Matter News
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to MatterNews.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Researchers have proven a significant version of the quantum unique ergodicity conjecture 10/12/2008

Lab probes iron-arsenic superconductors 10/11/2008

Spallation Neutron Source sends first neutrons to 'Big Bang' beam line 10/10/2008

Scientists engineer superconducting thin films 10/9/2008

New knowledge about thermoelectric materials could give better energy efficiency 10/8/2008

Fuzziness on the road to physics' grand unification theory 10/7/2008

Brilliantly bright light source is one step closer to reality, says scientist 10/5/2008

Zooming way in, technique offers close-ups of electrons, nuclei 10/2/2008

Micro honeycomb materials enable new physics in aicraft sound reduction 9/30/2008

Research gets to the heart of the scatter 9/28/2008

Quantum leap in hi-tech performance 9/26/2008

Unlocking the secret of the Kondo Effect 9/23/2008

Checking people at airports - with terahertz radiation 9/20/2008

Scientists create first dense gas of ultracold 'polar' molecules 9/19/2008

Study of repeater brings quantum communication closer to reality 9/18/2008

Protons partner with neutrons more often than other protons (6/19/2008)

Tags:
neutrons, protons, atoms

Theoretical work by Penn State Professor of Physics Mark Strikman predicted that fast-moving protons would have a surprisingly high tendency to form pairs with fast-moving neutrons. A new experiment by researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility is based on and confirms, for the first time, Strikman's prediction. - Joanna Griffin, U. S. Department of Energy, Jefferson Lab
Theoretical work by Penn State Professor of Physics Mark Strikman predicted that fast-moving protons would have a surprisingly high tendency to form pairs with fast-moving neutrons. A new experiment by researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility is based on and confirms, for the first time, Strikman's prediction. - Joanna Griffin, U. S. Department of Energy, Jefferson Lab
Fast-moving protons are much more likely to pair up with fast-moving neutrons than with other protons in the nuclei of atoms, according to a recent experiment performed at the U.S. Department of Energy's Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. The experiment confirms previous theoretical research led by Mark Strikman, a professor of physics at Penn State. Strikman's theory predicts that fast-moving protons have a nearly 100-percent tendency to form pairs with other fast-moving protons or neutrons, and that the majority of these pairings are between protons and neutrons. Strikman also suggested the experimental strategy that the researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility used to make their discovery.

Strikman's theory, along with its recent experimental confirmation, may help physicists to understand the structure of nuclear systems, from light nuclei to massive neutron stars. Results of the experiment will be published later this year in the journal Science, which recently posted the paper on its Web site.

Two decades ago, Strikman and his collaborator Leonid Frankfurt of Tel Aviv University in Israel suggested that the most direct way to look for pairings of two high-momentum nucleons -- a nucleon is a proton or a neutron in the nucleus of an atom -- would be to knock a fast-moving nucleon out of an atom's nucleus and to identify the nucleon that is left behind. This method was used in an experiment conducted by researchers at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, and results were published in 2003.

In 2006, Strikman and his colleagues published a paper in the journal Physical Review Letters in which they described the development and results of a detailed model that analyzed the Brookhaven National Laboratory data. The team's analysis indicated that when a proton is moving faster than one-quarter the speed of light, 90 percent of the time it is paired with a neutron, while 10 percent of the time it is paired, presumably, with another proton. "Although we expected a large asymmetry between the number of proton-neutron pairs and proton-proton pairs, the magnitude of the difference was startling to us because it was a significant departure from what estimates using current models of nucleon-nucleon interactions told us it would be," said Strikman.

Recently, a direct measurement was performed by researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility to verify the accuracy of the 90-percent to 10-percent ratio predicted by the model developed in 2006 by Strikman and his colleagues. In their experiment, the scientists sent a beam of energetic electrons into a thin sheet of carbon to knock protons out of the nuclei. Next, they counted the number of times that each proton's remaining partner was a neutron versus another proton. Results of the experiment supported Strikman's and Frankfurt's predictions.

"Although we predicted a very large probability of pairing between fast-moving nucleons, it is amazing to me that 100 percent of fast-moving nucleons are paired," said Strikman. "It also is amazing that so little of this pairing is between two protons."

Strikman added that he is excited to finally see experimental evidence in support of the theory that he has spent much of his career establishing. "Previous methods could not distinguish between proton-proton and proton-neutron correlations," he said. "But this new experiment has achieved something that never has been done before. The discovery is the most clear-cut example that the high-energy processes, which we have been advocating for many years, are truly effective tools and can be used for future discoveries."

Research for the theoretical paper by Strikman and colleagues was funded by the Israel Science Foundation, the U.S. Israeli Binational Scientific Foundation and the U.S Department of Energy.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by Penn State University

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.