American Institute of Physics
SEARCH AIP
home contact us sitemap
Physics News Update
Number 435, June 21, 1999 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein

HELIUM-6 NUCLEI SHARE DI-NEUTRONS Helium-6 nuclei, formed into beams for the first time only last year, are thought to be "Borromean" structures (so named for the heraldic symbol of the Princes of Borromeo, and consisting of three interlinking rings which fall apart if any one ring is removed). The He-6 nucleus, theorists believe, is really a He-4 core surrounded by two extra, loosely bound neutrons which can reside in one of two configurations: (1) one neutron on either side of the He-4 core or (2) both neutrons close together (comprising a "di-neutron") far from the He-4 core. To test this theory and to demonstrate the existence of di-neutrons, Yuri Oganessian and his colleagues at the Joint Institute of Nuclear Research (JINR) near Moscow (oganessian@flnr.jinr.ru, 011-7-09621-62151) collided a He-6 beam with a He-4 target and observed that some of the He-4 nuclei had been converted into He-6, proving that in some of the high-energy collisions di-neutrons had jumped from one nucleus to the other. This also holds true when He-6 beams hit hydrogen targets (the target nucleus being a single proton). In this case a di-neutron joined the proton to form a tritium nucleus. These results seem to favor the picture in which di-neutrons are the rule rather than the exception in He-6 nuclei. Now the JINR scientists are using He-8 beams to study in more detail how neutrons correlate with each other within nuclei and to search for signs of "tetra-neutron" states. (Oganessian, Zagrebaev, and Vaagen, Physical Review Letters, 21 June 1999; figures at Physics News Graphics)

DETECTION OF EARTH’S MAGNETIC FIELD USING NEUTRINOS has been accomplished at the Super-Kamiokande detector located underneath Mt. Ikenoyama in Japan. Here is the sequence of events: a cosmic ray proton strikes an oxygen or nitrogen atom in Earth’s upper atmosphere, creating a neutrino which passes freely into the Earth where it may find its way into Super-Kamiokande, a device consisting chiefly of 50,000 tons of pure water. In the water the neutrino (when it bothers to interact at all) will typically convert into a muon or electron, plus light, which is recorded in surrounding photodetectors. In this process, the neutrino and its daughter muon or electron track pretty closely the trajectory of the original cosmic ray proton. But the incoming cosmic ray flux, which would otherwise be isotropic, is shaped by the Earth’s magnetic field. This acts as a sort of prevailing wind which sets up an east-west anisotropy in cosmic rays. This anisotropy, measured as long ago as the 1930s, should be matched by a corresponding anisotropy in neutrinos, which is precisely what the Super-Kamiokande team now finds. This measurement, while it says nothing new about Earth’s magnetic field, does reassure the researchers that their detection of neutrino oscillation (one of the top physics stories of 1998, see Update 375) stands on a firm understanding of the complex chain of events whereby a cosmic ray in outer space leads to a burst of light in a cavern beneath Japan. (Futagami et al, Physical Review Letters, 28 June 1999; team leader, Y. Totsuka, Tokyo University, totsuka@suketto.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp; some US contacts: Henry Sobel, UC Irvine, 949-824-6911, sobel@uci.edu; Lawrence Sulak, Boston University, 617 353-9454, sulak@bu.edu; paper available to science writers from AIP public information; figures at Physics News Graphics)

DIRECT CP VIOLATION AT CERN The NA48 experiment at CERN reports a new detection of direct CP violation (partly responsible for the slight asymmetry between matter and anti-matter) in the decay of K mesons. The value they measure for the ratio epsilon prime over epsilon (roughly the ratio of direct to indirect CP violation--see Update 420) is 18.5±7 x 10-4. The value reported by a Fermilab group earlier in the year was 28±4 x 10-4. (http://www.cern.ch/Press; for background see Physics Today, May 1999.)