Particle discovered at CERN solves a 20-year-old mystery

Physicists working on the LHCb experiment have spotted an elusive and
fleeting particle, a heavier and more charming cousin to the proton, that
has been sought for decades

A new particle has popped into existence at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider, a
heavier proton-like particle that contains two charm quarks.

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Protons and neutrons are examples of a class of particles called baryons,
which each contain three fundamental subatomic particles called quarks that
come in a variety of so-called flavours. In the case of a proton, there are
two “up” quarks and one “down” quark that make up the particle.

But heavier quarks, like those known as charm quarks, can also combine to
make baryons. However, because these unusual quark combinations are heavier
and so more unstable, they often have fleetingly short lifetimes and
quickly decay into other particles.

In 2017, physicists working at CERN’s LHCb experiment glimpsed one of these
exotic baryons, memorably named Xicc++, that was made up of two charm
quarks and an up quark. This particle lived for only a trillionth of a
second. Now, physicists working on the LHCb experiment have spotted the
charm-filled sister particle to Xicc++, called the Xicc+particle, which
contains a down quark instead of an up, making it a heavier analogue of the
proton.

This particle had a predicted lifetime of six times shorter than that of
the Xicc++, making it much harder to detect. It was found only after the
LHCb experiment was upgraded to carry out more sensitive particle searches.
The finding has a statistical significance of over 7 sigma, a measure that
physicists use to state how confident they are that the result isn’t a
random fluke, which easily clears the 5-sigma bar required to claim a
discovery.

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“Not only is it interesting discovering the particle in its own right – the
Xicc+ has been searched for for a long time – but it also really shows the
power that these upgrades to the LHC are having,” says Chris Parkes at the
University of Manchester in the UK. “In one year’s data sample, we were
able to see something that we couldn’t see with 10 years of data from the
previous generation.”

Spotting this particle could teach us about how the strong nuclear force,
which describes how quarks bind together, glues together heavier quarks
than those we see in protons and neutrons, says Parkes. But it also
resolves a 20-year-old mystery.

In 2002, physicists working on the SELEX experiment at the Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois thought that they had spotted a particle
that looked very much like Xicc+, but with a much lower mass than predicted
at only a 4.7 sigma level of confidence. “Now we’ve found it, but it’s at a
mass which is similar to its partner [Xicc++] that we found a few years
ago, and not at the mass that was predicted by SELEX,” says Parkes. The
strength of the new discovery closes the door on the question of this
particle’s mass.

“It’s a very interesting measurement, but it’s unclear what we learn from
it,” says Juan Rojo at Vrije University Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
“There is no rule in quantum chromodynamics which prevents this hadron from
existing, but now we’ve measured it exists, we are left not particularly
illuminated.”

Part of this, says Rojo, is because our current theories don’t predict well
how heavier quarks inside baryons should interact or what their masses
should be. “The data is now ahead of the theory for these kinds of
particles, but it could be that in five years from now, this measurement is
able to answer some very important theory questions,” says Rojo, such as
what different combinations of quarks mean for particle masses.

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covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on
the website and the magazine.

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