PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

First observation of ultra-rare process that could uncover new physics

2024-09-24
(Press-News.org) Scientists at CERN have discovered an ultra-rare particle decay process, opening a new path to find physics beyond our understanding of how the building blocks of matter interact. 

Today the NA62 collaboration presented at a CERN EP seminar the first experimental observation of the ultra-rare decay of the charged kaon into a charged pion and a neutrino-antineutrino pair (K+ → π p+νν).  

This is an ultra-rare occurrence - the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics, which explains how particles interact, predicts that less than one in 10 billion kaons will decay in this way. The NA62 experiment has been designed and constructed specifically to measure this kaon decay.  

Cristina Lazzeroni, Professor in Particle Physics at the University of Birmingham, commented: “With this measurement, K+ → π p+νν becomes the rarest decay established at discovery level - the famous 5 sigma. This difficult analysis is the result of excellent teamwork, and I am extremely proud of this new result.” 

Kaons are produced by a high-intensity proton beam provided by the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS), colliding with a stationary target. This creates a beam of secondary particles with almost a billion particles per second flying into the NA62 detector, about 6% of which are charged kaons. The detector identifies and measures precisely each kaon and its decay products, except neutrinos which show up as missing energy. 

Professor Giuseppe Ruggiero, from the University of Florence, commented: “This is the culmination of a long project started more than a decade ago. Looking for effects in nature that have probabilities to happen of the order of 10 -11 is fascinating and challenging. After rigorous and painstaking work, we have got a stunning reward to our effort and delivered a long-awaited result.” 

The new result is based on the combination of data taken by the NA62 experiment in 2021–22 and a previously published result based on the 2016-18 dataset.  The 2021-22 dataset was collected following a suite of upgrades to the NA62 setup, allowing operation at 30% higher beam intensity with several new and improved detectors.  

The hardware upgrades combined with refined analysis techniques allowed collection of signal candidates at a 50% higher rate than before, while adding new tools to suppress backgrounds. 

A group of scientists from the University of Birmingham, currently led by Professor Evgueni Goudzovski, joined the NA62 experiment at the design phase in 2007 – playing a central role in the collaboration.  

Professor Goudzovski commented: “Attracting top talent and offering positions of responsibility to early-career researchers has always been the priority for the group. We are proud that both the current NA62 physics coordinator and the current convener of the K+ → π p+νν measurement are former Birmingham PhD students. It is a privilege to work in and lead such an energetic and constructive team.” 

The research team is studying the K+ → π p+νν decay because it is very sensitive to new physics beyond the SM description. This makes the decay one of the most interesting processes to search for evidence of new physics. 

The fraction of kaons that decay into a pion and two neutrinos is measured to be about 13 in 100 billion. This matches SM predictions but is about 50% higher. This could be due to new particles that increase the likelihood of this decay, but more data is needed to confirm this idea. The NA62 experiment is currently collecting data and scientists hope to confirm or rule out the presence of new physics in this decay within the next few years. 

ENDS 

For more information, interviews or an embargoed copy of the research paper, please contact University of Birmingham Press Office pressoffice@contacts.bham.ac.uk or +44 (0)121 414 2772. 
Notes to editor: 

The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions. Its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers, teachers and more than 8,000 international students from over 150 countries. 

CERN seminars: https://indico.cern.ch/event/1447422/ 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New indoor vertical farming research could help future-proof food demand for a changing planet

New indoor vertical farming research could help future-proof food demand for a changing planet
2024-09-24
To make sure everyone eats well in our crowded world, we need to innovate. Vertical farming systems, which grow plants intensively in an indoor setting, could be part of the answer – but to use them on a large scale we need to overcome key problems, especially the management of the energy-intensive, expensive light the plants need to grow. Now scientists show how manipulating light according to the needs of specific crops could make them grow stronger and healthier while minimizing energy use. “The biggest benefit of vertical farming systems is that healthy food can be grown ...

Common brain network detected among veterans with traumatic brain injury could protect against PTSD

2024-09-24
A Brigham led study suggests using neurostimulation therapies on a specific brain circuit could treat post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)  KEY TAKEAWAYS Brigham researchers analyzed 193 patients from the Vietnam Head Injury Study with penetrating traumatic brain injury to determine if the location of shrapnel damage to their brains influenced risk of developing PTSD. Damage to areas connected to the amygdala was associated with a lower chance of developing PTSD. The study suggests lesions that could protect against PTSD map to a specific brain circuit connected to the amygdala and the medial prefrontal ...

Duke-NUS study finds outbreak detection under-resourced in Asia

2024-09-24
SINGAPORE, 24 September 2024 – A landmark study led by Duke-NUS Medical School revealed that despite the recent pandemic, outbreak detection efforts remain under-resourced in South and Southeast Asia, with only about half the countries reviewed having integrated pathogen genomic surveillance initiatives in their national plans. Published in Nature Microbiology today, the study also identifies key priorities to enhance the preparedness of the region against future pandemics. The study, conducted over 12 months between 2022 and 2023, analyses responses on genomic sequencing capacity for pathogen detection from 13 out of 19 countries that make up South and Southeast Asia. The ...

Lengthened consonants mark the beginning of words

Lengthened consonants mark the beginning of words
2024-09-24
Distinguishing between words is one of the most difficult tasks in decoding spoken language. Yet humans do it effortlessly - even when languages do not seem to clearly mark where one word ends and the next begins. The acoustic cues that aid this process are poorly understood and understudied for the vast majority of the world's languages. Now, for the first time, comparative linguists have observed a pattern of acoustic effects that may serve as a distinct marker across diverse languages: the systematic lengthening of consonants at the beginning ...

Astronomers catch a glimpse of a uniquely inflated and asymmetric exoplanet

Astronomers catch a glimpse of a uniquely inflated and asymmetric exoplanet
2024-09-24
Astronomers from the University of Arizona, along with an international group of researchers, observed the atmosphere of a hot and uniquely inflated exoplanet using NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. The exoplanet, which is the size of Jupiter but only a tenth of its mass, is found to have east-west asymmetry in its atmosphere, meaning that there is a significant difference between the two edges of its atmosphere.  The findings are published in the journal Nature Astronomy.  "This is the first time the east-west asymmetry of any exoplanet has ...

TGen named Certified Service Provider for PacBio

2024-09-24
The Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), part of City of Hope, today announced that is has received Certified Service Provider status from PacBio, a leading developer of high-quality, highly accurate sequencing solutions. The certification follows the addition of the Revio and Onso platforms to TGen’s Collaborative Sequencing Service Center, which provides investigators with access to best-in-class short and long read sequencing instrumentation to support all analysis needs including ...

The environmental impacts of genetically modified crops

2024-09-24
Genetically modified (GM) crops are widely used around the world, but their effects on the environment need to be explored more. New research, published in Science on August 30, 2024, takes a look at common genetic modifications in four crops: soybean, corn, cotton, and canola. Although GM crops can produce more yield and profits, it can lead to changes in agricultural practices that could inadvertently impact the environment. For example, farmers may increase pesticide use as crops become more resistant to herbicides ...

Graphene spike mat and fridge magnet technology to fight against antibiotic resistance

Graphene spike mat and fridge magnet technology to fight against antibiotic resistance
2024-09-24
With strong bactericidal properties, graphene has the potential to become a game changer in the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria. So far there have been no efficient ways to control these properties – and thus no way to make use of graphene’s potential in healthcare. Now researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, in Sweden, have solved the problem by using the same technology found in an ordinary fridge magnet. The result of which, is an ultra-thin acupuncture-like surface that can act as a coating on catheters and implants – killing 99.9 percent of all bacteria on a surface. Healthcare-associated infections are a widespread problem around ...

Queen’s University Belfast to launch Figshare-powered repository to share, showcase and manage its research data and theses

Queen’s University Belfast to launch Figshare-powered repository to share, showcase and manage its research data and theses
2024-09-24
Figshare, a leading provider of institutional repository infrastructure that supports open research, is pleased to announce that Queen’s University Belfast has chosen Figshare as its new repository platform to store, showcase and manage its research data and theses outputs. Queen’s – a prestigious Russell Group UK university and ranked in the top 250 universities in the world – chose Figshare as its new repository platform owing to a selection of core features and functionality that will support the team in creating proficient ...

Nursing shortages can be deadly

2024-09-24
A new paper in the British Journal of Surgery, published by Oxford University Press, shows that nursing shortages result in longer hospital stays and worse patient outcomes, including higher mortality. Doctors perform over 300 million surgeries each year worldwide. Observers have expressed concern about the quality of care for adult patients undergoing surgery and the rising cost of avoidable complications, extended hospitalizations, and readmissions. Some 55% of surgical site infections are preventable. Until now ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New report from the University of Phoenix Career Institute® and the Center on Rural Innovation reveals keys to retaining rural America’s future generation

Greenhouse gas emissions from silage fed to livestock

The impact of AI on specific jobs

Diagnosing respiratory infections with breath

Well-being as student success

Spinning artificial spider silk into next-generation medical materials

Low-temperature conversion of ammonia to hydrogen via electric field-aided surface protonics

Challenges in availing reproductive health services experienced by migrant Nepalese men and women in Japan

A risky business: Why do some Parkinson’s disease treatments affect decision making?

New species of flatworm invading the United States

First observation of ultra-rare process that could uncover new physics

New indoor vertical farming research could help future-proof food demand for a changing planet

Common brain network detected among veterans with traumatic brain injury could protect against PTSD

Duke-NUS study finds outbreak detection under-resourced in Asia

Lengthened consonants mark the beginning of words

Astronomers catch a glimpse of a uniquely inflated and asymmetric exoplanet

TGen named Certified Service Provider for PacBio

The environmental impacts of genetically modified crops

Graphene spike mat and fridge magnet technology to fight against antibiotic resistance

Queen’s University Belfast to launch Figshare-powered repository to share, showcase and manage its research data and theses

Nursing shortages can be deadly

60-second heartbeat recordings offer window into autonomic health after severe brain trauma

Psychedelic drug psilocybin changes brain connectivity to treat body dysmorphic disorder

Google trends reveals surge in ADHD medication searches during COVID-19 pandemic

Multiple sclerosis symptoms at onset linked to long-term disability

New catalyst developed for sustainable propylene production from biomass

Nearly 200 potential mammary carcinogens found in food contact materials: new study highlights regulatory shortcomings

Mechanism behind autophagy trigger unveiled

Study: Good nutrition boosts honey bee resilience against pesticides, viruses

New battery cathode material could revolutionize EV market and energy storage

[Press-News.org] First observation of ultra-rare process that could uncover new physics