Research Highlights
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Quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of the strong interaction, has been very successful in describing high-energy and short-distance-scale experiments, and less successful in explaining low-energy and large-distance scales. However, the symmetries of QCD (such as chiral symmetry) provide guiding principles in treating the non-perturbative regime.
The MiniBooNE Collaboration reports first results of a search for ? e appearance in a ? µ beam. Using a 40-foot spherical tank filled with 800 tons of mineral oil in the Booster neutrino beam at Fermilab, no signicant excess of events above background is observed for reconstructed neutrino energies above 475 MeV. The data are consistent with no oscillations within a two-neutrino appearance-only oscillation model. However, an unexplained excess of events is observed for reconstructed neutrino energies below 475 MeV.
The Kamioka Liquid-scintillator Anti-Neutrino Detector (KamLAND) experiment is a reactor anti-neutrino experiment that searches for neutrino oscillation using a baseline that is two orders of magnitude larger than that in any previous reactor measurement. Results to date have shown that some electron anti-neutrinos disappear on their journey from their originating reactor to the detector. KamLAND's latest results also show a distortion in the neutrino energy spectrum that is consistent with neutrino oscillation and strongly disfavors other neutrino disappearance mechanisms. While the Standard Model assumes neutrinos to be without mass, neutrino disappearance through oscillation is evidence that neutrinos do have mass. The KamLAND experiment continues to take data and will provide the most precise determination of Δm122, a key oscillation parameter, in the foreseeable future.
The most precise measurement yet of strange quarks in the proton, performed at the Department of Energy's Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (Jefferson Lab) by the second phase of the Hall A Proton Parity Experiment (HAPPEx II), shows that the strange quark contribution to the proton's overall charge distribution and magnetic moment is small. Indeed, it yields no more than 2% of the proton charge radius and less than 4% of its magnetic moment. This result firmly pins down strange quark contributions (at one specific length scale, Q2=0.1 GeV2) to the proton's charge distribution and magnetic form factor, constraining the world experimental data to less than half of its previous range. The HAPPEx II result was a highlight of the Dallas APS Meeting in April 2006.
2005 Nobel Prize in Physics
The 2005 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded in
part to Roy
J. Glauber of Harvard University "for his contribution
to the quantum theory of optical coherence." Glauber provides
an excellent example of the interrelationships between physics
subfields. His work on quantum optics is recognized as a major
contribution to Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics (AMO).
A few years before his seminal work on the coherent
quantum states of photons, he used the eikonal approximation in
his development of a high-energy multiple scattering theory, known
as "Glauber theory". This remains a major contribution
to High Energy and Nuclear Physics. Glauber's famous 1959 lectures
at Boulder, Colorado, developed his widely used theory for evaluating
the scattering of protons, or other hadrons, as a sequence of
collisions with different nucleons in a nucleus. At high energies,
such processes involve multiple diffraction of the incident waves
from the individual nucleons, showing a close and beautiful connection
with optical diffraction. In addition to his work in quantum optics,
Glauber remains interested in high-energy scattering theory.
The 2005 Nobel Prize announcement can be found
here.
For physicists the nucleus 6He, with
2 protons and 4 neutrons, has been intriguing for quite some time.
Measurements in the eighties and nineties have indicated that,
when used as a beam, the probability for it to induce a nuclear
reaction on any target is much larger than that for 4He.
This observation was interpreted as a strong indication that 6He
is a three-body "halo" nucleus, i.e., it can be best
viewed as a well bound 4He core and 2 neutrons orbiting
this core at large distances. Moreover, while these three constituents
of 6He form a bound system, the nuclear potential is
not strong enough to bind any two of them separately. For this
reason, 6He is often referred to as "Borromean"
(The name derives from the heraldic emblem of the medieval princes
of Borromeo, three rings interlocked in such a way that the removal
of any of the rings will cause the remaining two to fall apart).
The charge radius of 6He has been determined
for the first time by measuring the atomic isotope shift between
6He and 4He using laser spectroscopy.
2004 Nobel Prize in Physics
The 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to
David Gross, David Politzer, and Frank Wilczek for their work
on asymptotic freedom, which helped establish quantum chromodynamics
(QCD) as the theory of the strong interactions that bind the atomic
nucleus. Asymptotic freedom is a property of the interaction between
the quarks that make up protons, neutrons, and other subatomic
particles. The proton and neutron are strongly bound systems of
three quarks, but the interaction between the quarks becomes very
weak at short distances, or at high energies.
QCD is a central part of modern nuclear physics research. A detailed
understanding of the confinement of quarks, and the role of the
gluons that bind the quarks together into observable mesons and
baryons is central to the research of intermediate energy physicists.
How the nuclear force among protons and neutrons arises from QCD
remains one of the most important problems in nuclear physics.
Relativistic heavy ion physicists focus on the deconfinement of
quarks into a quark-gluon plasma at high temperatures. Nuclear
theorists and astrophysicists recent studies include interesting
ideas on the properties of QCD matter at high densities and low
temperatures, such as is found in neutron stars.
The 2004 Nobel Prize announcement can be found here.
During a recent experiment at Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator
Facility (Jefferson Lab, or JLab), precision data have been obtained,
for the first time, on the spin structure of the neutron in the
valence quark region. Such data provide an important test
of our fundamental understanding of the nucleon structure and
the spin/flavor features of the strong interaction. In particular,
they suggest the importance of the quark orbital angular momentum
in the nucleon spin.
The spin structure of the nucleon has been studied for over thirty
years (for a review, see e.g. Adv. Nucl. Phys. 26,
1 (2001)). The first set of data on the proton polarized structure
functions from CERN in the late 1980's, combined with earlier
data from SLAC, showed that only (12±17)% of the nucleon spin
could be attributed to the quark spin. This result contradicted
the valence quark model expectation, in which about 75% of the
nucleon spin arises from the spin of the three valence quarks.
Since the quark model is so successful as a qualitative guide
to hadronic study, this observation was so surprising that it
was named "the proton spin crisis"
-- Where does the rest of the proton spin come from?
Dozens or even hundreds of protons and neutrons
can combine to form the known nuclei of atoms. But when it comes
to putting quarks together to form protons, neutrons or other
particles, they only come in packages of twos or threes. Or at
least so it was thought until recently. For over 30 years, physicists
have searched for exotic particles known as pentaquarks, that
have a valence structure of four quarks and one antiquark. In
the fall of 2002, evidence for a narrow baryon state having an
exotic strangeness quantum number, consistent with a pentaquark
structure, was presented at the PANIC conference. Since then,
many independent experiments have confirmed the existence of this
state.
Although the protons and neutrons in atomic nuclei
account for nearly all of the observed mass in the universe, these
particles have a complicated structure that is poorly understood.
This situation arises from the fundamental theory of strong interactions,
quantum chromodynamics (QCD), which gives the nucleons their very
rich structure, but which is also nonperturbative and extremely
difficult to solve.
The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) is a heavy
water Cherenkov neutrino detector located 6800 feet underground
at the active INCO, Ltd. Creighton nickel mine near Sudbury, Canada.
On April 20, 2002, SNO published results which are thought to
have solved the Solar Neutrino Problem.

A view of the exterior of SNO's photomultiplier
array during detector construction. Photo courtesy of LBNL.
Raymond Davis Jr. (University of
Pennsylvania) and Masatoshi Koshiba (Univ. of
Tokyo) shared half of this years Nobel prize in physics. Their
citation reads "for pioneering contributions to astrophysics,
in particular for the detection of cosmic neutrinos".

Until we started to understand the nature of the
nuclear forces, the origin of solar energy was a mystery. Because
of the fundamental work in Nuclear Physics done by Hans Bethe,
George Gamow, Willy Fowler, Ray Davis, M.
Koshiba their many collaborators, we now know that Sun's
energy originates from a series of nuclear reactions going on
in its core. These nuclear reactions emit neutrinos which travel
through the material in the Sun very easily. Solar models, developed
by John Bahcall and others, predict the solar neutrino flux which
reaches the Earth.
The other half of the prize was won by Riccardo
Giacconi (Associated Universities Inc.) "for pioneering
contributions to astrophysics, which have led to the discovery
of cosmic X-ray sources"
Artist's conception of a binary sytem. Photo courtesy
of NASA/HEASARC.
The Nobel Prize for Prof. Giacconi recognizes his
enablement of the birth of X-ray astronnomy. This led to the discovery
of neutron stars that accerete matter from a binary companion,
releasing large amounts of gravitational energy. These objects
periodically emit large flashes of X-rays as a result of nuclear
reactions taking place in the built-up material. The exact details
of what takes place awaits further illucidation of the nature
of neutrons stars and the underlying nuclear physics. New nuclear
physics facilities such as RIA
will make a major contribution to this understanding.

Dr. Chun-Yen Chen aligning the optics of the
atom trap used to count 81Kr atoms and demonstrate
the new Atom Trap Trace Analysis (ATTA) method. (Photo by George
Joch)
Neutron guide hall at the NIST Center for Neutron
Research. Here, experimentors from Harvard, NIST, LANL, and HMI
have shown they can load ultracold neutrons into a magnetic trap
through inelastic scattering of neutrons with phonons in superfluid
4He.
Gammasphere with its two hemisphere's opened.
In back is the Fragment Mass Analyzer first quadrupole (blue)
and first electric dipole (yellow).
Interior of the Liquid Scintillator
Neutrino Detector (LSND) at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Constant density surfaces for
a polarized deuteron in the Md = ±1 (left) and Md
= 0 (right) states.
Caltech graduate student
Bryon Mueller inside the Cherenkov detector of the SAMPLE experiment,
which studies the strange quarks within the proton.
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