"Cascade B" Particle Discovered At Fermilab 140
pnotequalsnp writes to note that physicists at Fermilab have discovered a new heavy particle called the Cascade B. This is the first particle ever seen that is made up of quarks representing all three quark families. A team of 610 physicists from 88 institutions reported the discovery in a paper submitted to Physical Review Letters last week. This must be the discovery that triggered rumors that the Higgs had been found.
To quote "Napolean Dynamite"... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What's the significance? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2007/jun/14/uta-f
So, yeah, Standard Model stuff. Practical? Well:
http://motls.blogspot.com/2007/06/d0-discovers-ca
Shows that YES! Building particle detectors involves a large waterpark a la Waterworld. You can make money off of that, therefore, it must be practical. (Seriously, is my browser showing this wrong? I see no indication that this guy is joking?)
Not related to Higgs boson (Score:4, Informative)
not the higgs (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Unlikely to match the Higgs rumors... (Score:5, Informative)
(1) 1 GeV is approximately the proton mass, so this new particle is a bit over 5x the proton mass
(2) "Resonance" in this case means a feature in their data that looks like a new particle. When analyzing data from an accelerator, you basically add up the energies of all the particles coming out of a collision and histogram the result for a lot of collisions. If you see a peak in the histogram, it may mean that something interesting is happening at collisions of a particular energy, and such a peak is a signature that a particle is being created. The rumors related to a peak at ~180 GeV, which means it probably isn't the same peak that led to the discovery of the 5 GeV "cascade B" mentioned in this article.
(3) Dzero (or D0) is one of the two major detectors at the Tevatron particle accelerator (the other is CDF). They are the source of the rumors and of this new discovery.
(4) I say this is probably an "analysis issue", in that the 180 GeV feature could turn out to be an analysis mistake. It's probably being rechecked extensively by the folks working on Dzero, and they'll eventually let us know if it's real.