Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Heavy relative of the neutron discovered
21 July 2011 [19:11] - Today.Az
Scientists of the CDF collaboration at the Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory announced the observation of a new particle, the neutral Xi-sub-b (Ξb0). This particle contains three quarks: a strange quark, an up quark and a bottom quark (s-u-b). While its existence was predicted by the Standard Model, the observation of the neutral Xi-sub-b is significant because it strengthens our understanding of how quarks form matter.
Fermilab physicist Pat Lukens, a member of the CDF collaboration, presented the discovery at Fermilab on July 20, 2011.
The neutral Xi-sub-b is the latest entry in the periodic table of
baryons. Baryons are particles formed of three quarks, the most common
examples being the proton (two up quarks and a down quark) and the
neutron (two down quarks and an up quark). The neutral Xi-sub-b belongs
to the family of bottom baryons, which are about six times heavier than
the proton and neutron because they all contain a heavy bottom quark.
The particles are produced only in high-energy collisions, and are rare
and very difficult to observe.
Although Fermilab's Tevatron particle collider is not a dedicated
bottom quark factory, sophisticated particle detectors and trillions of
proton-antiproton collisions have made it a haven for discovering and
studying almost all of the known bottom baryons. Experiments at the
Tevatron discovered the Sigma-sub-b baryons (Σb and Σb*) in 2006, observed the Xi-b-minus baryon (Ξb-) in 2007, and found the Omega-sub-b (Ωb-) in 2009. The lightest bottom baryon, the Lambda-sub-b (Λb),
was discovered at CERN. Measuring the properties of all these particles
allows scientists to test and improve models of how quarks interact at
close distances via the strong nuclear force, as explained by the theory
of quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Scientists at Fermilab and other DOE
national laboratories use powerful computers to simulate quark
interactions and understand the properties of particles composed of
quarks.
Once produced, the neutral Xi-sub-b travels a fraction of a
millimeter before it decays into lighter particles. These particles then
decay again into even lighter particles. Physicists rely on the details
of this series of decays to identify the initial particle. The complex
decay pattern of the neutral Xi-sub-b has made the observation of this
particle significantly more challenging than that of its charged sibling
(Ξb-). Combing through almost 500 trillion
proton-antiproton collisions produced by Fermilab's Tevatron particle
collider, the CDF collaboration isolated 25 examples in which the
particles emerging from a collision revealed the distinctive signature
of the neutral Xi-sub-b. The analysis established the discovery at a
level of 7 sigma. Scientists consider 5 sigma the threshold for
discoveries.
CDF also re-observed the already known charged version of the neutral
Xi-sub-b in a never before observed decay, which served as an
independent cross-check of the analysis. The newly analyzed data samples
offer possibilities for further discoveries.
The CDF collaboration submitted a paper that summarizes the details of its Xi-sub-b discovery to the journal Physical Review Letters. It will be available on the arXiv preprint server on July 20, 2011.
CDF is an international experiment of about 500 physicists from 58
institutions in 15 countries. It is supported by the U.S. Department of
Energy, the National Science Foundation and a number of international
funding agencies.
Fermilab is a national laboratory funded by the Office of Science of
the U.S. Department of Energy, operated under contract by Fermi Research
Alliance, LLC. /Science Daily/
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