Unexpected data from the
Large Hadron Collider suggest the collisions may be producing a new type
of matter
November 27, 2012 by Anne Trafton
Unexpected data from the Large Hadron Collider suggest the collisions
may be producing a new type of matter
Enlarge
A proton collides with a lead nucleus, sending a shower of particles
through the ALICE detector. The ATLAS, CMS and LHCb experiments also
recorded collisions. Credit: Alice/CERN
Collisions between protons and lead ions at the Large Hadron Collider
(LHC) have produced surprising behavior in some of the particles created
by the collisions. The new observation suggests the collisions may have
produced a new type of matter known as color-glass condensate.
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When beams of particles crash into each other at high speeds, the
collisions yield hundreds of new particles, most of which fly away from
the collision point at close to the speed of light. However, the Compact
Muon Solenoid (CMS) team at the LHC found that in a sample of 2 million
lead-proton collisions, some pairs of particles flew away from each
other with their respective directions correlated.
"Somehow they fly at the same direction even though it's not clear how
they can communicate their direction with one another. That has
surprised many people, including us," says MIT physics professor Gunther
Roland, whose group led the analysis of the collision data along with
Wei Li, a former MIT postdoc who is now an assistant professor at Rice
University.
A paper describing the unexpected findings will appear in an upcoming
issue of the journal Physical Review B and is now available on arXiv.
The MIT heavy-ion group, which includes Roland and MIT physics
professors Bolek Wyslouch and Wit Busza, saw the same distinctive
pattern in proton-proton collisions about two years ago. The same flight
pattern is also seen when ions of lead or other heavy metals, such as
gold and copper, collide with each other.
Those heavy-ion collisions produce a wave of quark gluon plasma, the hot
soup of particles that existed for the first few millionths of a second
after the Big Bang. In the collider, this wave sweeps some of the
resulting particles in the same direction, accounting for the
correlation in their flight paths.
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It has been theorized that proton-proton collisions may produce a
liquid-like wave of gluons, known as color-glass condensate. This dense
swarm of gluons may also produce the unusual collision pattern seen in
proton-lead collisions, says Raju Venugopalan, a senior scientist at
Brookhaven National Laboratory, who was not involved in the current
research.
Venugopalan and his former student Kevin Dusling theorized the existence
of color-glass condensate shortly before the particle direction
correlation was seen in proton-proton collisions. While protons at
normal energy levels consist of three quarks, they tend to gain an
accompanying cluster of gluons at higher energy levels. These gluons
exist as both particles and waves, and their wave functions can be
correlated with each other. This "quantum entanglement" explains how the
particles that fly away from the collision can share information such
as direction of flight path, Venugopalan says.
The correlation is "a very tiny effect, but it's pointing to something
very fundamental about how quarks and gluons are arranged spatially
within a proton," he says.
The CMS researchers originally set out to use the lead-proton collisions
as a "reference system" for comparison with lead-lead collisions.
"You don't expect quark gluon plasma effects" with lead-proton
collisions, Roland says. "It was supposed to be sort of a reference
run—a run in which you can study background effects and then subtract
them from the effects that you see in lead-lead collisions."
That run lasted only four hours, but in January, the CMS collaboration
plans to do several weeks of lead-proton collisions, which should allow
them to establish whether the collisions really are producing a liquid,
Roland says. This should help narrow down the possible explanations and
determine if the effects seen in proton-proton, lead-proton and
lead-lead collisions are related.
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-11-unexpected-large-hadron-collider-collisions.html#jCp
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2012-11-unexpected-large-hadron-collider-collisions.html#jCp
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