Physics at the University of Virginia
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Seminars for the week of
9/1/2008 - 9/5/2008

Atomic
Monday, September 1 Available
3:30 PM, Room 204
Physics Building

Nuclear
Tuesday, September 2 RESERVED
3:30 PM, Room 204
Physics Building

High Energy
Wednesday, September 3 Brandon Parks [Host: Chris Neu]
3:30 PM, Room 204 Ohio State University
Physics Building “Search for the Standard Model Higgs Boson at CDF Run II”
ABSTRACT:
 One of the greatest theoretical triumphs in the history of physics has been the unification of the electromagnetic and weak forces. This theory successfully predicted the masses of the W and Z bosons which were later measured at CERN, and involves a mechanism that provides all particles with mass. This mechanism also predicts the existence of another observable particle, known as the Higgs boson. Experiments at the LEP collider have placed a lower bound on its mass of 114 Gev/c2, but direct measurement of the Higgs has thus far eluded all efforts. Currently, the CDF and D0 experiments at Fermilab are pushing to probe the mass regions not excluded by LEP with a number of analyses optimized for masses extending from 100 to 200 GeV/c2. Near the LEP boundary where the Higgs is expected to decay primarily to a pair of bottom quarks, the most promising channels involve Higgs produced in association with a W or Z boson. In particular, the ZH modes have very interesting properties which can be taken advantage of at the analysis level. The mode in which the Z decays to electrons or muons is extremely "clean", as leptons from vector boson decay are typically well measured and all final state particles are directly reconstructed. Conversely, the mode in which the Z decays to neutrinos is extremely challenging, as the presence of the Z can only be inferred from momentum imbalance provided by recoil with the Higgs. Utilizing new analysis techniques developed to isolate a Higgs signal amongst its seemingly overwhelming backgrounds, no significant excess of signal has currently been observed. However, limits have been set on the production cross section of a Higgs boson. Currently, limits of 16 times the standard model expectation has been set in the ZH->llbb mode, and 8 times the standard model expectation in the ZH->vvbb mode for a Higgs mass of 115 GeV/c2. Combining these results with all low mass analyses at CDF and D0, the Tevatron has placed a limit of 3.7 times the standard model expectation directly above LEP's lower mass limit.

Condensed Matter
Thursday, September 4 Available
4:00 PM, Room 204
Physics Building

Research Talk
Friday, September 5 Available
3:00 PM, Room 204
Physics Building

Colloquium
Friday, September 5 Michael Raymer [Host: Olivier Pfister]
4:00 PM, Room 204 University of Oregon
Physics Building “Photon Wave Mechanics and Spin-Orbit Interaction in Single Photons”
ABSTRACT:
 We often use the term “photon” in reference to individual quantum objects, or particles of light, rather than as excitations of the electromagnetic field. Yet, quantum mechanics textbooks contain no satisfactory wave equation for the photon wave function. I review the analog of the Dirac equation for a photon, which completely describes the evolution of the photon’s quantum wave function in coordinate space. Single photons carry orbital angular momentum as well as spin angular momentum. When a single photon travels in a multimode optical fiber, its spin and orbital angular momenta interact, modifying the shape of the photon wave function as it travels. Close analogy of this behavior can be found with that of an electron in a cylindrical potential, in spite of the fact that a photon has no magnetic moment. We are carrying out related experiments to illustrate the usefulness of the photon wave function concept.


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