Posted on 03/13/2009 9:49:17 PM PDT by neverdem
Same techniques could be used to detect theoretical particles like the Higgs boson
Physicists have identified the production of the elusive single top quark, two research teams report.
Previously top quarks have been observed only when produced in pairs, as when they were initially discovered 14 years ago at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Ill. Now, researchers using Fermilabs two detectors announced March 9 that they have detected single top quarks. The techniques used to find the singleton quarks could help to identify other rare particles, such as the Higgs boson, the scientists say.
What a discovery, comments Nobel laureate David Gross of the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. These researchers should be congratulated.
Quarks are fundamental particles of matter that come in six varieties known as flavors. Ordinary matter consists mostly of two quark flavors, the up and down quarks that make up protons and neutrons. Other quarks are found in exotic subatomic particles or are created in high-energy collisions in particle accelerators. The top quark was the last flavor to be discovered experimentally, in 1995.
Since that time, the two groups at Fermilab, using the CDF and the DZero detectors, have combed through data from billions upon billions of particle collisions, looking for the unique features that would signal a single top quark.
But only about one in every 20 billion collisions produces a single top quark, and that weak signal easily gets lost in the background of other particle debris. Pairs of top quarks have a more distinctive signature than singles, and so are easier to distinguish, explains physicist Darien Wood, a spokesman for the DZero group.
The two groups had slightly different methods of analyzing the data, which allowed for healthy competition, says physicist Robert Roser, a...
(Excerpt) Read more at sciencenews.org ...
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Cheers!
I wonder if this science will ever produce something really useful?
Thanks for the ping!
You always play better when you know the rules of the game.
Actually, particle physics has been useful in developing very small, fast processors that will soon find their way into things like cell phones.
Look at the technological world around you. It was all made possible by scientific discoveries.
Some discoveries are more useful than others.
I’m not saying that these won’t be useful.
I’m just saying I wonder what they will be if anything.
“You always play better when you know the rules of the game.”
That is very true.
A lighter Higgs makes particle hunt harder
FReepmail me if you want on or off my health and science ping list.
Galileo wondered the same thing.
· Google ·
Science without results does seem to be an exercise in federal funding for the sake of federal funding. Salk is a hero, he saved countless lives. There guys - oy!
Of course, then, the next question I ask them is, "could you have predicted that throwing particles at gold foil could teach us how to change the world in this way?" Obviously, no. We do not have any idea how BASIC RESEARCH like this Top Quark research can create future discoveries and thought. It may be minimal, but history has given us to realize that the outcome could extend far beyond our strangest dreams!
I hope I live long enough to find out!
Im still working on gravitational pull
It is my belief based on the history of science and technology, that it takes a minimum of two full generations in order to bring a major scientific discovery to fruition. I don’t expect to see the result of the current High Energy physics and Cosmology research - but I’m excited about seeing it progress nonetheless.
What I WOULD like to see before I die, and still believe we COULD if someone had the balls to actually pursue it singlemindedly for more than ten years, is WORKING FUSION POWER GENERATORS. Gaack! We’ve been so bad at focusing on that incredibly powerful concept. ... I better not get started on this side track or I’ll write a chapter of a book in this thread!
If I were a zillionaire I'd spend most of it pursuing space. If man is going to survive long term we have to get off this rock.
Now back to reality...
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