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Proton size dispute.


Art Man

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Science News webzine - "Physicists may be a step closer to solving the mystery of proton size"

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By Emily Conover

SEPTEMBER 10, 2019 AT 8:00 AM

If protons wore clothing, the label might read “XXS.”

For nearly a decade, scientists have been arguing over the size of the puny subatomic particles: extra small, or extra extra small. A new measurement bolsters the case that protons are more petite than once thought, researchers report in the Sept. 6 Science.

Until 2010, the proton’s radius was measured at about 0.88 femtometers, or millionths of a billionth of a meter. But then a new type of measurement — based on exotic atoms made with muons, the heavy cousins of electrons — clashed with that figure, registering a proton size of about 0.84 femtometers (SN: 4/18/17).  

One way to test the proton’s radius is by measuring the separation between the energy levels in which hydrogen atoms can exist — different states in which the atom’s electron carries a certain amount of energy. That energy difference depends on the size of the proton.

By measuring the separation between two such energy levels, physicist Eric Hessels of York University in Toronto and colleagues have pegged the radius at about 0.83 femtometers, in good agreement with the 2010 value.

The result adds to a small heap of recent studies that have claimed a slightly slimmer proton physique, including a 2017 measurement, made by considering a different set of energy levels in hydrogen atoms (SN: 10/5/17), and an estimate reported in October 2018, based on scattering electrons off of protons (SN: 11/2/18). However, a study published in May 2018 went against the slim-proton trend, falling in line with the original, larger value of the radius.

The inability to settle on a size is impeding researchers’ ability to test essential tenets of physics, like quantum electrodynamics, the theory that describes interactions of electrically charged particles. But resolving the debate is likely to be no small feat.

Questions or comments on this article? E-mail us at feedback@sciencenews.org

I know there's a lot of physics smart users on this board. Are there any theories in physics circles about why these differing measurements are happening? Could it be the equipment isn't a accurate enough or that protons can be different weights and sizes depending on what elements they constitute?

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9 hours ago, Art Man said:

Science News webzine - "Physicists may be a step closer to solving the mystery of proton size"

I know there's a lot of physics smart users on this board. Are there any theories in physics circles about why these differing measurements are happening? Could it be the equipment isn't a accurate enough or that protons can be different weights and sizes depending on what elements they constitute?

It's more likely there is an unknown bias in at least one approach to making the measurement. These measurements were in Hydrogen, so there's no way to interpret this as "depending on what elements they constitute"  which is a non-starter. Once you are in any element with multiple nucleons the mass of the nucleus decreases as compared to its constituents, so assigning a mass to any individual particle is nonsensical.

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7 hours ago, Strange said:

Thanks.

 

1 hour ago, swansont said:

These measurements were in Hydrogen, so there's no way to interpret this as "depending on what elements they constitute"  which is a non-starter. Once you are in any element with multiple nucleons the mass of the nucleus decreases as compared to its constituents, so assigning a mass to any individual particle is nonsensical.

Hydrogen is the standard for atomic testing?

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8 minutes ago, Art Man said:

Hydrogen is the standard for atomic testing?

No, standard would not be the right description. You try and choose the best test. Hydrogen is the best test for the experiments in this case. It’s a somewhat common testbed owing to its uncomplicated structure. (Also for any investigations into hydrogen)

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