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Physicists Find Tiny Particle With No Charge, Very Low Mass And Sub-nanosecond Lifetime
ScienceDaily ^ | December 7, 2006

Posted on 12/07/2006 6:00:02 PM PST by annie laurie

After decades of intensive effort by both experimental and theoretical physicists worldwide, a tiny particle with no charge, a very low mass and a lifetime much shorter than a nanosecond, dubbed the "axion," has now been detected by the University at Buffalo physicist who first suggested its existence in a little-read paper as early as 1974.

The finding caps nearly three decades of research both by Piyare Jain, Ph.D., UB professor emeritus in the Department of Physics and lead investigator on the research, who works independently -- an anomaly in the field -- and by large groups of well-funded physicists who have, for three decades, unsuccessfully sought the recreation and detection of axions in the laboratory, using high-energy particle accelerators.

The paper, posted online in the British Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physics, will be published in the January 2007 issue.

Results first were presented during a two-day symposium held in October at UB that celebrated Jain's 50-year career in the physics department in the College of Arts and Sciences.

During that symposium, the world-renowned and Nobel Prize-winning scientists in attendance expressed astonishment and delight that the axion finally might have been found.

The axion has been seen as critical to the Standard Model of Physics and is believed to be a component of much of the dark matter in the universe.

"These results show that we have detected axions, part of a family of particles that likely also includes the very heavy Higgs-Boson particle, which at present is being sought after at different laboratories," said Jain.

The story of the search for the axion particle in high-energy physics -- not to be confused with the search by cosmologists and astrophysicists for axions produced by the sun -- reads almost like a novel, with veritable armies of physicists committing many years of research and passion to its discovery starting in the 1970s.

In 1977, theoretical physicists predicted that there should exist a particle with characteristics very similar to those described in Jain's papers; in that publication, the term "axion" was coined. After that theoretical work, there was a mushrooming of papers from both theoretical and experimental physicists all chasing the axion using low-, medium- and high-energy accelerator beams from different laboratories worldwide.

But when it proved to be too elusive, many in the physics community then abandoned the search in the 1990s, based on puzzling evidence that perhaps this tantalizing particle didn't exist after all. Some groups flatly denied its existence and began referring to it as a "phantom."

Jain's initial interest in the elusive particles originated with work he began publishing in 1974 in Physical Review Letters and other journals that demonstrated evidence for particles with very low mass and very short lifetimes during particle accelerator experiments he conducted at Fermilab and Brookhaven National Laboratory.

At the time, Jain's papers elicited little interest from other physicists.

"This particle was there in my original paper in 1974," he said. "The experiment gave a hint that these particles existed but did not generate sufficient statistics to prove it. I knew I had to wait until a heavy ion beam at very high energy was available at a new accelerator."

As recently as 1999, a project called the CERES experiment at CERN in Geneva again focused on attempting to detect the axion, but that project also was unsuccessful.

The problem, according to Jain, was with their detector, which was electronic, the standard used in high-energy physics experiments today.

"They didn't know how to handle the detector for short-lived particles," Jain said. "I knew that for this very short-lived particle -- 10 to the power minus 13 seconds -- the detector must be placed very near the interaction point where the collision between the projectile beam and the target takes place so that the produced particle doesn't run away too far; if it does, it will decay quickly and it will be completely missed. That is what happened in most of the unsuccessful experiments."

Instead, Jain used a visual detector, made of three-dimensional photographic emulsions, which act as both target and detector and that therefore can detect very short-lived particles, such as the axion. However, use of such a detector is so specialized that to be successful, it requires intensive training and experience.

In the 1950s, Jain was trained to use this type of detector by its developer, the Nobel laureate, British physicist Cecil F. Powell. Jain has used it throughout his career to successfully detect other exotic phenomena, such as the charm particle, the anomalon, the quark-gluon plasma and the nuclear collective flow. In Jain's successful experiment, the axions were produced under extreme conditions of high temperature and high pressure, using a heavy ion lead beam with a total energy of 25 trillion electron volts at CERN in Geneva.

His experiments generated 1,220 electron pairs with identified vertices, the origin of each pair. They peaked at a distance of just 200-300 microns from the interaction point where the collisions take place in the emulsion.

"Only at that very short distance did I find the peak signal of this very-low-mass, short-lived particle with a neutral charge," he said.

After they are produced, axions rapidly decay into two electron pairs, the electron and the positron, he explained.

"We identified each vertex for each electron pair and we would not accept any electron pair unless we knew its vertex," he said. "There was a congestion of all kinds of low mass particles, including axions, near the detector. The background has to be filtered out from this congestion in order to obtain the signal of the axion."

Jain's co-author on the paper is Gurmukh Singh, then a post-doctoral researcher at UB and now a visiting assistant professor in the Department of Computer and Information Sciences at the State University of New York at Fredonia.

During Jain's long and illustrious career at UB, he published 175 scientific papers on a wide variety of physics topics, ranging from cosmic ray research performed on balloon flights to National Institutes of Health-funded studies on bone tissue to find more effective cancer therapies.

"After half a century as a scientist at UB, I find that with the discovery of this axion, my mission is complete," he concluded.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: axion; buffalo; darkmatter; higgsboson; particle; physics; science; universityatbuffalo
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To: SteveMcKing
There are times at Slashdot when I consider DU more credible.
21 posted on 12/07/2006 6:24:05 PM PST by Psycho_Bunny
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To: annie laurie

Ummmm...Paris Hilton's brain?


22 posted on 12/07/2006 6:26:29 PM PST by Carl LaFong ("We must protect our phoney-boloney jobs, gentlemen"- Congress - (by way of Governor Le Petomane))
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To: annie laurie

Where did they find it, what does it do and why do I get this sick feeling that my tax dollars are being spent on this somehow?


23 posted on 12/07/2006 6:26:35 PM PST by Montana4Jesus
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To: saganite

Now this is no time to be making fun of Bob Dole and those Viagra commercials.


24 posted on 12/07/2006 6:31:04 PM PST by WestVirginiaRebel (Common sense will do to liberalism what the atomic bomb did to Nagasaki-Rush Limbaugh)
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To: Physicist
Ping

What say you? Potential confirmation, or artifact of the experimental technique?

25 posted on 12/07/2006 6:32:42 PM PST by Charles H. (The_r0nin) (Hwæt! Lãr biþ mæst hord, soþlïce!)
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To: annie laurie
The only particle named after a detergent. Really.
26 posted on 12/07/2006 6:40:21 PM PST by TChad
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To: Charles H. (The_r0nin)

Sometimes when I read these articles, I suspect much of what we call modern physics may be an 'artifact of the experimental technique'. My high school course in Physics was the one subject I most enjoyed ( All A+'s ), but within a few years afterwards, almost all I had learned proved to be inoperative.


27 posted on 12/07/2006 6:44:06 PM PST by gb63
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To: annie laurie
Speculation on this 'particle's characteristics are varied. The source article for this thread gives no information. Here's a link to a generally credible source that speculates on potential uses for this 'axion'. If it exists.http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19225794.900-darkmatter-particles-could-xray-the-sun.html
28 posted on 12/07/2006 6:44:27 PM PST by kinoxi
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To: annie laurie

It's Pelosi's Brain!!!!


29 posted on 12/07/2006 6:45:51 PM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: Carl LaFong
Brittneys underwear? IQ? Talent? Self respect?

Harumphf!!!!

30 posted on 12/07/2006 6:46:56 PM PST by rawcatslyentist (When true genius appears, know him by this sign: all the dunces are in a confederacy against him.)
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To: annie laurie
"axion"

Wasn't that a laundry detergent?

If it's of minute mass, has no significance, and a brief lifespan, why didn't they call it the "algoron"?

31 posted on 12/07/2006 6:50:22 PM PST by IronJack (=)
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To: kinoxi

Thanks for the link!


32 posted on 12/07/2006 6:50:44 PM PST by annie laurie (All that is gold does not glitter, not all those who wander are lost)
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To: SteveMcKing

Slashdot has this covered.

Their consensus is that it's seriously flawed, and that the whole thing is wrong.




And they would be seriously correct. This is an artifact, pure and simple and someone desperate to publish got their pituitary producing testosterone instead of adrenaline in place of common sense. In my not so humble opinion.


33 posted on 12/07/2006 6:52:53 PM PST by harrowup (Eyes had a NassCAR wuntz; bettern' ma first; but not da bestest.)
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To: kinoxi
New Scientist "generally credible"? Depends on the meaning of "generally," I guess.

Over the last couple of years its drift to the left has sped up to a swivel, and reading its articles now means picking your way through a minefield of international socialist assumptions.

34 posted on 12/07/2006 6:53:33 PM PST by Tenniel (The First Amendment: Freedom OF religion, not freedom FROM religion.)
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To: annie laurie

"The axion...and is believed to be a component of much of the dark matter in the universe."

They should have picked a better name!

Evil Nanonewts?


35 posted on 12/07/2006 6:55:58 PM PST by Domestic Church (AMDG...)
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To: Tenniel

It's still generally credible when taken in the aggregate IMO.


36 posted on 12/07/2006 6:57:30 PM PST by kinoxi
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To: annie laurie

The axion's lifespan is less than a nanosecond and these physicists are concerned about its recreation? They are too kind-hearted.


37 posted on 12/07/2006 7:06:43 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: annie laurie
Physicists Find Tiny Particle With No Charge, Very Low Mass And Sub-nanosecond Lifetime

They discovered a freshman!

38 posted on 12/07/2006 7:07:37 PM PST by AmishDude (I coined "Senator Ass" to describe Jim Webb. He may have already used it as a character in a novel.)
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To: annie laurie
a tiny particle with no charge, a very low mass and a lifetime much shorter than a nanosecond

They should have called it "McCain for President, 2008"

39 posted on 12/07/2006 7:07:51 PM PST by ElkGroveDan ( What does it profit a man to gain the whole world but lose his own soul?)
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To: SteveMcKing
Their consensus is that it's seriously flawed, and that the whole thing is wrong.

by large groups of well-funded physicists who have, for three decades, unsuccessfully sought the recreation and detection of axions in the laboratory, using high-energy particle accelerators.

Lovely. I think it's great to pay for "scientists" who don't know what the hell they're doing.

40 posted on 12/07/2006 7:10:31 PM PST by AmishDude (I coined "Senator Ass" to describe Jim Webb. He may have already used it as a character in a novel.)
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