Scientists May be on Brink of Discovering Fifth Force of Nature
fliptop writes:
Experts closing in on potentially identifying new force after surprise wobble of subatomic particle:
The tantalising theory that a fifth force of nature could exist has been given a boost thanks to unexpected wobbling by a subatomic particle, physicists have revealed.
[...] Dr Mitesh Patel, from Imperial College London, said: "We're talking about a fifth force because we can't necessarily explain the behaviour [in these experiments] with the four we know about."
The data comes from experiments at the Fermilab US particle accelerator facility, which explored how subatomic particles called muons - similar to electrons but about 200 times heavier - move in a magnetic field.
Patel says the muons behave a bit like a child's spinning top, in rotating around the axis of the magnetic field. However, as the muons move, they wobble. The frequency of that wobble can be predicted by the standard model.
But the experimental results from FermiLab do not appear to match those predictions.
Prof Jon Butterworth of University College London, who works on the Atlas experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at Cern, said: "The wobbles are due to the way the muon interacts with a magnetic field. They can be calculated very precisely in the standard model but that calculation involves quantum loops, with known particles appearing in those loops.
"If the measurements don't line up with the prediction, that could be a sign that there is some unknown particle appearing in the loops - which could, for example, be the carrier of a fifth force."
Related:
- Making Sense of the Muon's Misdemeanours
- Shock Result in Particle Experiment Could Spark Physics Revolution (0.1% Difference in W Boson Mass)
- Latest Muon Measurements Hint at Cracks in the Standard Model
Also Submitted As: Scientists at Fermilab close in on fifth force of nature
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