Particle Physics: an Introduction

Instructors: Martin Pohl +1 more

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Skills you'll gain

  •   Mathematical Modeling
  •   Science and Research
  •   Experimentation
  •   Semiconductors
  •   Laboratory Equipment
  •   Physics
  •   Research
  •   Medical Imaging
  •   Radiation Protection
  • There are 8 modules in this course

    More specifically, the following questions are addressed: - What are the concepts of particle physics and how are they implemented? - What are the properties of atomic nuclei and how can one use them? - How does one accelerate and detect particles and measure their properties? - What does one learn from particle reactions at high energies and particle decays? - How do electromagnetic interactions work and how can one use them? - How do strong interactions work and why are they difficult to understand? - How do weak interactions work and why are they so special? - What is the mass of objects at the subatomic level and how does the Higgs boson intervene? - How does one search for new phenomena beyond the known ones? - What can one learn from particle physics concerning astrophysics and the Universe as a whole? The course is structured in eight modules. Following the first one which introduces our subject, the modules 2 (nuclear physics) and 3 (accelerators and detectors) are rather self contained and can be studied separately. The modules 4 to 6 go into more depth about matter and forces as described by the standard model of particle physics. Module 7 deals with our ways to search for new phenomena. And the last module introduces you to two mysterious components of the Universe, namely Dark Matter and Dark Energy.

    Nuclear physics

    Accelerators and detectors

    Electromagnetic interactions

    Hadrons and strong interaction

    Electro-weak interactions

    Discovering new phenomena

    Dark matter and dark energy

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