Interactions News Wire #01-04
9 Jan. 2004
http://www.interactions.org
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Source: Brookhaven National Laboratory
Content: News Release
Date Issued: 8 Jan. 2004
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News Release
number: 04-02
contact: Karen McNulty Walsh, 631
344-8350,
kmcnulty@bnl.gov, or Mona S. Rowe, 631
344-5056,
mrowe@bnl.gov New g-2
Measurement Deviates Further From Standard Model UPTON, NY -
The latest result from an international collaboration of scientists
investigating how the spin of a muon is affected as this type of subatomic
particle moves through a magnetic field deviates further than previous
measurements from theoretical predictions. The result strengthens the challenge
this experiment, known as muon g-2, first posed to the so-called Standard Model
of particle physics in February 2001 (based on data collected in 1999), and then
backed with a more precise result in July 2002 (based on data collected in
2000).
The new measurement, which has been submitted to Physical Review
Letters, was announced today at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven
National Laboratory, where the experiment was conducted by scientists from
Brookhaven and 11 other institutions in the United States, Russia, Japan, The
Netherlands, and Germany. Based on data collected in 2001, it is the first
precise measurement of how negatively charged muons "wobble" in the magnetic
field; the two prior results were for positively charged muons. The precision of
the new result matches the combined precision of the previously reported
results.
All three results are in good agreement with one another and
with a long-standing theoretical prediction of the so-called PCT Theorem that
particles and antiparticles should wobble at the same rate in a magnetic field.
But when compared with the latest Standard Model predictions for the g-2 value,
the new experimental result differs from the most direct theory calculation by
2.8 standard deviations, and from a somewhat more indirect theory calculation by
1.7 standard deviations, making this the most significant deviation to date
between experiment and theory. When the positive and negative muon results are
combined, the result differs from the direct theory calculation by 2.7 standard
deviations, and from the indirect theory calculation by 1.4 standard deviations.
The two theoretical predictions are in significant disagreement with one another
and have been under close scrutiny by the theory community for several
years. The related theory issues are gradually being clarified and may get
fully resolved soon.
Boston University physicist Lee Roberts,
spokesperson for the muon g-2 experiment, said, "The measurement of this
property, the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon, is a very sensitive test of
the validity of the Standard Model, and is also sensitive to new physics beyond
the Standard Model." The Standard Model seeks to describe the effects of three
of the four known forces on all subatomic particles. "The fact that our
measurement continues to deviate from what that theory predicts may be an
indication that we are seeing new physics beyond the Standard Model," Roberts
said.
While physicists have known for some time that the Standard Model
is incomplete, the correct extension to this theory is still a matter of
speculation, with one leading candidate being supersymmetry - a theory that
predicts the existence of yet-to-be-discovered companion particles for all the
known subatomic particles. "One reason there has been so much interest in our
experiment is that the rate at which muons wobble in a magnetic field would be
affected by the presence of new physics, such as supersymmetric particles, if
they exist," said Roberts. "Historically, muon g-2 has provided an important
constraint on new theories. Our experiment is now fourteen times more precise
than the experiment done at CERN [the European laboratory for particle physics]
in the 1970s. This precision places important restrictions on potential new
theories."
Added William Marciano, senior theoretical physicist at
Brookhaven Lab, "The recent g-2 result strengthens the case for new physics
effects with supersymmetry, a leading candidate, but it is by no means
definitive. Continued scrutiny of theory and further running of the experiment
are imperative."
Background on previous g-2 results
The Standard Model of particle physics is an overall theory of particles
and forces that has withstood experimental challenge for some 30 years. In
February 2001, the muon g-2 collaboration published a finding that deviated from
the value predicted by the Standard Model. The result of that experiment, which
like the current one, was performed at Brookhaven's Alternating Gradient
Synchrotron, had a one percent statistical chance of being explained by the
theory as it was understood at that time.
After that announcement,
perhaps because of the startling experimental result from Brookhaven, many
theoretical and experimental physicists took a closer look at the predicted
theoretical value for g-2. In October 2001, theorists reported that a
mathematical error had been made in calculating the predicted value. As a result
of the revised theory estimate, the measured difference from the Standard Model
prediction reported at Brookhaven in 2001 was less statistically significant.
The experimental result released in July 2002 was twice as precise as
the previous measurement and was in excellent agreement with it, making that
measurement a much more sensitive test of the Standard Model. Since that time,
much additional work has been going on to improve scientists' understanding of
and confidence in the theory prediction for the Standard Model value. While a
consensus seems to be developing, it is still an active topic of investigation
by a large number of scientists from around the world.
The Standard
Model theory for g-2 is composed of contributions from three of the four forces
in nature: the weak, the electric, and the strong force. While the contributions
from the weak and electric forces can be calculated from first principles, the
contribution from the strong force cannot. This latter contribution must be
determined using experimental data. The direct determination uses data obtained
by colliding electrons and anti-electrons and measuring the particles that are
created from the strong force in the collision. The indirect method uses data
from the decay of tau particles, which are heavy brothers of the muon and
electron, along with some additional theoretical assumptions.
At present
the two methods do not agree very well, and in light of this disagreement some
physicists only use the direct method to determine the theory value. The data
used in both methods were obtained at accelerators in Russia, Europe, China, and
the U.S. Data from additional experiments at accelerators in the U.S., Italy,
and Japan, when available, should help to further refine the Standard Model
theory value for g-2, giving scientists greater confidence in the number used
for comparison with the experimental result announced today.
This
research was funded by the Office of High Energy Physics within the Office of
Science of the U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. National Science Foundation,
the German Bundesminister fur Bildung und Forschung, and the Russian Ministry of
Science, and through the U.S.-Japan Agreement in High Energy Physics.
For previous news on g-2, go to:
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2001/bnlpr020801.htm
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2001/bnlpr020801_ud.htm
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2002/bnlpr073002.htm
For background, go to:
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2001/g-2_backgrounder.htm
http://www.g-2.bnl.gov/index.shtml
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