"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.
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I'm happy with the Physidore 64.
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I'm happy with the Physidore 64.
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Well, I'm pretty sure at least one is named "Robert", if that helps.
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Re:610 physicists (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:610 physicists (Score:4, Funny)
Re:610 physicists (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:610 physicists (Score:5, Interesting)
And as for team size being limited - I'll bet that during the better days at NASA, say during the Apollo missions, everyone right down to the janitor felt that they were part of the team - and, if you don't think that janitors are important just wait until the next time the toilet blocks.
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And yes, it does tak
The real answer (Score:2)
Re:610 physicists (Score:5, Funny)
Re:610 physicists (Score:5, Funny)
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Re: 610 physicists (Score:4, Funny)
One sentence about the discovery (Score:5, Funny)
Re: 610 physicists (Score:5, Funny)
It's late. (Score:2)
Re: 610 physicists (Score:4, Funny)
Researchers at arxiv were able to reconstruct the form of the original paper by analyzing hundreds of thousands of "personal communicaion" and "in press" citations by physicists distributed around the field.
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interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
What's the significance? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What's the significance? (Score:5, Insightful)
Takes us one more step closer to a Grand Unified Theory.
And no, there's no practical upshot.. it's pure research.
Re:What's the significance? (Score:5, Interesting)
Dr. Hans Meixner.
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Ok, it
Re:What's the significance? (Score:5, Insightful)
These are very long-term, high-risk investments. Unless the payoff is large and likely to happen, you won't see private investment. That doesn't mean that we can't try to encourage this, but until lots of people are already making money off of this kind of investment you're not going to see a lot of private cash flowing in...
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Alternatively, we can get people to finance that kind of research as a consortium. Like some kind of entity gathering the money, and distributing it to researchers...
There are oly upsides! The reseacher gets the money now, so he can eat and pay the bills now, not just 100 years down the road. There is much less risk involved, so the amount of money can be reduced acordingly. People are free to use those results, without asking for permission from hundreds of Newton's* offspring...
* Maybe not the best exam
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Sure that's cited right? (Score:1)
It's too late at night for me to delve further though, and I got an essay to write.
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More like, "confirms that the Standard Model can be used to make predictions about the Standard Model."
Takes us one more step closer to a Grand Unified Theory.
No. You can look at strong force/weak force interactions forever, and never see gravity.
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More like, "confirms that the Standard Model can be used to make predictions about the Standard Model."
Complete internal consistency is one nice aspect of any model, and something I don't think any of the Standard Model's alternatives have achieved.
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Although protons and neutrons make up the majority of known matter today, baryons composed of heavier quarks, including the cascade b, were abundant soon after the Big Bang at the beginning of the universe.
So I'm gonna guess that we're getting closer to re-creating the big bang as a result of discovering this particle?
It would be interesting if they could find this stuff in our everyday environment, but I guess you can't have a big bang everyday, now can you?
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Personally, I'd rather not recreate the Big Bang. I'm pretty happy with the one we have, really.
On the other hand, recreating the conditions right after the Big Bang should be fine.
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http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2007/jun/14/uta-fe rmilab-physicists-discover-triple-scoop-bary/ [pegasusnews.com]
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Just when I thought slashdot couldn't get any geekier....
BSD (Score:2, Insightful)
(and yes, I know that you should not identify a baryon only by its quark content but...
This again? (Score:1)
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Now if only it were true...and realistic...
To quote "Napolean Dynamite"... (Score:3, Informative)
Moooooooogieeeee! (Score:5, Funny)
6 - Never allow family to stand in the way of opportunity
111 - Treat people in your debt like family... exploit them.
I read the article... (Score:2)
They're waiting for you, Gordon! (Score:2, Funny)
b (pronounced "zigh sub b") (Score:2)
Unlikely to match the Higgs rumors... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Unlikely to match the Higgs rumors... (Score:5, Funny)
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The great thing about that pick-up line is you won't be burdened with figuring out how to explain that to your kids.
Re:Unlikely to match the Higgs rumors... (Score:4, Funny)
1. Data uses some big word for particle of the week that nobody's heard of
2. Someone says, "What?"
3. Data repeats the word and proceeds to explain it
4. Nerds everywhere nod in mystifed agreement with the cool scientific complexity of the future, and
5. This weeks show is a success.
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.
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New particle! (Score:5, Funny)
Splendid! Now all I have to do is feed this into our generators, reverse the polarity of our schields, and our enemies are history. Muahahahah!
No, this is not star trek fantasy... (Score:2)
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I had no idea there were Yiddish starships...
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Three more years... (Score:5, Interesting)
Congratulations to the folks at DZero on yet another fine piece of work!
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That also said, it's very important to have two large colliders operational at once, as an observation recorded at *both* would be considerably more significant. The US really needs to get its head back into the game when
where has this thing been all this time? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Though this particle is "only" 6 GeV, it certainly is a rather rare process -- 15 candidates in five years of running. They've probably found far more top quarks. Why is it so rare? My guess is: because it contains a down quark, a bottom quark, and a strange quark, which is a unique and relatively heavy combination.
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Cascade B (Score:5, Funny)
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Not related to Higgs boson (Score:4, Informative)
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The supposed Higgs signal seen at D0 is an excess of H->bb events around 160-180GeV. There is a bump, of fairly high significance, about 4sigma deviations from the calculated background, but the background is not well-understood and this will probably turn out to be
No, no! It migh lead to a "resonance cascade"!!!! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No, no! It migh lead to a "resonance cascade"!! (Score:5, Funny)
Something other? (Score:1, Flamebait)
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Re:Something other? (Score:5, Funny)
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"Background fluctuation" or "something other"? Can't decide?
In this case, these two terms are interchangeable.
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Well, the problem is in defining what is "background". When you calculate the probability you have a model of what background should be. When in "modern physics" (of which "I have no i
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The assumption that you can declare the data measured while the beam was off to be equal to the background noise of your experiment is incorrect. The beam may generate a lot of different stuff,
*Zigh* (Score:2)
So now instead of
*sigh* goes back to watching pr0n
we will get
*zigh* goes back to watching pr0n
Any other ramifications other than standard model verification?
Cascade B(itter) Particle (Score:2)
Obviously, the long sought after Cascade Bitter [wikipedia.org] particle. I guess physicists must be pretty desperate to find a good beer these days. Though shelling out for a particle accelerator just so you can get some beer money seems pretty inefficient.
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No, they needed it to split the beer atoms [wikipedia.org]. Back tassie they just do it with a chisel.
not the higgs (Score:4, Informative)
Heim? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Which Higgs? (Score:5, Funny)
5) Higgs Profit!
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Even if we consider people who worked specifically on this pro
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