Experiments confirm proton radius at 0.84 femtometres

Two precise experiments have agreed on a proton radius of about 0.84 femtometres, aligning with a surprising 2010 measurement and resolving a long-standing puzzle in particle physics. Researchers used lasers to study electron transitions in hydrogen atoms. The findings, published in Nature and Physical Review Letters, boost confidence in the smaller proton size.

More than 15 years ago, a 2010 experiment using an exotic hydrogen atom revealed the proton might be 4 per cent smaller than previously thought, sparking the 'proton radius puzzle'. A 2019 study further supported this smaller size. Now, complementary experiments led by Dylan Yost at Colorado State University and Lothar Maisenbacher at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Germany have confirmed the radius at roughly 0.84 femtometres, or less than 1 million-billionth of a metre. Both teams matched the 2010 result using lasers to measure previously unprobed electron energy transitions in hydrogen atoms, which contain one proton and one electron whose interaction reveals the proton's size. The electromagnetic forces between the particles influence energy states, allowing precise size determination despite challenges like maintaining perfect vacuums and calibrating lasers over years of data analysis. 'When you look at that data, how much money are you willing to bet that the proton radius is what it is? For me personally, right now, with these measurements, the betting odds go significantly up,' Yost said. Maisenbacher added, 'It’s now very, very unlikely that there is still this proton radius puzzle.' Juan Rojo at Vrije University Amsterdam noted the value of diverse methods: 'The proton radius should be a universal property; it should give the same result no matter how you look at it.' These results align with quantum electrodynamics to 0.5 parts per million accuracy, setting no discrepancies for new particles or forces. Yost highlighted potential for tabletop hydrogen experiments to detect light new particles missed by giant colliders.

Relaterte artikler

Realistic depiction of atoms dynamically moving before radiation-driven decay in a groundbreaking 'atomic movie' by scientists.
Bilde generert av AI

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

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI Faktasjekket

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 with the STAR collaboration have observed particles emerging directly from empty space during high-energy proton collisions at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The experiment provides strong evidence that mass can arise from vacuum fluctuations, as predicted by quantum chromodynamics. Quark-antiquark pairs promoted to real particles retained spin correlations tracing back to the vacuum.

Rapportert av AI

An international team of researchers has detected signs of a rare η′-mesic nucleus, a fleeting particle trapped inside an atomic nucleus. This exotic state, observed in a high-precision experiment, suggests the η′ meson's mass decreases in dense nuclear matter. The finding could shed light on how matter acquires mass through the structure of space's vacuum.

Researchers have experimentally observed a hidden quantum geometry in materials that steers electrons similarly to how gravity bends light. The discovery, made at the interface of two oxide materials, could advance quantum electronics and superconductivity. Published in Science, the findings highlight a long-theorized effect now confirmed in reality.

Rapportert av AI

CERN's BASE experiment has begun more precise antiproton studies thanks to the recent first-ever truck transport of antimatter around the France-Switzerland site. Spokesperson Stefan Ulmer says moving 92 antiprotons away from production magnets is key to probing why the universe has more matter than antimatter.

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.

Rapportert av AI

Researchers at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory have identified plasma rotation as the key factor explaining why particles in fusion tokamaks strike one side of the exhaust system more than the other. Their simulations, which matched real experiments, combined rotation with sideways drifts. The discovery could improve designs for future fusion reactors.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis