MSU physicist first to observe formation of rare âstrange matterâ
Contact: Sam Kealhofer ĖũĖũ
STARKVILLE, Miss.âA Mississippi ´ķĪķAPP physicist and her colleagues are the first scientists to observe how subatomic particlesâknown as lambda particlesâare formed, helping researchers learn more about their production and formation in atomic nuclei, deepening the overall understanding of the dynamics of subatomic structure that governs most of the visible matter in the universe.
Lamiaa El Fassi, an associate professor in MSUâs Department of Physics and Astronomy, published the results in a recent edition of .
Lambda particlesâcomprised of up and down quarksâare common building blocks that make up most of the visible matter in the universe, and a rarer particle called a strange quark, known as âstrange matter.â While strange matter only exists in extreme circumstances like high-energy particle collisions and the cores of the densest stars in the universe, by studying strange matter, scientists can glean information on how subatomic particles are formedâas well as acquire better understanding on how the universe operates.
âIt hasnât been an easy journey, but I am pleased with its outcome. These classes of studies help build a story, analogous to a motion picture, of how the struck quark turns into hadrons. In this paper, we report the first-ever observation of lambda baryon production in the forward and backward fragmentation regions,â said El Fassi.
The discoveries happened after more than 10 years of analyzing data collected from a 2004 experiment carried out using the Continuous Electron Beam accelerator Facility (CEBAF) Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) housed in the Experimental Hall B at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility.
El Fassiâs team produced the lambda particles by shooting the CEBAFâs electron beam at different fixed-target nuclei such as carbon, iron and lead. When the high-energy electron from the accelerator collides with one of the targetâs nuclei, it would break its protons and/or neutrons and thus probe their building blocks, called quarks. These quarks would then move around freely inside the nucleus prior to joining with other quark subconstituents to form the new composite particles, which would sometimes be a lambda.ĖũĖũ
âThe study reveals the possibility of a different mechanism responsible for the production and formation of lambda particles. Instead of the exchanged virtual photon between the beam and target nucleus being absorbed by a single struck quark, sometimes itâs absorbed by paired quarks, called a diquark. This is also the first experimental hint of its kind, opening the door for new theoretical and experimental development to fully understand the measured trend,â El Fassi said.
Through their observations, the team hypothesized the existence of a diquarkâa pair of quarks that will sometimes absorb the exchanged virtual photon and bond with the strange quark to create the lambda particle. The observation of the diquark deepens scientistsâ understanding of how three-quark composite particlesâsuch as lambda particlesâare formed.
El Fassi's work is supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy; Office of Science; Office of Nuclear Physics Award No. DE-FG02-07ER41528.
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