New Subatomic Particle Discovered
Cyndi writes "A new subatomic particle has been discovered by researchers at Stanford. It seems to be "an unusual configuration of a charm quark and a strange anti-quark"."
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From the article, it sounds as if this particle would exhibit naked charm (and naked (anti-)strange as well I assume). This seems astounding to me (at a quarter to five AM at least). Last I heard that sort of thing was on mother nature's short list of no-nos.
-- MarkusQ
Could someone explain the who Anti-Quark, Naked Quark, Bio-Polar Quark, Spring Break Quark, and Got my head up my ass CIO Quark please?
Neck_of_the_Woods
#/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
There's tons of different configurations of fundamental particles, especially quarks. Though the people who set up the accelerators and did this must be pretty chuffed, and have indeed contributed to the advancement of particle physics by helping repertoriate more of the possible combinations, there's nothing even remotely interesting to anyone who's not a particle physicist working on this type of quark configuration.
Now if they had discovered a new fundamental particle, or if that particle exhibited properties in contradiction with the current laws of particle physics (eg symmetry breaking), that would be worth posting...
Daniel
Carpe Diem
The combination was not the surprise, but the missing mass is, which suggests that the theoretical calculation of the binding force is incorrect (though such calculation is often an approximation themself) This usually signals that some aspect of the theory on the force is wrong or that their is yet another particle that was undetected, thus robbing some mass away. (Neutrino was 'discovered' this way)
a charm quark with ... an anti strange [quark]
Love makes strange bedfellows...
This force, unlike most others in nature, becomes stronger as the distance between the two quarks increases.
Absence makes the heart grow fonder...
They have discovered the LOVE particle!
Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
I prefer Neelix's portrayal of the Grand Proxy in "False Profits"!
My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
I kill me.
-- (Score:i, Imaginary)
But what happens if you've only got one of them here, and the nearest other one is in a neighboring galaxy? Massive destruction? Infinite attraction? Or just enough attraction to get a geek a date?
Hmm...I really can't tell if you are joking or not. This is never going to happen due to the scale at which these forces work. The strong nuclear force prevents free quarks from being observed. This is called confinement and is due to quantum chromodynamics (QCD). If a enough energy is pumped into a particle composed of quarks, the energy enevtually goes into creating a new quark pair, therefore satifying confinement (no free quarks). The amount of energy to do this is staggering. Think GeV or higher particle accelerator. Any other time the distances over which these forces work (10^-18 m) prevents much of anything being extracted.