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Courtesy of Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
With the Stanford accelerator, physicists create particles, watch them as they decay and then look for exotica.

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Demolition Derby of Physics Jars Loose Clues on Subatomic Glue


Published: December 30, 2003

(Page 2 of 2)

In an episode that has become almost nonexistent among latter-day particle collaborations, usually consisting of hundreds of physicists working in antlike synchrony, that challenge began this year when a single scientist noticed something odd in the data flowing from BaBar.

Like many experiments now, when physicists have no hope of passing the high-energy frontier in collisions, BaBar uses a different strategy: creating vast numbers of particles that are closely monitored when they decay into other products, with an eye to measuring their properties precisely and finding exotica.

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Scientists like to call this the luminosity frontier, said Dr. Stephen L. Olsen, a physicist at the University of Hawaii, drawing an analogy between intense particle beams and bright light beams. BaBar, for example, has created some 150 million B-meson pairs, particles made of a bottom quark and an up or down one.

In January, Dr. Antimo Palano, a collaborator on the experiment from Bari University in Italy, was checking a decay process and saw a small bump in the data sample. He added more data, and the signal kept getting bigger. The announcement of a new particle was made by the collaboration in April.

"I was looking for something new in the data, and I was lucky to see it," Dr. Palano said in a telephone interview from his office in Italy.

But what was the particle? Dr. Palano and some colleagues believe that it was a long-sought type of D-meson that contains a charm quark and a strange quark. In fact, Dr. Estia Eichten, a theorist at Fermilab, said he and others had predicted an incorrect mass for the particle - a reason no one had found it before.

If that interpretation turns out to be right, it will shed light on the workings of the strong force, Dr. Eichten said: his faulty calculations assumed that the two quarks whirled around each other like the proton and electron of a hydrogen atom. Improved calculations suggest the mesons are tethered as if by a rubber band, with one of the quarks behaving as if it were nearly massless.

But other physicists, like Dr. Close of Oxford, suggested that the particle's surprising mass could be explained more easily if it were a kind of molecule of two other mesons, whirling about each other and exchanging still other particles that help them stick together.

Dr. Close said that debate remained unresolved. But by July, the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in Newport News, Va., had presented data that might have clinched the case that agglomerations of five quarks had been seen: two up, two down, and one strange quark swirling about in a confraternity that had never been seen before.

"At the present moment," said Dr. Lawrence Cardman, an associate director at the accelerator, "there is to the best of my knowledge no model that explains all of the data."

In one view, the up quarks bind relatively tightly to the down quarks, with the strange quark standing alone, and the whole contraption tumbles about like a three-atom molecule. Another says a vibrating, rotating clump forms, consisting of a two-quark and a three-quark nugget.

Finally, in the paper in tomorrow's issue of Physical Review Letters, a collaboration at KEK says that it has come up with another startling find, which it calls X(3872). A number of theorists believe the particle is a kind of charmonium - the term for a pair of charm quarks orbiting each other. Some scientists, including Dr. Olsen, the collaboration's spokesman, believe they have turned up another quark molecule.

This time, the molecule would contain a pair of mesons, each consisting of a charm quark and an up quark. Somehow the whole seemingly fragile collection would be sticking together long enough to be detected. Even with those questions, Dr. Olsen said, "we're really leaning toward this molecular point of view."

Add it all up, and it has been a hot time for those who study the strong force, said Dr. Close, who added that scientists had moved nearer to understanding the mysterious glue of the atomic nucleus.


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