Title :
Particle physics-future directions
Author_Institution :
Fermi Nat. Accel. Lab., Batavia, IL, USA
Abstract :
Wonderful opportunities await particle physics over the next decade, with the coming of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN to explore the 1-TeV scale (extending efforts at LEP and the Tevatron to unravel the nature of electroweak symmetry breaking) and many initiatives to develop our understanding of the problem of identity: what makes a neutrino a neutrino and a top quark a top quark. Here I have in mind the work of the B factories and the Tevatron collider on CP violation and the weak interactions of the b quark; the wonderfully sensitive experiments at Brookhaven, CERN, Fermilab, and Frascati on CP violation and rare decays of kaons; the prospect of definitive accelerator experiments on neutrino oscillations and the nature of the neutrinos; and a host of new experiments on the sensitivity frontier. We might even learn to read experiment for clues about the dimensionality of spacetime. If we are inventive enough, we may be able to follow this rich menu with the physics opportunities offered by a linear collider and a (muon storage ring) neutrino factory
Keywords :
CP invariance; linear accelerators; muons; neutrino oscillations; particle beam dynamics; reviews; space-time configurations; spontaneous symmetry breaking; storage rings; 1 TeV; B factories; CERN; CP violation; Fermilab; Frascati; LHC; Large Hadron Collider; Tevatron collider; electroweak symmetry breaking; linear collider; muon storage ring; neutrino oscillations; rare kaon decays; spacetime dimensionality; weak interactions; Ink; Instruments; Laboratories; Mesons; Neutrino sources; Particle accelerators; Particle measurements; Physics; Production facilities; Storage rings;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 2001. PAC 2001. Proceedings of the 2001
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7191-7
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.2001.987624