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Title: New particles and interactions

Abstract

The Working Group on New Particles and Interactions met as a whole at the beginning and at the end of the Workshop. However, much of what was accomplished was done in five subgroups. These were devoted to: (1) new quarks and leptons; (2) technicolor; (3) supersymmetry; (4) rare decays and CP; and (5) substructure of quarks and leptons. Other aspects of new particles, e.g., Higgs, W', Z', fell to the Electroweak Working Group to consider. The central question of this Workshop of comparing anti pp (with L = 10/sup 32//cm/sup 2/-sec) with pp (with L = 10/sup 33//cm/sup 2/-sec) colliders carried through to all these subgroups. In addition there were several other aspects of hadron colliders which were considered: what does an increase in ..sqrt..s gain in cross section and resultant sensitivity to new physics versus an increase in luminosity; will polarized beams or the use of asymmetries be essential in finding new interactions; where and at what level do rate limitations due to triggering or detection systems play a role; and how and where will the detection of particles with short, but detectable, lifetimes be important. 25 references.

Authors:
;
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, CA (USA); State Univ. of New York, Stony Brook (USA); Fermi National Accelerator Lab., Batavia, IL (USA)
OSTI Identifier:
7186842
Report Number(s):
SLAC-PUB-3310; CONF-840275-2
ON: DE84010566
DOE Contract Number:  
AC03-76SF00515
Resource Type:
Conference
Resource Relation:
Conference: Workshop on anti pp options for the SSC, Chicago, IL, USA, 13 Feb 1984; Other Information: Portions are illegible in microfiche products. Original copy available until stock is exhausted
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Subject:
72 PHYSICS OF ELEMENTARY PARTICLES AND FIELDS; 43 PARTICLE ACCELERATORS; POSTULATED PARTICLES; PARTICLE PRODUCTION; PROTON-ANTIPROTON INTERACTIONS; PROTON-PROTON INTERACTIONS; SUPERCONDUCTING SUPER COLLIDER; EXPERIMENT PLANNING; COLOR MODEL; CP INVARIANCE; LEPTONS; PARTICLE DECAY; PARTICLE PROPERTIES; PARTICLE STRUCTURE; QUARKS; SUPERSYMMETRY; BARYON-BARYON INTERACTIONS; COMPOSITE MODELS; DECAY; ELEMENTARY PARTICLES; FERMIONS; HADRON-HADRON INTERACTIONS; INTERACTIONS; INVARIANCE PRINCIPLES; MATHEMATICAL MODELS; NUCLEON-ANTINUCLEON INTERACTIONS; NUCLEON-NUCLEON INTERACTIONS; PARTICLE INTERACTIONS; PARTICLE MODELS; PLANNING; PROTON-NUCLEON INTERACTIONS; QUARK MODEL; STORAGE RINGS; SYMMETRY; 645103* - High Energy Physics- Particle Interactions & Properties-Experimental- Strong Interactions & Baryon & Meson Properties; 430400 - Particle Accelerators- Storage Rings

Citation Formats

Gilman, F. J., and Grannis, P. D. New particles and interactions. United States: N. p., 1984. Web.
Gilman, F. J., & Grannis, P. D. New particles and interactions. United States.
Gilman, F. J., and Grannis, P. D. 1984. "New particles and interactions". United States. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/7186842.
@article{osti_7186842,
title = {New particles and interactions},
author = {Gilman, F. J. and Grannis, P. D.},
abstractNote = {The Working Group on New Particles and Interactions met as a whole at the beginning and at the end of the Workshop. However, much of what was accomplished was done in five subgroups. These were devoted to: (1) new quarks and leptons; (2) technicolor; (3) supersymmetry; (4) rare decays and CP; and (5) substructure of quarks and leptons. Other aspects of new particles, e.g., Higgs, W', Z', fell to the Electroweak Working Group to consider. The central question of this Workshop of comparing anti pp (with L = 10/sup 32//cm/sup 2/-sec) with pp (with L = 10/sup 33//cm/sup 2/-sec) colliders carried through to all these subgroups. In addition there were several other aspects of hadron colliders which were considered: what does an increase in ..sqrt..s gain in cross section and resultant sensitivity to new physics versus an increase in luminosity; will polarized beams or the use of asymmetries be essential in finding new interactions; where and at what level do rate limitations due to triggering or detection systems play a role; and how and where will the detection of particles with short, but detectable, lifetimes be important. 25 references.},
doi = {},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/7186842}, journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Sun Apr 01 00:00:00 EST 1984},
month = {Sun Apr 01 00:00:00 EST 1984}
}

Conference:
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