New Heaviest Exotic Antimatter Nucleus Scientists teasing

2024.09.02.
New Heaviest Exotic Antimatter Nucleus Scientists teasing

The RHIC STAR collaboration, in which ELTE is an official participant, has detected exotic antiparticles by analyzing six billion particle collisions. This discovery could help researchers understand the differences between matter and antimatter.

As reported by the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in a news release recently, scientists studying the tracks of particles streaming from six billion collisions of atomic nuclei at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) — an “atom smasher” that recreates the conditions of the early universe — have discovered a new kind of antimatter nucleus, the heaviest ever detected. Composed of four antimatter particles — an antiproton, two antineutrons, and one antihyperon — these exotic antinuclei are known as antihyperhydrogen-4.

Members of RHIC’s STAR Collaboration made the discovery by using their house-sized particle detector to analyze details of the collision debris. They report their results in the journal Nature and explain how they’ve already used these exotic antiparticles to look for differences between matter and antimatter.

An artistic representation of antihyperhydrogen-4 — an antimatter hypernucleus consisting of one antiproton, two antineutrons, and one antilambda particle — created by the collision of two gold nuclei (left). (Image source: Institute of Modern Physics, China)

“Our physics knowledge about matter and antimatter is that, except for having opposite electric charges, antimatter has the same properties as matter — same mass, same lifetime before decaying, and same interactions,” said STAR collaborator Junlin Wu, a graduate student at the Joint Department for Nuclear Physics, Lanzhou University and Institute of Modern Physics, China. But the reality is that our universe is made of matter rather than antimatter, even though both are believed to have been created in equal amounts at the time of the Big Bang some 14 billion years ago.

“Why our universe is dominated by matter is still a question, and we don’t know the full answer,” Wu said.

RHIC, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science user facility for nuclear physics research at DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, is a good place to study antimatter. Its collisions of heavy ions — atomic nuclei that have been stripped of their electrons and accelerated close to the speed of light — melt the boundaries of the ions’ individual protons and neutrons. The energy deposited in the resulting soup of free quarks and gluons, visible matter’s most fundamental building blocks, generates thousands of new particles. And like the early universe, RHIC makes matter and antimatter in nearly equal amounts. Comparing characteristics of matter and antimatter particles generated in these particle smashups might offer clues to some asymmetry that tipped the balance to favor the existence of matter in today’s world.

“Research on the strong force, which binds nuclei together and determines their structure, can be conducted at large particle accelerators like RHIC, the SPS and LHC in Geneva, or the FAIR being built in Germany. The situation is similar to the 19th-century research on electricity, its understanding, and eventual application. We are currently gaining a deeper understanding of this interaction, and the accumulated knowledge already has various applications, from medicine to materials science,” said Máté Csanád, university professor and leader of the STAR-ELTE research group.

ELTE is an official participant in the STAR collaboration. The STAR-ELTE research group operates within the Institute of Physics at the Department of Atomic Physics, as part of the Astrophysics and Particle Physics Thematic Excellence Program. Participation in the STAR experiment is also currently supported by the NKFIH OTKA K-138136 and PD-146589 projects.

Members of the research group are personally involved in data collection, and the researchers at ELTE play a crucial role in data analysis, with a particular focus on femtoscopy measurements; Máté Csanád was also the leading the data archiving effortsfor the experiment and is currently a member of the committee coordinating invited lectures within the collaboration.

 

Detecting heavy antimatter

Composite image of the STAR detector and an example of particle tracks it detects emerging from a gold-gold collision at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory. (Joe Rubino and Jen Abramowitz/Brookhaven National Laboratory)

“To study the matter-antimatter asymmetry, the first step is to discover new antimatter particles,” said STAR physicist Hao Qiu, Wu’s advisor at IMP. “That’s the basic logic behind this study.”

STAR physicists had previously observed nuclei made of antimatter created in RHIC collisions. In 2010, they detected the antihypertriton. This was the first instance of an antimatter nucleus containing a hyperon, which is a particle containing at least one “strange” quark rather than just the lighter “up” and “down” quarks that make up ordinary protons and neutrons. Then, just a year later, STAR physicists toppled that heavyweight antimatter record by detecting the antimatter equivalent of the helium nucleus: antihelium-4.

A more recent analysis suggested that antihyperhydrogen-4 might also be within reach. But detecting this unstable antihypernucleus — where the addition of an antihyperon (specifically an antilambda particle) in place of one of the protons in antihelium would edge out the heavyweight record holder once again — would be a rare event. It would require all four components — one antiproton, two antineutrons, and one antilambda — to be emitted from the quark-gluon soup generated in RHIC collisions in just the right place, headed in the same direction, and at the right time to clump together into a temporarily bound state.

“It is only by chance that you have these four constituent particles emerge from the RHIC collisions close enough together that they can combine to form this antihypernucleus,” said Brookhaven Lab physicist Lijuan Ruan, one of two co-spokespersons for the STAR Collaboration

 

Needle in a “pi” stack

To find antihyperhydrogen-4, the STAR physicists looked at the tracks of the particles this unstable antihypernucleus decays into. One of those decay products is the previously detected antihelium-4 nucleus; the other is a simple positively charged particle called a pion (pi+).

“Since antihelium-4 was already discovered in STAR, we used the same method used previously to pick up those events and then reconstructed them with pi+ tracks to find these particles,” Wu said.

By reconstruct, he means retracing the trajectories of the antihelium-4 and pi+ particles to see if they emerged from a single point. But RHIC smashups produce a lot of pions. And to find the rare antihypernuclei, the scientists were sifting through billions of collision events! Each antihelium-4 emerging from a collision could be paired with hundreds or even 1,000 pi+ particles.

“The key was to find the ones where the two particle tracks have a crossing point, or decay vertex, with particular characteristics,” Ruan said. That is, the decay vertex has to be far enough from the collision point that the two particles could have originated from the decay of an antihypernucleus formed just after the collision from particles initially generated in the fireball.

The STAR team worked hard to rule out the background of all the other potential decay pair partners. In the end, their analysis turned up 22 candidate events with an estimated background count of 6.4.

“That means around six of the ones that look like decays from antihyperhydrogen-4 may just be random noise,” said Emilie Duckworth, a doctoral student at Kent State University whose role was to ensure that the computer code used to sift through all those events and pick out the signals was written properly.

Subtracting that background from 22 gives the physicists confidence they’ve detected about 16 actual antihyperhydrogen-4 nuclei.

 

Matter-antimatter comparison

The result was significant enough for the STAR team to do some direct matter-antimatter comparisons.

They compared the lifetime of antihyperhydrogen-4 with that of hyperhydrogen-4, which is made of the ordinary-matter varieties of the same building blocks. They also compared lifetimes for another matter-antimatter pair: the antihypertriton and the hypertriton.

Neither showed a significant difference, which did not surprise the scientists.

The experiments, they explained, were a test of a particularly strong form of symmetry. Physicists generally agree that a violation of this symmetry would be extremely rare and will not hold the answer to the matter-antimatter imbalance in the universe.

“If we were to see a violation of [this particular] symmetry, basically we’d have to throw a lot of what we know about physics out the window,” Duckworth said.

So, in this case, it was sort of comforting that the symmetry still works. The team agreed the results further confirmed that physicists’ models are correct and are “a great step forward in the experimental research on antimatter.”

The next step will be to measure the mass difference between the particles and antiparticles, which Duckworth, who was selected in 2022 to receive funding from the DOE Office of Science Graduate Student Research program, is pursuing.

 

The scientific publication: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07823-0

Source of the press release: Brookhaven National Laboratory, ELTE-STAR Research Group