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New quarktet: subatomic oddity hints at pentaparticle family.


Physicists at a European particle accelerator particle accelerator, apparatus used in nuclear physics to produce beams of energetic charged particles and to direct them against various targets. Such machines, popularly called atom smashers, are needed to observe objects as small as the atomic nucleus in studies  say they've spotted a never-before-seen elementary particle composed of five of the fundamental constituents known as quarks and antiquarks. In contrast, protons and neutrons contain three quarks, and no particle is known to have four quarks. The new report marks only the second sighting ever of a five-quark particle, the first one having been found last summer by three independent groups working in the United States, Japan, and Russia (SN: 7/5/03, p. 3).

The detection of this second so-called pentaquark bolsters me theoretical hunch that a family of five-quark particles exists, says Gunther M. Roland of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business,  (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology ), a member of the team that spotted the newest particle. Physicists expect others in the new particle family, like these initial two members, to consist of four quarks and one antiquark an·ti·quark  
n.
The antiparticle of a quark.



antiquark  

The antiparticle that corresponds to a quark.

Noun 1.
.

"This is really the beginning of a new era," Roland says. "I think this will lead to a big program to find further [pentaquarks] and to understand their properties in detail."

"It's all very exciting," says theorist Harry J. Lipkin of the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel, who is not associated with the team making the claim.

Evidence for about 40 of the new particles turned up in an analysis of millions of proton-proton collisions from 2000 and 2001 at the Super Proton Synchrotron The Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) is a particle accelerator at CERN. Originally specified as a 300 GeV proton machine, the SPS was actually built to be capable of 400GeV, an operating energy it achieved on the official commissioning date of 17 June 1976.  accelerator at the European Organization for Nuclear Research European Organization for Nuclear Research: see CERN.  (CERN CERN or European Organization for Nuclear Research, nuclear and particle physics research center straddling the French-Swiss border W of Geneva, Switzerland. ) near Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
. The experiment has yet to be replicated.

On Oct. 8, the CERN team posted a report about the new pentaquark on ArXiv, an Internet site where many physics results appear initially (www.arXiv.org/abs/hep-ex/0310014).

The discovery of a new family of quark-containing particles may help physicists fill in blanks in their understanding of quark interactions, says theorist Frank Wilczek of MIT. For one thing, it could end what had been a puzzling absence of evidence for particles with groupings containing more than three quarks or antiquarks, which theorists for decades have been expecting to show up in accelerators.

Larger groupings of quarks and antiquarks may have existed in the early universe and may persist today in extremely dense stars, says theorist Marek Karliner of Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv University (TAU, אוניברסיטת תל־אביב, את"א) is Israel's largest on-site university. . Like recently discovered extrasolar planets that reveal new planetary configurations to astronomers (SN: 3/15/03, p. 164), pentaquarks are alerting physicists to possible new sub-atomic arrangements, he adds.

Some theorists, including Karliner, Lipkin, and Wilczek, propose that pentaquarks may involve two-quark subgroups known as diquarks. These are quark-quark or antiquark-antiquark pairs that have seemed to play only bit roles in quark interactions, Wilczek says. Others theorize the·o·rize  
v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es

v.intr.
To formulate theories or a theory; speculate.

v.tr.
To propose a theory about.
 that the new findings rule out such arrangements.

"Do not believe any theoretical model at this stage," says Lipkin.

What's most important about the CERN evidence for now, says Karliner, is that it puts to rest gnawing doubts about the initial pentaquark sighting last summer.

"There were slight discrepancies between the experiments [that identified the first pentaquark], and people were worried that something was wrong," Karliner recalls. "Having discovered another member of this exotic family is very reassuring."

QUOTE

"Having discovered another member of this exotic family is very reassuring."

MAREK KARLINER

Tel Aviv University
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Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Date:Oct 18, 2003
Words:528
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