Scientists are trying to work out if a strange new
particle, dubbed a “ghost particle”, has been detected at CERN’s Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) in Switzerland.
Using the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) instrument on
the particle accelerator, the team said they had seen a signal that could be a
particle that’s twice the mass of a carbon atom. But as the particle does not
fit known theories, it could cause a bit of a stir if it exists. Their
findings, which have not yet been peer-reviewed, are available on arXiv.
“I’d say theorists are excited and experimentalists
are very skeptical,” Alexandre Nikitenko, a theorist on the CMS team who worked
on the data, told The Guardian. “As a physicist I must be very critical, but as
the author of this analysis I must have some optimism too.”
The team were due to discuss their findings in a
meeting today at CERN. Those findings suggest a build-up of muons, which are
heavy electrons, in the CMS detector. This would correspond to a particle with
a mass of 28GeV, which is about a quarter the mass of the Higgs boson at 125
GeV.
It may take another year to find out if this
particle is real or not, but as Science Alert notes, even if it is real it’s
not exactly physics-breaking. “But it is strange – a mass that has formed where
no mass was expected,” they said.
This isn’t the only particle news we’ve had this
year. In fact, this isn’t even the only “ghost particle” news we’ve had,
because in July, astronomers announced the discovery of neutrinos coming from
an energetic galaxy 4 billion light-years away – a slightly different
discovery, for sure though.
Perhaps more relevant was the news from September
this year, when scientists suggested they “broke the Standard Model” with the
detection of ultra-high energy cosmic neutrinos using the Antarctic Impulsive
Transient Antenna (ANITA).
In March, there was news of the weirdly named
“skyrimon”, a particle with ball lightning-like properties. And also in
September, results at CERN hinted at a particle that seemed to defy the
Standard Model.
Will this latest discovery stand up to scrutiny?
Time will tell. But it's certainly an exciting time for physics at the moment.
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