January 23, 2004
Troy, N.Y. — An international team of physicists has
provided the best evidence to date of the existence of a new
form of atomic matter, dubbed the "pentaquark." The research
team confirmed the existence of pentaquarks by using a
different approach that greatly increased the rate of detection
compared to previous experiments. The results are published as
the cover story in today's issue of the journal Physical Review
Letters.
"The latest, and most conclusive evidence of this five-quark
particle - the 'pentaquark' - could bring immense insight in
understanding the laws and structure of universal matter in its
most fundamental form," said lead author Valery Kubarovsky, a
Research Scientist at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy,
N.Y.
The research was carried out at the U.S. Department of
Energy's Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
(Jefferson Lab) by the CLAS (CEBEF Large Acceptance
Spectrometer) collaboration, which consists of physicists from
universities and laboratories in seven nations.
Nearly all matter on Earth is held in the nuclei of atoms. An
atomic nucleus is composed of protons and neutrons, with the
number of protons determining the chemical element. In the last
four decades, physicists have discovered that these subatomic
particles are composed of even smaller particles, called
quarks, which are held together by a strong nuclear force
called "glue." Each proton and neutron is composed of three
quarks, for example.
For years, scientists have predicted that five-quark particles
also could exist under unusual conditions. Yet, no proof
surfaced until late 2002 when a Japanese team announced its
discovery of the pentaquark in particle-smashing experiments.
When the researchers zapped carbon atoms with high-energy gamma
rays, they observed that, after gamma ray photons "crashed"
into the neutrons, a few neutrons "grew" into five-quark
particles. The Jefferson Lab team then corroborated this
finding using a deuteron target.
The team announced the initial discovery of a pentaquark on a
proton target at an international physics conference in New
York City in May 2003. The findings were soon corroborated by
researchers at Bonn University in Germany. Kubarovsky presented
the CLAS team's results at the first conference on pentaquarks,
hosted by Jefferson Lab in November 2003.
Still, the results of subsequent experiments by researchers
globally have been mixed until now.
"Detection is difficult because we are unable to ‘see' the
pentaquark itself, which lives less than one hundredth of a
billionth of a billionth of a second, before decaying into two
separate particles," said Paul Stoler, Rensselaer physics
professor and chair of the Jefferson Lab Users Board of
Directors. "But even the two-particle, tell-tale sign is
difficult to detect because of the many irrelevant reactions,
or 'debris,' that also occur in the same experiments."
To limit the debris, CLAS team members searched for a simpler
mode of production. Since they could not isolate a single
neutron - stable neutrons cannot exist freely - they turned to
the single proton as a target.
One proton makes up the entire nucleus of the simplest element
known in the universe: hydrogen. In the experiment, the
Jefferson Lab team liquefied the hydrogen at a temperature that
reached a few degrees above absolute zero before zapping the
element with gamma rays.
"Shifting our focus from neutrons to protons dramatically
altered our results," Kubarovsky said. "We strongly increased
the previous success rates for detecting pentaquarks."
According to CLAS researchers, further experimentation is
needed to increase the pentaquark detection rate per particle
explosion, to better understand the details of how the
pentaquark is produced, and its internal characteristics.
Several follow-up experiments will be conducted at Jefferson
Lab within the next year.
"Consider that, out of several billion collisions, scientists
have found a few dozen pentaquarks. We need to find at least a
thousand events that result in the creation of pentaquarks to
have more valuable information on the nature of this new state
of matter," Kubarovsky says. "Right now we have a sample of
about 45, which is the most significant in the world."
Contact: Jodi Ackerman
Phone: (518) 276-6531
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