Home » Technology » Two particles shake up physics

Two particles shake up physics

This article comes from the magazine Sciences et Avenir- La Recherche n ° 893/894 dated July-August 2021.

Nice spring for particle physics. In quick succession, two results have stirred up the research community. Two anomalies which, if confirmed, would upset the whole physics of matter. At stake ? new particles, even new forces… The first result came from the LHCb experiment which takes place in the collider installed under the Franco-Swiss border in Geneva, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Its objective: to study the rare decays of mesons, particles made up of a quark and an antiquark. A first study, submitted to the journal Nature Physics March 22, concerns a member of the meson family, the “B”. “Meson B decays into a cocktail of particles containing either an electron-positron pair or a muon-antimuon pair, explains Yasmine Amhis, physicist at Paris-Saclay University and member of the LHCb experiment . With a probability of 50-50, the theory tells us. However, initial results indicate that the electron-positron pathway would be preferred. “

The probability of error is only one in 40,000

The other anomaly, possibly unrelated to the previous one, affects the muon, this cousin of the electron, 200 times more massive than it. The Muon g-2 experiment, which takes place at Fermilab, near Chicago (United States), measured its magnetic moment. And again, according to an article published on April 7 in Physical Review Letters, it would not correspond to what the theory had announced. This confirms measurements dating back to 2004, and which had already caused confusion in the community of physicists. “These two results are very important, but they have yet to be confirmed, tempers Yasmine Amhis. Regarding B mesons, there is a one in a thousand chance that this result is due to a statistical fluctuation. To be affirmative, this probability will have to reach a chance in 1.7 million. We must therefore continue to strip the measures. “ Regarding the magnetic moment of the muon, the probability of an error is only one in 40,000.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.