Physicists get B in antimatter studies.As theorists see it, the universe exploded into being billions of years ago with equal parts matter and antimatter antimatter: see antiparticle. antimatter Substance composed of elementary particles having the mass and electric charge of ordinary matter (such as electrons and protons) but for which the charge and related magnetic properties are opposite in sign. . Yet aside from traces produced in laboratories and detected in the atmosphere and space, nearly no antimatter exists now. Physicists at particle accelerators in California and Japan have now taken a step closer to understanding that puzzling absence. New data from those accelerators, combined with older American results, raise to two the number of elementary particle types in which matter and antimatter have been observed to breakdown in different ways, scientists say. Physicists discovered nearly 40 years ago that matter and antimatter versions of so-called K mesons This is a list of mesons; it is not comprehensive.this is a stub Particle Symbol Anti- particle Quark Makeup Spin and parity Rest mass MeV/c² S C B Mean lifetime s Principal decays Notes Charged Pion decay slightly differently, a disparity called charge-parity, or CP, violation (SN: 3/6/99, p. 148). In the first moments of the universe, CP violation would have let matter survive at the expense of antimatter. Two years ago, a team at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), physical science research center located near Batavia, Ill., est. 1968 as the National Accelerator Laboratory, renamed 1974 in honor of Enrico Fermi. It was built on the site of the former village of Weston. (Fermilab) in Batavia, Ill., released results hinting that CP violation also occurs among particles called B mesons (SN: 2/20/99, p. 118). Since then, independent teams at the Stanford (Calif.) Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC SLAC Stanford Linear Accelerator Center SLAC Student Labor Action Coalition SLAC Scapholunate Advanced Collapse (wrist disorder) SLAC Salt Lake Acting Company (Utah) SLAC Student Learning Assistance Center ) and at the KEK See CEC. High Energy Accelerator Research Organization in Tsukuba, Japan, have been colliding tens of millions of electrons and their antimatter counterparts, positrons, looking for firm evidence of B meson meson (mē`zŏn) [Gr.,=middle (i.e., middleweight)], class of elementary particles whose masses are generally between those of the lepton class of lighter particles and those of the baryon class of heavier particles. CP violation (SN: 5/29/99, p. 342). That evidence may now be in hand. This month, both groups released their latest figures for a parameter called sin 2[beta] or sin2[phi][sub]1. It would equal 0 if there were no CP violation among B mesons. The California team reports that sin2[beta] is .34 [+ or -] .20, whereas the team in Japan finds 0.58 [+ or -].33. Averaging those results with Fermilab's, scientists come up with a value of .49 [+ or -].16. "It appears that we have established now that there is CP violation in the B meson system," says David G. Hitlin of the California Institute of Technology California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena, Calif.; originally for men, became coeducational in 1970; founded 1891 as Throop Polytechnic Institute; called Throop College of Technology, 1913–20. in Pasadena, a SLAC team leader. If upheld, that conclusion would bolster scientists' hunch that CP violation is key to antimatter-matter disparity. --P.W. |
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