LHC Discovers Pentaquark Particles 95
mrspoonsi sends news that researchers running experiments at the Large Hadron Collider have published findings confirming the existence of pentaquark particles, first predicted in the 1960s by Murray Gell Mann and George Zweig. The particles consist of five quarks bound together. Further research will examine exactly how this binding works.
Previous experiments had measured only the so-called mass distribution where a statistical peak may appear against the background "noise" - the possible signature of a novel particle. But the collider enabled researchers to look at the data from additional perspectives, namely the four angles defined by the different directions of travel taken by particles within LHCb. "We are transforming this problem from a one-dimensional to a five dimensional one... we are able to describe everything that happens in the decay," said Dr. Koppenburg, who first saw a signal begin to emerge in 2012. "There is no way that what we see could be due to something else other than the addition of a new particle that was not observed before."
Gillette (Score:5, Funny)
Gillette: Fuck it, we're doing five quarks!!
Re: (Score:2)
You only think you're kidding.
https://www.google.com/webhp?q... [google.com]
Re:Gillette (Score:4, Informative)
He's actually referring to this famous Onion article:
http://www.theonion.com/blogpo... [theonion.com]
Re: (Score:3)
I know, but then they DID it. Anyway...
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https://s-media-cache-ak0.pini... [pinimg.com]
SNL: 1975, SNL: 2000 (Score:3)
The Late Show (1990's): Gillette 3000 [youtube.com]
Saturday Night Live 2000: Platinum Mach 14 [saturday-night-live.com]
The Onion: 2004
Re: (Score:2)
There's also a battery-operated "Power Han
Re: Gillette (Score:2)
My then fiance used to have a lot of fun using my fusion's buzz function back as a substitute vibrator back in the day. It was the only use it ever had.
I for one (Score:1)
I for one welcome our exotic matter overlords.
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With a crowbar in hand.
Wait for Confirmation (Score:1)
This is why physics is the king of the sciences (Score:5, Insightful)
When the mathematics is so powerful that it can make accurate predictions far in advance of their ability to be verified, you know you are connecting with the fundamental mechanisms that drive the universe.
Re:This is why physics is the king of the sciences (Score:5, Insightful)
Either that, or you're not the guy who made the incorrect prediction 50 years back....
Re:This is why physics is the king of the sciences (Score:5, Informative)
General Relativity is a shining example of this, and the Standard Model is even more so. These theories are among the most accurate predictors of new discoveries, sometimes ridiculously so.
Meanwhile, String Theory is still kicking around, getting more and more complex, but coming up with very little in the way of prediction. I'm not busting on it... I keep up with the latest work (as much as a non-expert can anyway) and find it fascinating (and/or incomprehensible).
We are definitely tapping into something real, but whether or not it's fundamental is another question entirely. Newton seemed fundamental, but wasn't. Einstein seems fundamental, but might not be. It seems like there's usually another layer of reality below the one which seems to be fundamental. But everything we uncover is fascinating.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, "Science is cool".
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We are definitely tapping into something real, but whether or not it's fundamental is another question entirely. Newton seemed fundamental, but wasn't. Einstein seems fundamental, but might not be. It seems like there's usually another layer of reality below the one which seems to be fundamental.
We haven't even reached turtles yet.
Re:This is why physics is the king of the sciences (Score:5, Insightful)
Just to tap into another great scientific discovery, the New Horizons mission is a great example of this also. Nine years ago, scientists had to plan a route and engineers had to design systems. All of this had to be extremely precise. New Horizons had a 100 km by 150 km window of space that it had to be in within 100 seconds. If it was out of this area, the photos would return blank space. While we won't know if it hit the target until the photos come back late tonight/early tomorrow, it looks like they hit the mark. That's planning a route 9 years out and 5 billion km away. That took some serious understanding of orbital velocity to accomplish. One tiny mistake and New Horizons would have wound up far away from Pluto.
Re:This is why physics is the king of the sciences (Score:5, Informative)
You left out, as Paul Harvey says, the rest of the story.
While they planned the route fourteen years ago, they've spent the last nine years (since launch) analyzing the spacecraft's current trajectory and making mid course corrections as needed to ensure that New Horizons hit the window. If they hadn't done so, less than forty minutes after launch New Horizons would have been doomed to miss Pluto entirely. (The booster ended up performing a little 'hot' - when the final stage was discarded, it was actually going too fast.)
Don't get me wrong, it's still a fantastic achievement that all they needed was 20 m/s (give or take a little) of course correction - but the fact remains that New Horizons wasn't passively ballistic, it was actively flown.
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Agreed. Here's the page where it shows the significant events of the mission.
http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/Missio... [jhuapl.edu]
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"Actively flown" with a one-way latency of 4.5 hours.
Navigating an oil tanker must feel like go-kart in comparison.
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It seems like there's usually another layer of reality below the one which seems to be fundamental.
Nice to know that the fundamental theorem of software engineering applies to the design of the universe too.
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Great points, and I fully agree, but I want to go a bit further.
General Relativity is amazing and wonderful, but I think we can safely say it's not complete or fundamental. Aside from dark matter, the insides of black holes, and quantum effects, it doesn't provide any mechanism for curved spacetime. As much praise as I think Einstein and GR deserve, too often I see and hear people treat it as the ultimate truth of the universe, particularly curved spacetime. I'm somewhat skeptical of String Theory, but I e
Re:This is why physics is the king of the sciences (Score:4, Interesting)
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some would argue mathematics is king of the sciences
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Mathematics isn't a science any more than fashion is a science. They are just off the scales at different ends.
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Oxford dictionary: Mathematics: 1. The abstract science of.....
you lose
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Most mathematicians would dispute the point and consider the title belittling.
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some would argue mathematics is king of the sciences
Mathematics is not a science. It is a language used to describe scientific principles and theories.
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Because you say so? Oxford dictionary disagrees with you.
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Because you say so? Oxford dictionary disagrees with you.
The "study" of mathematics is a science in the broad sense, just like the "study" of theology is also a science. But mathematics itself, particularly as used in the context of this article, is a descriptive language.
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I don't so much disagree as consider it a narrow viewpoint. Darwin's Theory of the Origin Of Species by Natural Selection was pretty damn regal in my opinion, and, I daresay, has even influenced the thinking of many physicists. Computer Science has had a big influence too. (I think Computers are the 'steam engines' of the 20th Century in the sense that physicists learned about thermodynamics in the 19th Century from studying the steam engine, which led to all kinds of stuff, and studying what computers c
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Continuous vs Discrete motion. The experiment tells you, your description is flawed.
There was a God Particle... (Score:2)
so this must the be the Satan Particle.
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Naa, just Rosey and her five sisters.
PenaQuark? (Score:2)
+2/3, -1/3 (Score:2)
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+1.
Re:+2/3, -1/3 (Score:5, Funny)
two up quarks, one down quark
Still haven't discovered the Konami quark then, yet?
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The states also require that there be both bofa and updog.
Re:+2/3, -1/3 (Score:4, Informative)
+1.
In detail...
up quark: +2/3
down quark: -1/3
charm quark: +2/3
anti-charm quark: -2/3
2/3 + 2/3 - 1/3 + 2/3 - 2/3 = +1.
Re:+2/3, -1/3 (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:+2/3, -1/3 (Score:4, Insightful)
Thanks - so why don't the charm and the anti-charm go "poof" ?
No doubt they do. Many exotic particles don't have long lifetimes. I'm not sure what the pentaquark's lifetime is.
The J/psi meson, [wikipedia.org] which consists of a charm-anticharm pair, lives for about 7.2 x 10^-21 s.
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Thanks - so why don't the charm and the anti-charm go "poof" ?
They do, sort of: this thing doesn't last long at all.
Consider a much more common particle, the neutral pi meson: just two quarks: quark/antiquark pairs of several possible flavors. Also doesn't last long (8e-17s), but extremely well studied.,
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IANAP but I would guess that the quantum numbers add up such that it does look like the charm and anti-charm quark went "poof" in some respects (like color charge, I imagine, otherwise I don't see how the chromodynamics can work out with a five-particle system; the color of the anti-charm must be opposite that of the charm, whatever it is, and the remaining three red, green, and blue, respectively, to get a white particle as required by QCD), but left over residual features (like spin and electric charge) i
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Thanks - so why don't the charm and the anti-charm go "poof" ?
They might not be antiparticles of each other, as they might differ in color charge [wikipedia.org].
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Thanks - so why don't the charm and the anti-charm go "poof" ?
They might not be antiparticles of each other, as they might differ in color charge [wikipedia.org].
I think that would violate color confinement [wikipedia.org] because the resulting pentaquark would have a net color.
Re:+2/3, -1/3 (Score:5, Informative)
Thanks - so why don't the charm and the anti-charm go "poof" ?
They might not be antiparticles of each other, as they might differ in color charge [wikipedia.org].
I think that would violate color confinement [wikipedia.org] because the resulting pentaquark would have a net color.
Red up quark, blue down quark, blue charmed quark, green up quark, antiblue anti-charmed quark. Net color = R+B+B+G-B = R+B+G = colorless. (Shamelessly lifted from the "2015 LHCb results" section of the Wikipedia page for the pentaquark [wikipedia.org].)
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Ah! Thanks for that. After I posted, I wondered if that was possible.
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Thanks - so why don't the charm and the anti-charm go "poof" ?
They might not be antiparticles of each other, as they might differ in color charge [wikipedia.org].
I think that would violate color confinement [wikipedia.org] because the resulting pentaquark would have a net color.
Red up quark, blue down quark, blue charmed quark, green up quark, antiblue anti-charmed quark. Net color = R+B+B+G-B = R+B+G = colorless. (Shamelessly lifted from the "2015 LHCb results" section of the Wikipedia page for the pentaquark [wikipedia.org].)
Wait ... the two charmed quarks you mentioned are in fact anti-particles.
Did you mean to swap the blue and green on the charmed and up quarks? That would in fact make the charmed quarks not anti-particles to each other. I'm not sure that's even possible (I'm not an expert on the standard model, let alone pentaquarks) but I assume it would at least not violate Pauli exclusion (because the two up-quarks aren't the same color.)
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That "spatting of atoms", if that's what you want to call collisions with protons (positively ionized hydrogen), happens naturally all the time. Space is spatting you right now with them.
Re:How long till it kills us? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why do it? To understand the universe. Knowledge is better than ignorance. Where is the payoff? You're soaking in it. By the end of 1998 (my estimate), ONE spinoff technology of high energy physics--the World Wide Web we are using--had paid for the ENTIRE field, from its VERY BEGINNING up to that time, with interest. The rest since is gravy. You're welcome (IAAPP). What are we going to get by continuing? Well, of what use is a new-born baby?
Bad day for non planetary science news (Score:1)
Please Speak English (Score:1)
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Not gobblygook at all, it is perfectly understandable with even undergraduate level knowledge of particle physics.
Layman's articles targeting high school or less education on this abound, you can find them with search engine.
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You have stumbled onto the true problem with ignorance: The ignorant refuse to believe they're actually ignorant.
And the educated know enough to understand the limits of their knowledge and acknowledge their own ignorance, perhaps too much.
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"channels" are like slots in a coin changer, they are for counting the different types of decay products. J/psion are one such particle (a charm quark and anti-charm quark bound together)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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From the quote in the post I was replying to
"Observations of exotic structures in the J/p channel.."
Back to grammar school for you I guess
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You aren't the target audience for the scientific article. That's what the press release [web.cern.ch] is for. Abstracts are not the same as introductions. They are necessarily succinct, to the point where use of jargon is required.
Re: Sure, we believe you, LRC... (Score:2, Insightful)
But a jealous ignoramus would certainly accuse his intellectual superiors of bad faith, rather than accept his inferiority.
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There's nothing more adorable than the special brand of naivete that goes around wearing cynicism's clothes. I could just pinch your cheeks right off.
What's happened to Slashdot? :) (Score:5, Funny)
Ok, three links, one to an actual pre-pub paper, one to CERN's official press release, and one to a reputable news source? What's wrong with this submitter? Don't you know that Slashdot links are supposed to go to some random bozo's blog, where he rants about the political repercussions of a discovery like this, and how it will affect free software/NSA spying/Sharia law/the Lizard people, all with no useful links to any hard data anywhere, but hundreds of ads? :)
Seriously, I've been expecting this since the recent announcement of a possible tetraquark particle, but I certainly didn't expect it this soon. Very cool.
New Law of Physics (Score:2)
The harder you hit things, the more pieces they break into.