Rare Subatomic Process Observed For The First Time by LHC Scientists
Hello
reader!
It
follows an article published today (06/10) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Rare Subatomic Process was first observed by the LHC
scientists with Brazilian contribution.
Duda
Falcão
NEWS
Rare
Subatomic Process Observed
For The First Time by LHC Scientists
By Elton
Alisson
June 10,
2015
(Image:
CERN)
Data analyzed by CMS and LHCb collaborations show B meson
decay that has never been seen before. Three Brazilian research
groups participated in the research, published by Nature.
|
Agência FAPESP – In an article published by the journal Natureresearchers from the CMS and LHCb collaborations
at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Switzerland announced the first
observation of a very rare subatomic process. CERN is the European Organization
for Nuclear Research, the world's largest particle physics laboratory.
Analyzing the combined results of two experiments,
they found that the Bs0 meson decays (that is, spontaneously
transforms) into two muons. The Standard Model predicts that this rare process
happens a few times in a billion decays, but it has never been seen before.
A muon is an ultraenergetic atomic particle. The Bs0 meson and its cousin the B0 are
elementary unstable subatomic particles that are only produced in high-energy
collisions such as those that occur in particle accelerators like the LHC or
that occur in nature, for example, in cosmic-ray interactions.
Three groups of Brazilian researchers contributed to
the study. They are affiliated with the São Paulo Research and Analysis Center (SPRACe)
at São Paulo State University (UNESP) and the Federal University of the ABC
(UFABC), supported by FAPESP; the Brazilian Physics Research Center (CBPF); and
the Rio de Janeiro State University (UERJ). The SPRACe group participates in
the CMS collaboration.
“Precise observation of rare decays, such as those of
B mesons, is a complementary strategy to test the possibility of new physics
beyond the Standard Model,” said Sérgio Novaes, a full professor at UNESP and
principal investigator at SPRACe.
Novaes told Agência FAPESP that
the Standard Model of particle physics, which explains how the fundamental
particles that make up all known matter in the universe interact through
strong, weak, and electromagnetic forces, predicts a very low probability of B
mesons decaying into muons: approximately four times for every 1 billion Bs0 mesons
produced and once for every 10 billion B0 mesons.
The existence of a difference between the predicted
probabilities of decay and the experimental observations of these mesons could
open a window to theories beyond the Standard Model, including supersymmetry,
which posits that for each fermion (quark, electron, or neutrino) there is a
corresponding boson, such as the Higgs boson that was found by researchers at
the LHC in 2012.
The experiments performed by the CMS and LHCb
collaborations, in which protons collided at high energy to create 1 trillion B
mesons, confirmed the Standard Model’s predictions with a high level of
precision.
“The combined results of the observations performed by
the CMS and LHCb collaborations match the predictions of the Standard Model and
help to eliminate or constrain a number of theories that predict higher rates
of B meson decay than those observed,” Novaes said.
Joint Analysis
The two collaborations produced their data in 2011-12
and first released results for B meson decay individually in July 2013.
According to Novaes, while the individual results were
in agreement, both were just below the 5 sigma statistical precision
historically needed to claim an observation in particle physics.
“Five standard deviations, or 5 sigma, means 99.9994%
confidence that the measurement is correct and a 1 in 1.75 million chance that
it’s a random fluctuation,” he said.
The combined analysis of the data obtained by both
collaborations, taking correlations and uncertainties into account, easily
exceeded this statistical precision requirement, reaching 6.2 sigma.
According to the article published in Nature, “both
measurements are statistically compatible with Standard Model predictions and
allow stringent constraints to be placed on theories beyond the Standard
Model”.
“Precision measurements of electroweak effects are an
indirect and complementary way to obtain limits that predict new heavy
particles,” Novaes said.
The CMS and LHCb collaborations collected data at
between 7 and 8 teraelectronvolts (TeV) center-of-mass energy.
The LHC experiments will resume collecting data in the
coming weeks, recording collisions at 13 TeV with more intense proton beams,
doubling the production of Bs0 and B0 mesons and consequently making the
measurement of their decay rates even more precise.
According to researchers in the field, CERN will also
resume a direct search for new heavy particles that may be produced in the LHC
and for any signs of new phenomena that extend the Standard Model.
The article “Observation of the rare Bs0 →µ+µ− decay from the combined analysis
of CMS and LHCb data” (doi: 10.1038/nature14474) can be read at www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature14474.html.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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