Interactions News Wire
#54-05
1 July 2005
http://www.interactions.org*******************************************************************
Source:
SLAC
Content: Press Release
Date Issued: 1 July
2005
*******************************************************************
BaBar
finds new massive particle
On Thursday June 30th
at the international Lepton-Photon symposium in Uppsala, Sweden, the BaBar
experiment at the Department of Energy's Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
(SLAC) announced the discovery of a new massive particle with curious behavior.
The particle is
produced in collisions between electrons and their antimatter counterparts,
called positrons. For the moment the particle has been named Y(4260), reflecting
the measured mass of 4260 Mega-electron volts but the unknown nature of the
state. The discovery is the subject of a paper
submitted to Physical Review Letters this week.
"This is a
very beautiful result," said Persis Drell, Director of Particle and Particle
Astrophysics at SLAC. "The techniques used to extract the signal take full
advantage of the enormous BaBar data set. We don't yet know what this new
discovery is telling us... but we know enough to be surprised. This isn't what we
expected!"
One unusual
aspect of the discovery is the Y(4260) is seen in events where the annihilating
electron-positron pair are accompanied by an energetic photon emitted before the
collision, and nothing else. This allows BaBar physicists to establish the
particle's quantum numbers-which define a particle's intrinsic properties such
as spin and charge. However, they have yet to learn which combinations of quarks
and gluons-the universe's indivisible bricks and mortar-make up the particle.
The most likely scenario is that
Y(4260) is part of a large family of particles, known as psi mesons. These are
particles composed of a charm quark and an anti-charm quark tightly bound by the
strong force. Although they have the same basic composition, psi mesons exist
with different masses, in just the same way as an electron bound to a proton in
a hydrogen atom can only have certain allowed energies according to quantum
mechanics.
But, there are
problems with this explanation. What intrigues the research team is the implied
pattern of Y(4260) decays into other particles. BaBar has only observed one set
of decay products, a J/psi, pi+ and pi-. If this new particle is a type of psi
meson-and it does have the same quantum numbers-it ought to decay much more
often into particles containing a charm quark and a non-charm quark. Other
measurements of total electron-positron annihilation
rate suggest that this cannot be the case.
"We're
seeing hints that the particle doesn't decay the way you would expect if it was
part of the psi family." said BaBar spokesman David MacFarlane. "It's
mysterious. Either we don't understand the theory that explains how the strong
force works in these bound states or the particle is more exotic than a simple charm anti-charm
particle."
The
exotic possibilities include bound diquarks, particles with two quarks and two
antiquarks, and hybrid mesons, particles with a quark, antiquark and bound gluon.
The discovery of the
Y(4260) adds to the growing list of exotic new particles that have been seen in
recent years at BaBar and Belle, the experiment at the KEK laboratory in
Tsukuba, Japan. Some of these, such as the DSJ(2317) and DSJ(2458) refine our
understanding of how quarks are bound into particles; others, such as the
X(3872) and (3940) also defy conventional explanations and challenge our understanding
of nature.
In
addition to announcing Y(4260), the BaBar experiment collaboration is presenting
65 papers at the Lepton-Photon symposium. The experiment is actively pursuing
hints that matter-antimatter asymmetries in certain types of decays, called
penguin modes, may be influenced by non-standard physics such as supersymmetry.
Supersymmetry is a possible new symmetry of spacetime, where each of the
presently known fundamental particles would be partnered by a very massive
"superpartners." Existence of this or other new physics could impact penguin
modes, which are particularly sensitive to the resulting effects. Two of
the conference papers present data on two new types of penguin decays, one that
follows standard physics and one that adds to the growing set of hints from
BaBar and Belle that non-standard physics such as supersymmetry might be
influencing these decays.
"We
expect to double our data set by July 2006," said MacFarlane, "which will
possibly give us enough statistical significance to convincingly show that new physics is occurring in the penguin modes. It's an
exciting
time."
Some 600 scientists and engineers from 75 institutions in
Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Russia, Spain
the United Kingdom, and the United States are working on BaBar. SLAC is funded
by the Department of Energy's Office of Science.
By Heather
Rock Woods
Photos and plots can be downloaded at:
http://www-group.slac.stanford.edu/com/imageaccess/babar/CONTACT:
Neil
Calder, SLAC Communications: (650) 714-9545,
neil.calder@slac.stanford.eduCOMMENT:
David
MacFarlane, BaBar spokesman: (650) 796-2994,
dbmacf@slac.stanford.eduChris
Hearty, BaBar physics analysis coordinator: (650) 926-2435,
hearty@slac.stanford.edu