|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
June
'Strange' physics experiment
is unraveling structure of proton
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
6/17/05
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
| University
of Illinois photo |
| Workers
install the 100,000 pound magnet for testing at the
University of Illinois prior to the G-Zero experiment
at Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
in Newport News, Va. |
|
|
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
– An international team of nuclear physicists has determined that
particles called strange quarks do, indeed, contribute to the ordinary
properties of the proton.
Quarks are subatomic particles that form the building blocks of atoms.
How quarks assemble into protons and neutrons, and what holds them together,
is not clearly understood. New experimental results are providing part
of the answer.
The experiment, called G-Zero, was performed at Thomas Jefferson National
Accelerator Facility in Newport News, Va. Designed to probe proton structure,
specifically the contribution of strange quarks, the experiment has
involved an international group of 108 scientists from 19 institutions.
Steve Williamson, a physicist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
is the experiment coordinator.
“The G-Zero experiment provided a much broader view of the small-scale
structure of the proton,” said Doug Beck, a physicist
at Illinois and spokesman for the experiment. “While our results
agree with hints from previous experiments, the new findings are significantly
more extensive and provide a much clearer picture.”
Beck will present the experimental results at a seminar at the Jefferson
facility Friday morning. Also on Friday, the researchers will submit
a paper describing the results to the journal Physical
Review Letters. The paper will be posted on the physics archive
(under “nuclear experiment”).
The centerpiece of the G-Zero experiment is a doughnut-shaped superconducting
magnet 14 feet in diameter that was designed and tested by physicists
at Illinois including Ron Laszewski, now retired. The 100,000-pound
magnet took three years to build.
In the experiment, an intense beam of polarized electrons was scattered
off liquid hydrogen targets located in the magnet’s core. Detectors,
mounted around the perimeter of the magnet, recorded the number and
position of the scattered particles. The researchers then used mathematical
models to retrace the particles’ paths to determine their momenta.
“There is a lot of energy inside a proton,” Beck said. “Some
of that energy can change back and forth into particles called strange
quarks.” Unlike the three quarks (two “up” and one
“down”) that are always present in a proton, strange quarks
can pop in and out of existence.
“Because of the equivalence of mass and energy, the energy fields
in the proton can sometimes manifest themselves as these ‘part-time’
quarks,” Beck said. “This is the first time we observed
strange quarks in this context, and it is the first time we measured
how often this energy manifested itself as particles under normal circumstances.”
The results are helping scientists better understand how one of the
pieces of the Standard Model is put together. The Standard Model unifies
three forces: electromagnetism, the weak nuclear interaction and the
strong nuclear interaction.
“The G-Zero experiment tells us more about the strong interaction
– how protons and neutrons are held together,” Beck said.
“However, we still have much to learn.”
The G-Zero experimental program is funded by the National Science Foundation,
the U.S. Department of Energy, the French National Center for Scientific
Research (CNRS) and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
(NSERC) in Canada.
Editor’s note:
To reach spokesman Doug Beck, call 217-621-8021.
To reach deputy spokesman Phil Roos (a professor of physics at the University
of Maryland), call 301-405-6103.
|
 |
 |
|