New issue of symmetry available

March 31, 2009 | 1:10 pm

DZero cover for the March 2009 issue of symmetry.

DZero cover for the March 2009 issue of symmetry.

CDF cover for the March 2009 issue of symmetry.

CDF cover for the March 2009 issue of symmetry.

The latest issue of symmetry (with two alternative covers) is now available online. It features the five-year-old “result of the week” column in Fermilab Today, showing the continual progress in accelerator-based particle physics in the United States. Feature articles also cover how cosmic rays are being used as tools for understanding and predicting weather and climate, and the hunt for rare isotopes using the technique of “fast-beam fragmentation.”

Read about a lighter approach to science in an essay by science comedian Brian Malow and the popular Piled Higher and Deeper comics by Jorge Cham, showing the world of the Large Hadron Collider and CERN from a graduate student’s perspective.

Those of you who have a connection, affiliation, or preference for either the CDF or DZero experiments at Fermilab will be pleased to know that you can choose to view the issue online with the theme based on either the CDF or DZero covers. Choose which you want with the links at the top of the page on your first visit. Otherwise, you’ll get a random choice of cover. (Or should I say pseudo-random after reading Calla’s piece on the Hotbits Web site in symmetry breaking yesterday?!)

Enjoy the new issue online and let us know what you think via letters@symmetrymagazine.org. Print subscribers will be receiving copies of the issue soon, once they filter through the mail system.

David Harris

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Real random

March 30, 2009 | 10:42 am

Random number generators are used for a variety of purposes, from complex mathematics to security and encryption, or for selecting the winner of the church raffle. But did you know that your computer’s random number generator is only–gasp!–pseudo-random? These generators are based on algorithms, and therefore, with enough information about the algorithm, it is possible to predict the next number in a sequence. That defies the one true rule of randomness: that the results be totally unpredictable. Using the standard model of randomness–beta decay–a Web service called Hotbits will generate, upon individual request, genuinely random sequences of numbers, when the pseudo just won’t do.

Random is, by definition, a totally uninspired event. There is no apparent cause or series of events leading up to it. Even the roll of a die could be called non-random, since the numbers that come up are actually the result of a number of forces acting together on the die, including the force of the rollers hand, gravity, air gusts, the surface they fall on, etc.

Hotbits uses the decay of the isotope cesium-137 to generate random numbers. An atom undergoes beta decay when a neutron in its nucleus turns into a proton. It’s not magic: it’s the weak force that makes this possible. The weak force is the only force that will allow for the switch (despite being weaker than the electromagnetic and strong forces). To conserve charge, beta decay also releases an electron (sometimes called the beta particle).

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Calla Cofield

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Under pressure: Run coordinators keep their cool

March 26, 2009 | 8:48 am

Cons Gattuso and Mary Convery in the main FNAL control room choreographing the intricate dance of scientists, engineers, and technicians performing maintenance work around the lab.

Mary Convery and Cons Gattuso in the Fermilab main control room choreographing the intricate dance of scientists, engineers, and technicians performing work around the lab.

After an interrupted power outage in February, dozens of people crowded into a standing-room-only planning meeting. They all wanted access to areas of the collider to do maintenance and repairs.

Cons Gattuso and Mary Convery had to schedule access around the Neutron Therapy Facility cancer treatment schedule while minimizing the amount of beam down time and late hours worked.

“Everyone is looking after their own systems,” Gattuso says. “They have their machines in mind, while we keep an eye on the entire accelerator complex.”

As the Accelerator Division’s current run coordinator and deputy run coordinator, Gattuso and Convery balance running the complex’s day-to-day operations, regular maintenance, and immediate repairs. They also have to mesh the various personalities and interests of hundreds of people working in the AD and detector groups.

“It takes a special personality to make those decisions, to diffuse situations and to make it all work,” says Roger Dixon, AD head.

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Rhianna Wisniewski

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An AliEn in the cloud: new computing environments for high-energy physics

March 25, 2009 | 11:16 am

This text is from a press release issued by the US Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory today.

A novel system is enabling high energy physicists at CERN in Switzerland, to make production runs that integrate their existing pool of distributed computers with dynamic resources in “science clouds.” The work was presented at the 17th annual conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics, held in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21-27.

The integration was achieved by leveraging two mechanisms: the Nimbus Context Broker, developed by computer scientists at the US Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Chicago, and a portable software environment developed at CERN.

Scientists working on A Large Ion Collider Experiment, also known as the ALICE collaboration, are conducting heavy ion simulations at CERN. They have been developing and debugging compute jobs on a collection of internationally distributed resources, managed by a scheduler called AliEn.

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Guest author

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Single top quark in the palm of your hand

March 24, 2009 | 10:25 am

There’s more than one way to find a single top quark.

You can spend more than a decade combing through data from a particle collider, as scientists in Fermilab’s CDF and DZero collaborations did.

Or you can commission one from Julie Peasley, a soft sculpture artist in Los Angeles.

Fermilab recently announced the first observation of the single top quark, a top quark produced without an anti-top quark. Fermilab physicists discovered the top quark in 1995. Until recently, they had only observed top quarks in pairs with their antiparticles.

Physicist Heidi Schellman, a professor at Northwestern University who works with the DZero collaboration, ordered a plush toy version of the top quark from Particle Zoo in honor of the accomplishment.

Particles produced in collisions in the Tevatron, Fermilab’s particle collider, quickly decay into other particles, which physicists use to identify the higher-energy particles from which they came. The single top quark decays into a bottom quark and a W boson, which in turn decays into an electron and a neutrino or a muon and a neutrino.

The decay of the single top quark is similar to the decay expected of a hypothetical charged Higgs boson. So the observation of the single top may represent, among other possibilities, a step toward the discovery of the Higgs.

Schellman contacted Julie Peasley, who sells plush toy versions of fundamental particles in the Standard Model, to commission a top quark that would decay. Peasley came up with the idea of making a top quark with a zipper that would hold two smaller plush toys, an antimuon and a neutrino. The top quark reverses into the third musketeer of the decay, a bottom quark.

Peasley has no background in science, but “this lady understands at a rather deep level how this works,” Schellman said. Peasley started as a graphic designer.

“I’ve always been interested in theoretical physics since I was in high school, reading about the origin of the universe,” she said. She rekindled that interest when she read Warped Passages, a nonfiction book by Lisa Randall, a Harvard professor of physics.

“Particles seemed to have personalities,” Peasley said. “That tied in with my current interest in handmade crafts…The good thing about it is that I can have pretty high artistic license because nobody can tell me, ‘That’s not what it looks like.’”

Schellman has commissioned custom particles before, including three oscillating neutrinos and a decaying strange bottom meson that unzips to reveal a strange quark, a bottom quark, and a gluon. She gave duplicates of the latter to students who graduated after studying strange bottom meson decay.

Schellman only commissioned one decaying top quark. “For now, there’s only one,” she said. “It’s the single top quark.”

Kathryn Grim

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Stimulus funding for Office of Science announced

March 23, 2009 | 11:41 am

Today Secretary of Energy Steven Chu will announce the disbursement of the $1.2 billion first round of stimulus funds for the DOE Office of Science during an event at Brookhaven National Laratory.

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory will receive $34.9 million and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory $68.3 million. Both labs expect that more funds might be sent their way once the Office of Management and Budget approves the remaining $371 million of the Congressional funding allocation directed to the Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

More information in these places:

DOE press release
Detailed breakdown (PDF)
Fact sheet on science investment for stimulating the economy (PDF)

Fermilab press release

SLAC press release

David Harris

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LHC weekly update: March 20, 2009

March 20, 2009 | 8:36 am

This week at the LHC, repairs to the pipeline that supplies the superconducting magnets with supercold helium have been completed. Tomorrow, the last magnet to be replaced because of high internal resistance will be removed from the beamline; its replacement will be put in place next week. Modification of the pressure relief system to allow helium to escape more quickly from the LHC in case of future incidents is 40% complete. Finally, the weekly LHC updates will now become every-other-week updates.

Technical details from the CERN Bulletin.

Katie Yurkewicz

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Particle oddball surprises physicists

March 18, 2009 | 9:39 am

Scientists of the CDF experiment at the Department of Energy’s Fermilab near Chicago have found evidence of an unexpected particle whose curious characteristics may reveal new ways that quarks can combine to form matter. The CDF physicists have called the particle Y(4140), based on how the particle is produced and how much it weighs. The particle now joins the handful of X and Y particles previously discovered at other laboratories, all of which flout nature’s known rules for fitting quarks and antiquarks together.

“It must be trying to tell us something,” said CDF cospokesperson Jacobo Konigsberg of the University of Florida. “So far, we’re not sure what that is, but rest assured we’ll keep on listening.”

CDF physicist Kai Yi, University of Iowa, unveiled the evidence of the Y(4140) particle to scientists at Fermilab at seminar yesterday afternoon, March 17, 2009.

CDF physicist Kai Yi, University of Iowa, unveiled the evidence of the Y(4140) particle to scientists at a seminar at Fermilab yesterday afternoon, March 17, 2009.

Matter as we know it comprises building blocks called quarks. Quarks fit together in various well-established ways to build other particles: mesons, made of a quark-antiquark pair, and baryons, made of three quarks. So far, it’s not clear exactly what Y(4140) is made of. But scientists know that its mass is 4140 Mega-electron volts.

Atoms such as hydrogen and oxygen can combine to form molecules such as water, or H2O. Some theorists think that X and Y particles are the subatomic equivalent of molecular structures, perhaps two mesons bound together for a short period of time. While physicists have an excellent theory (known as Quantum Chromodynamics) that describes the formation of individual mesons and baryons, the forces that govern the extended quark structures underlying the X and Y particles are not well understood, said Fermilab theorist Chris Hill.

The X and Y particle discoveries are not related to the disputed pentaquark observations, which seemed to indicate the existence of particles containing five quarks. Today, scientists reject the notion of pentaquarks since several follow-up experiments failed to confirm initial observations.

In contrast, the discoveries of various X and Y particles have been confirmed by independent observations. For example, the Belle collaboration at the KEK laboratory in Japan discovered the X(3872) particle in 2003, and the CDF collaboration at Fermilab as well as the BaBar collaboration at DOE’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California confirmed the particle’s existence. In 2005, the BaBar collaboration was the first to see the Y(4260) particle.

Last fall, CDF physicist Tommaso Dorigo summarized in his blog the status of precision measurements of the mass of the X(3872) particle, showing that some of these particles are now well-measured but poorly understood.

The Y(4140) particle reported by the CDF collaboration decays into a pair of particles, the J/psi and the phi, suggesting to physicists that it might be a composition of charm and anticharm quarks (also known as charmonium). However, the characteristics of this decay do not fit the conventional expectations for such a make-up, said Kai Yi, of the University of Iowa, who presented the Y(4140) result at a seminar at Fermilab yesterday. Other possible interpretations beyond a simple quark-antiquark structure are hybrid particles that also contain gluons, or even four-quark combinations.

B mesons can decay directly into a J/Ψ (psi) particle and a Φ (phi) particle. The CDF scientists found evidence that some B mesons unexpectedly decay into an intermediate quark structure identified as a Y particle.

B mesons can decay directly into a J/Ψ (psi) particle and a Φ (phi) particle. The CDF scientists found evidence that some B mesons unexpectedly decay into an intermediate quark structure identified as a Y particle.

The CDF scientists observed Y(4140) particles in the decay of a much more commonly produced particle containing a bottom quark, the B+ meson. Sifting through trillions of proton-antiproton collisions from Fermilab’s Tevatron, CDF scientists identified a small sampling of B+ mesons that decayed in an unexpected pattern. Further analysis showed that the B+ mesons were decaying into Y(4140). The 600 scientists of the CDF collaboration submitted a paper on the Y(4140) observation to Physical Review Letters this week.

The Y(4140) particle is the newest member of the family of X-and-Y particles of similar unusual characteristics observed in the last several years by experimenters at Fermilab’s Tevatron as well as at KEK laboratory and at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. The Tevatron experiments used collisions of protons and antiprotons to produce the new particles, while the experiments at KEK and SLAC relied on electron-positron collisions.

“We congratulate CDF on the first evidence for a new unexpected Y state that decays to J/psi and phi,” said Japanese physicist Masanori Yamauchi, a cospokesperson of KEK’s Belle experiment. “This state may be related to the Y(3940) state discovered by Belle and might be another example of an exotic hadron containing charm quarks. We will try to confirm this state in our own Belle data.”

Theoretical physicists are trying to decode the true nature of these exotic combinations of quarks that fall outside our current understanding of mesons and baryons. Meanwhile experimentalists happily continue to search for more such particles.

“We’re building upon our knowledge piece by piece,” said CDF cospokesperson Rob Roser of Fermilab, “and with enough pieces, we’ll understand how this puzzle fits together.”

Kurt Riesselmann

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SuperB moves forward

March 16, 2009 | 12:54 pm

This article first appeared in SLAC Today on March 16, 2009.

Researchers from around the world have proposed building a SuperB factory in Italy.

Researchers from around the world have proposed building a SuperB factory in Italy.

The BaBar and Belle B factories proved so successful that they have spawned a study for a successor: the SuperB factory. The proposal in Italy to build such a machine, which would produce electron–positron collisions 100 times more intense than the BaBar B factory’s PEP-II storage ring, is gaining momentum, and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory researchers are major players in the research and development efforts.

“There are many ways in which SLAC could be involved in SuperB in the future,” said David MacFarlane, deputy director of Particle Physics and Astrophysics at the laboratory. “SLAC has key expertise to bring to this project, based on our experience building and operating the PEP-II collider and BaBar.”

As R&D efforts ramp up around the world, SLAC researchers are getting involved, with two small new departments created in the laboratory’s Particle Physics and Astrophysics directorate earlier this month. The newly fledged SuperB Accelerator Department, led by Mike Sullivan, will soon begin work on several components of the SuperB collider, including the electromagnets, vacuum chambers, radio frequency systems and power supplies. The SuperB Detector Department, led by David Leith, is likely to work on the electromagnetic calorimeter, which measures the energy of particles, as well as research and development towards a new readout system for the particle identification system.

SLAC may also contribute existing accelerator and detector components to the project. The conceptual design, as it currently stands, will reuse many PEP-II parts if they are not needed in the United States, as well as several detector systems from BaBar. These components would offset a significant fraction of the costs for SuperB and would represent a significant enabling contribution by the Department of Energy and the US high-energy physics community.

“SLAC has been a leading steward to electron accelerator physics in the US, leaving a very special fingerprint on the world—with experiment, accelerator and theory all working very closely together,” said Leith. “The laboratory’s involvement in SuperB would continue that.”

A proposal for this next-generation machine is already well underway, and the project’s 150 international collaborators—including many current and former BaBar scientists—plan to present it to the Italian government later this year. Official Italian approval for the conceptual design, which is hoped for by the end of the year, would allow civil construction on the machine’s tunnels and buildings to begin at the University of Rome campus near the Frascati physics laboratory.

Researchers began work on SuperB’s more detailed technical design report at a workshop last month in France. This report, which is made possible through initial funding by the Italian government and the regional government of Lazio, should be completed by 2011. It will describe in detail a machine that could not only uniquely investigate the effects of any new physics results that come out of the Large Hadron Collider, but could also offer brand new tests of CP violation, which is thought to explain why the universe is composed of matter and not antimatter. While SLAC’s B factory studied CP violation in B mesons, SuperB could reach unprecedented levels of precision in extending these studies while also allowing new studies of the lepton sector by expanding CP violation searches to polarized tau leptons.

“It opens a door to an entirely new world of looking at lepton CP violation, and can also tell us more about any LHC finding,” said Leith. “It’s a very exciting discovery machine.”

Kelen Tuttle

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The Straight Dope on the "God Particle"

March 16, 2009 | 10:17 am

When does a physics experiment become cool? Honestly, almost never. But the LHC has defied expectation. It’s popped up on a number of major news outlets, both print and video, but perhaps more surprisingly, it has also appeared in entertainment venues like The Daily Show, The Hills, and YouTube (thanks to the fantastic LHC rap).

Even as the LHC cools down for the winter, the momentum of public interest hasn’t stopped. The experiment was the subject of a recent edition of The Straight Dope, a popular syndicated newspaper column in the Chicago Reader, with a loyal following online, in about thirty newspapers nationwide, and through six books. The Straight Dope, which is subtitled “Fighting Ignorance Since 1973 (it’s taking longer than we thought)”, answers weekly reader questions that are often about topics where a mishmash of information is thrown around in the public arena, or for which wikipedia does not have a straight answer. Many of the columns are essentially scientific, but brutally non-technical such as, “Could I survive on nothing but potatoes and milk?” or “Is anybody in charge of keeping satellites from colliding?” The column’s author Cecil Adams (aka Uncle Cecil) keeps the attention of his readers by cutting out any jargon and just giving them…the straight dope.

The question on March 6 was simply, “What is the God Particle?” The column did provide a very simple, non-scientific answer, which is sometimes difficult to find among the hoards of information about the LHC and its particle pursuits. Adams uses a great analogy for the Higgs particle involving political groupies clustering around Barack Obama.

The article did mention the lawsuits submitted by persons who feared that the LHC would create a black hole and swallow the earth. While the author did not support the claims, he also did not dispute them, nor mention that every physicist who is knowledgeable in the subject denies that such a thing could happen. But, it seems the LHC is only as popular as the disasters it will never create.

Calla Cofield

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