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Aktuelle Meldungen bei MM-Physik 8. Oktober 2000 © email: Krahmer |
PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics Neues von der AIP News Number 502/505 September 14, 2000 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein
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AN
INTRIGUING HINT OF THE HIGGS BOSON in
collider data at the LEP accelerator at CERN has prompted
officials there to extend the running period of the Large
Electron Positron (LEP) collider by at least a month,
instead of turning it off now to make way for the
building of the Large Hadron Collider (or LHC, a proton-
colliding machine to be housed in the same deep tunnel as
LEP). CERN decided today that the high energy
electron-positron collisions at LEP will continue, the
better to supplement the meager, but potentially crucial,
evidence for the Higgs boson, the particle widely thought
to be responsible for endowing other known particles with
mass. What happens at LEP, in effect, is that a lot of
energy squeezed into a very tiny volume almost instantly
rematerializes in the form of new particles. Theorists
have said that in some collisions a Higgs boson (h) might
be produced back to back with a Z boson, one of the
carriers of the weak force and itself the object of a
dramatic particle hunt at CERN 20 years ago. In these
rare events, both h and Z are expected to decay quickly
into two sprays, or jets, of particles. One tactic then
is to search 4-jet events for signs that the combined
mass of two jets at a special energy seems to stand out
above pedestrian "background" events in which
no true exotic particle had been produced. What has
caught LEP physicists' attention is just such an
enhancement, at a mass around 114 GeV/c^2. The
enhancement is not statistically significant enough for
CERN to claim a discovery yet, even when all four
detector groups combine their data, but sufficient to
cause excitement since the Higgs is perhaps the most
sought after particle in all of high energy physics. The
LEP extension is not expected to cause much of a delay in
LHC construction. Some websites: http://press.web.cern.ch http://opal.web.cern.ch/Opal/ http://alephwww.cern.ch/WWW/ TRILOBITE MOLECULES. New research predicts the existence of a giant two-atom molecule with an electron cloud resembling a trilobite, the ancient, hard-shelled creature which lived in the Earth's seas over 300 million years ago (see figure at www.aip.org/physnews/graphics). Made of two rubidium atoms spaced very far apart, the trilobite molecule could conceivably materialize in a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). This is because a BEC's ultracold, dense environment favors the creation of exotic species in addition to the condensate itself. The trilobite molecule has many remarkable properties in addition to its shape, according to the collaboration that predicts its existence (Chris Greene, University of Colorado and JILA, 303-492-4770, chris.greene@colorado.edu). For starters, it would be huge for something consisting of just two atoms: the cores of the Rb atoms are separated by anywhere between 50 nm and 5 microns. Rubidium molecules in BECs have been formed before (Update 471), but they have been much smaller (only 2-4 nm). The researchers believe the trilobite molecule can be created by manipulating a rubidium BEC with laser pulses or external electromagnetic fields. One of the rubidium atoms in the pair must first be converted into a Rydberg atom, which contains an electron in a very high orbit. Ultra-long-range molecules would then form from a weak attraction between the Rydberg atom's outermost electron and another Rb atom. Some of these molecules would have no permanent separation of electric charge, but ones with the trilobite-shaped electron cloud could possess a large permanent electric dipole moment. With dipole moments roughly 1,000 times larger than typical polar diatomic molecules, these would be the first-ever polar molecules made up of two atoms of the same element and isotope. While extremely fragile, their large dipole moments suggest that trilobite molecules could be accelerated, transported, cooled and decelerated using much smaller electric fields than those required for any other molecule. (Greene, Dickinson, and Sadeghpour, Physical Review Letters, 18 Sept 2000; Select Article.) |
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FIRST RESULTS FROM RHIC. Brookhaven's
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) had their
first heavy-ion collisions back in June and since then
extremely energetic smashups between gold atoms have been
lighting up detectors in the four interaction halls,
creating fireballs that approximate tiny pieces of the
universe as it might been only microseconds after the big
bang. One conspicuous goal at RHIC is to rip apart
protons and neutrons inside the colliding nuclei in order
to create novel new forms of nuclear matter, such as
quark gluon plasma. The beam energies have been as high
as 130 GeV per nucleon and the beam density is up to
about 10% of its design value. In this first published
RHIC paper, the PHOBOS collaboration (contact Gunther
Roland, MIT, gunther.roland@cern.ch) describes the
"pseudorapidity" (related to the velocity along
the direction of the beams) of the myriad particles
emerging from the collisions. The researchers pay special
attention to particles emerging at right angles to the
incoming beams. These particles emanate from the most
violent of collisions, which on average create about
6000-7000 particles per event, more than have ever been
seen in accelerator experiments before. The number of
particles produced in turn is indicative of the energy
density of the fireball produced at the moment of
collision; this density, 70% higher than in previous
heavy-ion experiments, carries the RHIC researchers into
a new portion of the nuclear phase diagram. The data
presented here help to constrain models of this
high-density nuclear realm. (Back et al., Physical Review
Letters, 9 Oct Select Articles.) All four RHIC detector
groups (STAR, PHENIX, and BRAHMS are the three others)
will be presenting their first scientific findings at the
American Physical Society Division of Nuclear Physics
Meeting in Williamsburg, VA on October 4-7 http://www.aps.org/meet/DNP00 While no announcement of a quark gluon plasma is expected, researchers plan to describe numerous impressive aspects of RHIC's early operation. DIRECT PHOTONS ARE SEEN IN HEAVY-ION COLLISIONS. In high energy heavy-ion collisions heated nuclear matter, both the original protons and neutrons (or maybe even their constituent quarks) as well as additional particles created out of the excess energy, can be thought of as a hot gas. High energy gamma photons have been observed, as expected, from the decay of particles exiting the hot nuclear gas. But gammas are also expected to be emitted at a lower rate as a kind of thermal glow from the interactions of the particles in the gas. Such "direct photons" have now been seen for the first time in an experiment conducted at CERN, where lead ions smashed into a stationary lead target (contact Terry Awes, Oak Ridge Natl.Lab, 865-574- 4587, awes@mail.phy.ornl.gov). Some theorists believe that direct photons, like the suppression of psi mesons or an enhancement in the production of strange mesons, might constitute evidence for the production of quark gluon plasma. (Aggarwal et al., Physical Review Letters, 2 Oct; Select Articles.) CONNECTING THE WAVE AND
PARTICLE ASPECTS OF LIGHT by detecting a photon
and then measuring the fluctuations of a closely
associated electromagnetic field has been experimentally
achieved for the first time. In most experiments,
researchers focus upon either light's particle aspects
(by counting photons, for instance) or wave aspects (by
measuring an interference between electromagnetic fields,
to cite a simple example). Now, researchers at SUNY-Stony
Brook and the University of Oregon (Luis Orozco, Stony
Brook, 631-632-8138, lorozco@notes.cc.sunysb.edu) have
demonstrated an experimental setup, which they call a
"Wave-Particle Correlator," for determining the
relationships between both aspects of the light that
comes from a single physical process. The "light
source" in their experiment consists of a beam of
rubidium atoms passing in between a highly reflecting
pair of mirrors (a "cavity QED system"). In
their setup, a laser aims light into the cavity through
one of its mirrors. Acting as a sort of "artificial
molecule," the cavity absorbs the light and re-emits
it. A photon occasionally escapes through an output
mirror, only to be detected as a particle by a
photodiode. The photon detection sets up a subsequent
measurement of wavelike properties, as the cavity
occasionally gets rid of a second photon to relax to a
stable state. The resulting electromagnetic field gets
mixed with another known electromagnetic wave to produce
an interference pattern. The pattern emerges only after
averaging over many such "conditional"
measurements triggered by photodiode detections. It
reveals that the electromagnetic field inside the cavity
after the first photon's departure contains, in effect, a
tenth of a photon, since a second photon is only emitted
about 10 percent of the time. Measuring such
wave-particle correlations might bring about new
microscopy techniques. (Foster et al., Physical Review
Letters, 9 October 2000; Select Article). |
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