|    Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Fermi National  Accelerator Laboratory will announce on Friday, June 18 the observation of an  unexpected new member of a family of subatomic particles called “heavy-light”  mesons. The new meson, a combination of a strange quark and a charm  antiquark, is the heaviest ever observed in this family, and it behaves in  surprising ways -- it apparently breaks the rules on decaying into other  particles.   As a rule, the more massive the meson, the shorter its  lifetime before decaying into other particles. But not this time. This heavy  meson lives three times longer than its lighter relatives.    “Strong decays follow the rule that the heavier the particle,  the faster it falls apart, all other things being equal,” said Carnegie  Mellon University physicist and SELEX spokesman James Russ. “It’s that last  part-all other things being equal-that makes the new particle so  interesting.”   SELEX deputy cospokesperson Peter Cooper of Fermilab said  this kind of contradiction is “just not supposed to happen. If this meson  played by the normal rules of the strong interaction,” Cooper said, “it  should fall apart quickly and we never would have seen it.”   In another contradiction, SELEX also saw the new meson  decay about six times more often than expected into an eta particle (a rarer  but well-studied member of the meson family), rather than into the expected  particle, called a K meson.    “It’s like watching a water bucket with a large hole and  small hole in the bottom,” Russ said. “For some reason, the water is pouring  out the small hole six times faster than it's coming out of the large one.  Something unusual must be going on inside the bucket.”   This first observation of the new meson expands the  picture of the ways in which the strong force works within the atomic  nucleus. The same strong force that keeps the nuclei of atoms from flying  apart also controls the decay rates of particles. Why does the new meson  break the highly predictable decay pattern of other mesons? How many other  patterns might there be?    Mesons tend to be a short-lived tribe. Their lifetimes are  so short that they show themselves as a range of masses-what particle  physicists call the particle’s “width”. This unusual effect -- a particle’s  mass being uncertain because it lives a very short time -- is a direct result  of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. It is a vivid demonstration that  these particles live in a quantum world. The meson lifetime is 10-24  seconds, or about the amount of time it takes light to cross a proton. By  comparison, light travels one foot in a billionth of a second.    A meson is made up of a quark and an antiquark, bound  together by the strong force. The combination of a massive quark, like the  charm quark, with a light quark (in this case, a strange quark) presents an  especially interesting laboratory in which to study the strong force. In  heavy-light mesons, the motion of the quarks is simpler than in other mesons  -- the heavy quark sits still and physicists only have to keep track of the  motion of the lighter quark completing the system.    “This new particle is showing a possible deviation from  the expected path that most mesons take,” Fermilab theorist Christopher Hill  confirmed. “It suggests that some intriguing new dynamical aspect of the  strong force is at work, and it opens the door for many future explorations,  at Fermilab and around the world.”   The discovery by the members of the SELEX collaboration  uses data from their fixed-target experiment at Fermilab’s Tevatron, the  world’s highest-energy particle accelerator. SELEX studies the results of  protons colliding with solid targets of copper and diamond. While the SELEX  experiment stopped taking data in 1997, an extended analysis revealed this  new particle lurking within their data.    In the spring of 2003, experiments at three  electron-positron colliders -- BABAR at Stanford (Cal.) Linear Accelerator  Center, CLEO at Cornell University in New York, and BELLE at KEK in Tsukuba, Japan  -- announced the discovery of a new pair of charm-strange mesons. While these  mesons had been predicted theoretically, their properties didn't match  theory. They had such low masses that they could not decay in the preferred  way, so they had long lifetimes.    Following the 2003 announcements, SELEX began to reexamine  its own results to seek out more eta particles and determine whether they  existed in more interesting combinations. But before any results could be  deemed conclusive, the collaboration had to prove that it understood the  unique photon detector well enough to vouch for that type of data. Several  Russian collaborators within SELEX conducted painstaking tests of the  detector, which they had built; their answer was “yes.”   The SELEX discovery adds yet another contradiction to the  conventional predictions of meson behaviour. The known symmetries of  heavy-light mesons predict that other active experiments, such as BABAR, CLEO  and BELLE, as well as Fermilab’s FOCUS experiment, will be able to see this  particle and various partner particles in their data, expanding even further  our picture of the strong force, and building on the SELEX result.    The collaboration has submitted a paper describing the  result –“First Observation of a Narrow Charm-Strange Meson DsJ+(2632)->Ds(eta)+  and D0K+” -- to Physical Review Letters. The  result is being presented on Friday, June 18 in a seminar at Fermilab by  physicist Anatoly Evdokimov of the Institute of Theoretical and Experimental  Physics, Moscow, Russia.    A relatively small experiment by the standards of particle  physics, SELEX is made up of about 125 physicists from 21 institutions around  the world. Included are six institutions in the U.S., four in Russia, three  in South America, two in Italy, and one each in Turkey, Germany, Mexico, the  United Kingdom, Israel and the Peoples Republic of China.    |