Scientists launch experiment to hunt forbidden antimatter transformation

An international team has initiated the MACE experiment to detect a rare transformation of muonium into its antimatter counterpart, antimuonium. This process, if observed, would challenge the Standard Model of particle physics by violating lepton flavor conservation. The project aims to vastly improve upon previous searches conducted over two decades ago.

Led by researchers from Sun Yat-sen University and the Institute of Modern Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the MACE experiment targets an elusive event where muonium—a fleeting system of a positive muon bound to an electron—spontaneously converts to antimuonium. Such a discovery would signal new physics beyond the Standard Model, potentially revealing unknown forces or particles at high energy scales.

The research team describes the conversion as 'a clean and unique probe of new physics in the leptonic sector.' They emphasize its sensitivity to specific models, noting, 'Unlike other charged lepton flavor violation processes, this conversion is sensitive to ∆Lℓ = 2 models that are fundamentally distinct and could reveal physics inaccessible to other experiments.'

The last attempt to observe this effect occurred in 1999 at the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland. MACE seeks to enhance sensitivity by over a hundredfold, targeting conversion probabilities around 10^{-13}. This requires innovations like a high-intensity surface muon beam, a silica aerogel target for muonium production, and advanced detectors to distinguish signals from background noise.

'Our design integrates advanced beam, muonium production target, and detector technology to isolate the signal from formidable backgrounds,' the team states. 'This makes MACE one of the most sensitive low-energy experiments searching for lepton flavor violation.'

In its initial Phase I, MACE will also probe other rare decays, such as muonium to two photons and muon to electron plus two photons, with unprecedented precision. A positive result could uncover physics at energies of 10 to 100 TeV, comparable to those of planned colliders.

Beyond fundamental insights, the experiment's technologies— including low-energy positron systems and high-resolution detectors—hold promise for applications in materials science and medical research. Hosted within Huizhou's research ecosystem, alongside facilities like the High-intensity heavy-ion Accelerator Facility and the China initiative Accelerator Driven System, MACE bolsters China's role in global particle physics. As the team puts it, 'We are not just building an experiment; we are opening a new window into the laws of nature.'

संबंधित लेख

Realistic depiction of atoms dynamically moving before radiation-driven decay in a groundbreaking 'atomic movie' by scientists.
AI द्वारा उत्पन्न छवि

Researchers create an ‘atomic movie’ showing how atoms roam before a radiation-driven decay

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया AI द्वारा उत्पन्न छवि तथ्य-जाँच किया गया

Scientists at the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society and international collaborators say they have reconstructed a real-time “movie” of atoms moving for up to a picosecond before an electron-transfer-mediated decay (ETMD) event, showing that nuclear motion and geometry can strongly influence when the decay occurs and what it produces.

Physicists at Texas A&M University are developing highly sensitive detectors to uncover the nature of dark matter and dark energy, which comprise 95% of the universe. Led by Dr. Rupak Mahapatra, these efforts aim to detect rare particle interactions that occur infrequently. The work, featured in Applied Physics Letters, builds on decades of research into cosmic enigmas.

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया

CERN researchers are set to transport around 100 antiprotons by truck around the campus near Geneva, Switzerland, on Tuesday. This marks the first demonstration of a planned antimatter delivery service to labs across Europe. The experiment, known as STEP, aims to enable precision measurements away from the noisy antimatter factory.

Nuclear physicists at the University of Tennessee have made three key findings about the rapid neutron-capture process that forms heavy elements like gold in stellar events. Their research, conducted at CERN's ISOLDE facility, clarifies how unstable atomic nuclei decay. The results, published in Physical Review Letters, could refine models of element formation in the universe.

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया

An international team of scientists has identified an unexpected Island of Inversion in molybdenum-84, a nucleus with equal numbers of protons and neutrons. This discovery challenges previous beliefs that such regions occur only in neutron-rich isotopes. The finding reveals new insights into nuclear deformation and fundamental forces.

Scientists at the University of Basel and ETH Zurich have reversed the polarity of a specialized ferromagnet with a focused laser beam, without heating the material. This achievement, detailed in Nature, combines electron interactions, topology, and dynamical control in a single experiment. The method hints at future light-based electronic circuits on chips.

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया

Researchers at RPTU University of Kaiserslautern-Landau have simulated a Josephson junction using ultracold atoms, revealing key quantum effects previously hidden in superconductors. By separating Bose-Einstein condensates with a moving laser barrier, they observed Shapiro steps, confirming the phenomenon's universality. The findings, published in Science, bridge atomic and electronic quantum systems.

 

 

 

यह वेबसाइट कुकीज़ का उपयोग करती है

हम अपनी साइट को बेहतर बनाने के लिए विश्लेषण के लिए कुकीज़ का उपयोग करते हैं। अधिक जानकारी के लिए हमारी गोपनीयता नीति पढ़ें।
अस्वीकार करें