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by Kerry Sheridan Kerry Sheridan 2 hrs 43 mins ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) Data from a major US atom smasher lab may have revealed a
new elementary particle, or potentially a new force of nature that could expand
our knowledge of the properties of matter, physicists say.
The science world was abuzz with excitement Wednesday over the findings, which
could offer clues to the persistent riddle of mass and how objects obtain it --
one of the most sought-after answers in all of physics.
But experts cautioned that more analysis was needed over the next several
months to uncover the true nature of the observation, which comes as part of an
ongoing experiment with proton and antiproton collisions to understand the
workings of the universe.
"There could be some new force beyond the force that we know," said Giovanni
Punzi, a physicist with the international research team that is analyzing the
data from the US Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
"If it is confirmed, it could point to a whole new world of interactions," he
told AFP.
While much remains a mystery, researchers agree that this is not the "God
Particle," or the Higgs-boson, a hypothetical elementary particle that has long
eluded physicists who believe it could explain why objects have mass.
"The Higgs-boson is a piece that goes into the puzzle that we already have,"
said Punzi. "Whereas this is something that goes a little bit beyond that -- a
new interaction, a new force."
Punzi said the new observation behaves differently than the Higgs-boson, which
would be decaying into heavy quarks, or particles.
The new discovery "is decaying in normal quarks," Punzi said. "It has different
features," he added.
"One thing we know for sure -- it is not the Higgs-boson. That is the only
thing we know for sure."
For more than a year physicists have been studying what appears to be a "bump"
in the data from the Illinois-based Fermi lab, which operates the powerful
particle accelerator, or atom-smasher, Tevatron.
The Tevatron was once the most powerful machine in the world for such purposes
until 2008 when the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) became operational at the
European Organization for Nuclear Research, which goes by the acronym CERN.
The US machine began its work in the mid 1980s, and is scheduled for shutdown
later this year when its funding runs dry.
"These results are certainly tantalizing," said Nigel Lockyer, director of
Canada's national laboratory for particle and nuclear physics, TRIUMF.
"It is too early to say for sure what the Fermilab team has observed," he added
in an email.
"On the one hand, there is clear evidence for something unexplained, and on the
other, there is a long list of alternative explanations for what might be
causing this subtle observation.
"My personal judgment is that this excitement is adding fuel to the fire for
the next generation of results and discoveries that will be made at the LHC (in
Europe) and elsewhere. We are so close to learning something profound."
Lockyer, a former spokesman for the Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF), which
made the announcement, said there is another major experiment going on at
Tevatron, a sister project known as D-Zero (D0), which could help confirm the
data.
"They are both multipurpose detectors. They both have the capability of seeing
this," he said, predicting a rush of opinions by theoretical physicists in the
coming days, and more data that could shed more light on the finding by summer.
"It will become very much clearer in the next few months. You won't have to
wait years."
According to D0 physicist Gregorio Bernardi, the presentation of the findings
created a stir.
"This is not yet what we call a discovery, since this is possibly a statistical
fluctuation, but it is already quite significant, and could be evidence for
physics beyond the standard model," he said.
"While experimentalists are careful when a signal is extracted above a large
background as it is the case here, the theorists were all quite excited and
several papers are being submitted today or tomorrow."
D0 will release a similar study in the coming weeks.
"In the previous D0 publication on such events, with four times less
statistics, no such peak was visible," Bernardi said.