Interactions News Wire
#57-05
6 July 2005
http://www.interactions.org*******************************************************************
Source:
Jefferson Lab
Content: Press Release
Date Issued: 1 July
2005
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12000
Jefferson Avenue • Newport News • VA • 23606 • (757) 269-7689 • Fax (757)
269-7398
July 1, 2005
Contact: Kandice Carter
kcarter@jlab.org or (757)
269-7263
Higher Precision Analysis Doesn’t Yield
PentaquarkNew, higher precision data that could only have been
gathered at the Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator
Facility (Jefferson Lab) shows the Theta-plus pentaquark doesn’t appear in
another place it was expected. This intriguing finding contradicts evidence
previously presented by Jefferson Lab researchers that they had sighted a
pentaquark, a particle built of five quarks. Volker Burkert, a Jefferson Lab
Experimental Hall Leader, will present this preliminary result in a talk
reviewing world pentaquark data at Lepton-Photon, the XXII International
Symposium on Lepton-Photon Interactions at High Energy, in Uppsala, Sweden, on
Friday, July 1.
The result comes from a very carefully crafted experiment
that was designed to repeat Jefferson Lab’s original pentaquark search with a
factor of ten higher statistics. Researchers in Jefferson Lab’s CEBAF Large
Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) collaboration took data with a high-energy photon
beam on a deuterium target March 13 – May 16, 2004. Deuterium is an isotope of
hydrogen with one proton and one neutron in its nucleus. An earlier probe of
this same region by CLAS revealed a possible signal for a pentaquark with mass
1542 MeV.
The new experiment searched for pentaquarks in this same
channel at a level of precision at least 10 times higher, or one order of
magnitude better, than the previous published result and found no pentaquarks.
“The earlier results on the Theta-plus can not be reproduced in the analysis of
the high-statistics run,” Burkert says.
Faced with this result, the
collaboration re-analyzed the data from the original experiment, taking into
account a new understanding of the background obtained from the recent run and
improved statistical analysis software. The re-analysis revealed a much weaker
signal for the pentaquark in the original experiment.
“One of the
problems with the first pentaquark finding is that we didn’t completely
understand the background,” Burkert says, “The statistical significance stated
in the earlier result is likely due to a combination of statistical fluctuation
with an underestimate of the background. We eliminated that problem with the
second, higher-statistics run and a more rigorous analysis.”
The first
pentaquark sighting was announced by SPring-8 researchers in the spring of 2003,
and the same year, Jefferson Lab, ITEP and ELSA researchers announced that they,
too, may have spotted tantalizing hints of the particle in data previously taken
in other experiments. Several experiments since then have backed up these early
sightings, while others have failed to confirm them. Jefferson Lab researchers
are currently in the midst of several dedicated hunts for the
pentaquark.
Most ordinary matter is built of quarks. They’re usually
found in twos (as particles called mesons) and threes (as particles called
baryons, such as protons and neutrons). While the pentaquark’s five-quark
configuration is not forbidden by the theory of the strong interaction, finding
one would be the first sighting of an exotic
baryon.
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Jefferson Lab is managed and operated for
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science by the
Southeastern
Universities Research Association, a consortium of 61 universities in the
southeast.
For more information or color photos, please contact Linda Ware at
(757) 269-7689.