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Another Universe behind our Universe?
How fast do fundamental particles wobble? A surprising answer to this seemingly inconsequential question has come out of Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York, USA and may not only indicate that the Standard Model of Particle Physics is incomplete but also that our universe is filled with a previously undetected type of fundamental particle. Specifically, the muon, a particle with similarities to a heavy electron, has had its relatively large wobble under scrutiny since 1999 in an experiment known as g-2 (gee-minus-two), pictured above. The result has galvanized other experimental groups around the world to confirm it, and pressures theorists to better understand it. The rate of wobble is sensitive to a strange sea of virtual particles that pop into and out of existence everywhere. The unexpected wobble rate may indicate that this sea houses virtual particles that include nearly invisible supersymmetric counterparts to known particles. If so, a nearly invisible universe of real supersymmetric particles might exist all around us.
Parole chiave: Theoretical Physics

Another Universe behind our Universe?

How fast do fundamental particles wobble? A surprising answer to this seemingly inconsequential question has come out of Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York, USA and may not only indicate that the Standard Model of Particle Physics is incomplete but also that our universe is filled with a previously undetected type of fundamental particle. Specifically, the muon, a particle with similarities to a heavy electron, has had its relatively large wobble under scrutiny since 1999 in an experiment known as g-2 (gee-minus-two), pictured above. The result has galvanized other experimental groups around the world to confirm it, and pressures theorists to better understand it. The rate of wobble is sensitive to a strange sea of virtual particles that pop into and out of existence everywhere. The unexpected wobble rate may indicate that this sea houses virtual particles that include nearly invisible supersymmetric counterparts to known particles. If so, a nearly invisible universe of real supersymmetric particles might exist all around us.

Fornax in X-ray.jpg Fox Fur Nebula.jpg G - 2.jpg G29-38-PIA03652-1.jpg GRB-00.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:G - 2.jpg
Nome album:Deep Sky Objects
Valutazione (14 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Theoretical / Physics
Copyright:R. Bowman, g-2 Collaboration, BNL, DOE
Dimensione del file:94 KiB
Data di inserimento:Ago 28, 2005
Dimensioni:650 x 490 pixels
Visualizzato:135 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=7064
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