<br> 18. Trigger Systems in High Energy Physics Experiments<br> 19. Grid Computing in High-Energy Physics<br> <br> PART III The Organisation<br> 20. The Sociology and Management of Terascale Experiments: Organisation and Community<br> 21. Funding of High Energy Physics<br> 22. The Role of the Big Labs<br> 23. Communication, Outreach and the Terascale<br> <br> PART IV Appendices<br> Index
Ian Brock is the Scientific Manager of the Helmholtz Alliance "Physics at the Terascale". He is an experimental physics professor currently on leave of absence from the University of Bonn. During his career he has worked on seven different high-energy physics experiments in Europe and the USA (TASSO, Crystal Ball, CLEO, L3, ZEUS, ATLAS and CLEOc). He has a wide experience in the building and maintaining of detectors, data analysis and statistical tools. He was the main author of the Mn_Fit software package, which was widely used in the high-energy physics community over the past 20 years.<br> <br> Thomas Schorner-Sadenius studied physics in Hamburg an Munich and worked on experiments at CERN (Crystal Barrel, OPAL, ATLAS, CMS) and at DESY (H1, ZEUS). His main expertise is in data analysis in the field of QCD studies, in triggering in high-energy physics experiments and in the running and maintenance of large detector systems. Currently Thomas Schorner-Sadenius is the leader of Analysis Centre of the Helmholtz Alliance "Physics at the Terascale" and responsible for the shaping of the analysis-related programme of the Alliance.
Written by authors working at the forefront of research, this accessible treatment presents the current status of the field of collider-based particle physics at the highest energies available, as well as recent results and experimental techniques.<br> It is clearly divided into three sections; The first covers the physics -- discussing the various aspects of the Standard Model as well as its extensions, explaining important experimental results and highlighting the expectations from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The second is dedicated to the involved technologies and detector concepts, and the third covers the important - but often neglected - topics of the organisation and financing of high-energy physics research.<br> A useful resource for students and researchers from high-energy physics.<br> <br> From the Contents:<br> PART I The Physics<br> * Setting the Scene<br> * The Standard Model: Our Picture of the Microcosm<br> * Electroweak and Standard Model Tests: The Quest for Precision<br> * Hard QCD: Still going strong<br> * Monte Carlo Generators and Fixed-order Calculations: Predicting the (Un)Expected<br> * The Higgs Boson: Still Elusive after 40 Years<br> * Supersymmetry<br> * Quark Flavour Physics<br> * Top Quarks: The Peak of the Mass Hierarchy?<br> * Beyond SUSY and the Standard Model: Exotica<br> * Forward and Diffractive Physics: Bridging the Soft and the Hard<br> PART II The Technology<br> * Accelerators: The Particle Smashers<br> * Detector Concepts: From Technologies to Physics Results<br> * Tracking Detectors: Following the Charges<br> * Calorimetry: Precise Energy Measurements<br> * Muon Detectors: Catching Penetrating Particles<br> * Luminosity Determination: Normalising the Rates<br> * Trigger Systems in High-Energy Physics Experiments<br> * Grid Computing in High-Energy Physics<br> PART III The Organisation<br> * The Sociology and Management of Terascale Experiments: Organisation and Community<br> * Funding of High Energy Physics<br> * The Role of the Big Labs<br> * Communication, Outreach and the Terascale<br> <br> Ian Brock was the first Scientific Manager of the Helmholtz Alliance "Physics at the Terascale". He is an experimental physics professor from the University of Bonn. During his career he has worked on seven different high-energy physics experiments in Europe and the USA (TASSO, Crystal Ball, CLEO, L3, ZEUS, ATLAS and CLEOc). He has a wide experience in the building and maintaining of detectors, data analysis and statistical tools. Professor Brock was the main author of the Mn_Fit software package, which has been widely used in the high-energy physics community over the past 20 years.<br> <br> Thomas Schorner-Sadenius studied physics in Hamburg and Munich and worked on experiments at CERN (Crystal Barrel, OPAL, ATLAS, CMS) and at DESY (H1, ZEUS). His main expertise is in data analysis in the field of QCD studies, in triggering in high-energy physics experiments and in the running and maintenance of large detector systems. Currently Dr. Schorner-Sadenius is the leader of Analysis Centre of the Helmholtz Alliance "Physics at the Terascale" and responsible for the shaping of the analysis-related programme of the Alliance.

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