Charge symmetry breaking has been observed in two experiments reported
at the recent American Physical Society meeting in Philadelphia. In
the 1930s, physicist Werner Heisenberg proposed that the neutron and
proton are simply slightly different manifestations of the same particle,
called the "nucleon." Modern nuclear physics endorses this
view: plenty of nuclear reactions proceed exactly the same way if a
proton takes the place of a neutron, or vice versa. However, this close
similarity breaks down in some cases, leading to a situation known as
"charge symmetry breaking" (CSB). In separate experiments
at the Indiana University Cyclotron Facility (IUCF) and the TRIUMF cyclotron
in Canada, researchers have made groundbreaking new measurements of
CSB (which, incidentally, is a nuclear-physics phenomenon completely
different from charge [C] conjugation in particle physics). Such CSB
measurements can provide deep insights into why nature gave the neutron
and proton slightly different masses. At an even more fundamental level,
the CSB measurements can potentially yield more precise values of the
mass difference between the up and down quarks that make up protons
and neutrons. Nuclear theorists are busily analyzing these new experimental
results to put tighter constraints on the up-down mass difference.
At the APS meeting, Ed
Stephenson of Indiana University announced the first unambiguous
identification of a rare process: the fusion of two nuclei of heavy
hydrogen to form a nucleus of helium and an uncharged pion, one of the
subatomic particles responsible for the strong force that binds nuclei
together. This process would not exist at all were it not that nature
allowed a small violation of charge symmetry. Over a two-month period,
researchers observed this rare reaction several dozen times, giving
physicists enough data to test theories of charge-symmetry breaking.
Representing a collaboration at TRIUMF, Allena
Opper of Ohio University discussed the detection of CSB in another
nuclear reaction: the fusion of a proton and neutron, which produces
a charged pion as one of its products. Viewed from a perspective or
("reference frame") at which the proton and neutron meet at the center,
the reaction, repeated man times, produces a small excess of pions (0.17%)
in a preferred direction. Such an asymmetry is a hallmark of CSB. Taken
together, these new CSB results promise a wealth of information on such
things as the slightly different electromagnetic fields inside each
nucleon. As it turns out, such fields may contribute to the proton-neutron
mass difference, as they carry energy which convert into a small amount
of mass.