Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors' Acknowledgments
- Photographs of the Symposium
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Mathematical Notation
- Part One Introduction
- Part Two Quarks and Leptons
- 4 From the Psi to Charmed Mesons: Three Years with the SLAC–LBL Detector at SPEAR
- 5 The Discovery of the Tau Lepton
- 6 The Discovery of the Upsilon, Bottom Quark, and B Mesons
- 7 The Discovery of CP Violation
- 8 Flavor Mixing and CP Violation
- Part Three Toward Gauge Theories
- Part Four Accelerators, Detectors, and Laboratories
- Part Five Electroweak Unification
- Part Six The Discovery of Quarks and Gluons
- Part Seven Personal Overviews
- Index
5 - The Discovery of the Tau Lepton
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors' Acknowledgments
- Photographs of the Symposium
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Mathematical Notation
- Part One Introduction
- Part Two Quarks and Leptons
- 4 From the Psi to Charmed Mesons: Three Years with the SLAC–LBL Detector at SPEAR
- 5 The Discovery of the Tau Lepton
- 6 The Discovery of the Upsilon, Bottom Quark, and B Mesons
- 7 The Discovery of CP Violation
- 8 Flavor Mixing and CP Violation
- Part Three Toward Gauge Theories
- Part Four Accelerators, Detectors, and Laboratories
- Part Five Electroweak Unification
- Part Six The Discovery of Quarks and Gluons
- Part Seven Personal Overviews
- Index
Summary
I begin this chapter with the period 1965–1974 when my colleagues and I worked experimentally on the e–μ problem and I became immersed in the then hypothetical world of heavy leptons. I go on to describe the discovery, in the period 1974–1976, of the tau lepton by myself and my colleagues using the SLAC–LBL I detector at the SPEAR e+e− storage ring. I then recount the verification of our discovery by ourselves and others, research that occupied the years 1976 through 1978. In the final section I describe the period 1978–1985, in which the transition was made in experiment and theory to the modern phase of tau research. I have told much of this history in a paper given at the first Workshop on Tau Lepton Physics and so I have repeated here quite a bit of material from that paper. A beautiful description of the discovery of the tau was given recently by Gary Feldman. The discovery of the tau was the subject of a doctoral thesis by Jonathan Treitel at Stanford University.
Before the tau: 1965–1974
The e-μ problem
The history of the discovery of the tau lepton begins in the late 1960s, when my colleagues and I and other experimenters worked on the problem, “How does the muon differ from the electron?” In fact, that was the title of a paper I wrote for Physics Today in 1971.
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- Information
- The Rise of the Standard ModelA History of Particle Physics from 1964 to 1979, pp. 79 - 100Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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