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12/10/2021 13:52

The tetra-neutron – experiment finds evidence for a long-sought particle comprising four neutrons

Dr. Andreas Battenberg Corporate Communications Center
Technische Universität München

    While all atomic nuclei except hydrogen are composed of protons and neutrons, physicists have been searching for a particle consisting of two, three or four neutrons for over half a century. Experiments by a team of physicists of the Technical University of Munich (TUM) at the accelerator laboratory on the Garching research campus now indicate that a particle comprising four bound neutrons may well exist.

    While nuclear physicists agree that there are no systems in the universe made of only protons, they have been searching for particles comprising two, three or four neutrons for more than 50 years.

    Should such a particle exist, parts of the theory of the strong interaction would need to be rethought. In addition, studying these particles in more detail could help us better understand the properties of neutron stars.

    "The strong interaction is literally the force that holds the world together at its core. Atoms heavier than hydrogen would be unthinkable without it," says Dr. Thomas Faestermann, who directed the experiments.

    Everything now points to the fact that precisely these kinds of particles were created in one of the last experiments carried out at the now decommissioned tandem Van de Graaff particle accelerator on the Garching research campus.

    The long search for the tetra-neutron

    As early as 20 years ago, a French research group published measurements that they interpreted as the signature of the sought-after tetra-neutron. However, later work by other groups showed that the methodology used could not prove the existence of a tetra-neutron.

    In 2016, a group in Japan attempted to produce tetra-neutrons from helium-4 by bombarding it with a beam of radioactive helium-8 particles. This reaction should produce beryllium-8. In fact, they were able to detect four such atoms. From their measurement results, the researchers concluded that the tetra-neutron was unbound and quickly decayed back into four neutrons.

    In their experiments, Faestermann and his team bombarded a lithium-7 target with lithium-7 particles accelerated to about 12 percent of the speed of light. In addition to the tetra-neutron, this should produce carbon-10. And indeed, the physicists succeeded in detecting this species. A repetition confirmed the result.

    Circumstantial evidence

    The team's measurement results matched the signature that would be expected from carbon-10 in its first excited state and a tetra-neutron bound by 0.42 megaelectronvolts (MeV). According to the measurements the tetra-neutron would be roughly as stable as the neutron itself. It would then decay by beta-decay with a half-life of 450 seconds. "For us, this is the only physically plausible explanation of the measured values in all respects," explains Dr. Thomas Faestermann.

    With their measurements, the team achieves a certainty of well over 99.7 percent, or 3 sigma. But in physics, the existence a particle is only considered conclusively proven once a certainty of 5 sigma is achieved. Thus, the researchers are now eagerly awaiting independent confirmation.

    ###

    The Maier-Leibnitz Laboratory, with its tandem Van de Graaf accelerator, was operated jointly by the Technical University of Munich and the Ludwig Maximillian University of Munich. The facility was shut down for structural reasons in early 2020. All five authors of the publication are graduates or employees of the Technical University of Munich.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Dr. Thomas Faestermann
    Technical University of Munich
    Department of Physics, E12
    E-mail: thomas.faestermann@ph.tum.de


    Original publication:

    Indications for a bound tetraneutron
    Thomas Faestermann, Andreas Bergmaier, Roman Gernhäuser, Dominik Koll, Mahmoud Mahgoub
    Physics Letters B 824 (2022) 136799 – DOI: 10.1016/j.physletb.2021.136799


    More information:

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0370269321007395 Original publication
    https://www.tum.de/en/about-tum/news/press-releases/details/37068 Press release at TUM homepage
    https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/1636862 Additional images


    Images

    Dr. Thomas Faestermann and Dr. Roman Gernhäuser at the tandem Van de Graaff accelerator on the Garching research campus. Here, more than ten million volts accelerate lithium ions to about 12 percent of the speed of light.
    Dr. Thomas Faestermann and Dr. Roman Gernhäuser at the tandem Van de Graaff accelerator on the Garch ...
    Uli Benz / TUM

    Schematic representation of the reaction from lithium-7 to carbon-10 and the long-sought tetra-neutron.
    Schematic representation of the reaction from lithium-7 to carbon-10 and the long-sought tetra-neutr ...
    Thomas Faestermann / TUM


    Attachment
    attachment icon Impression of the tetra-neutron. Two of the neutrons occupy the deepest orbital with antiparallel spin. The other two occupy the next higher orbital.

    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars, Students, Teachers and pupils, all interested persons
    Chemistry, Physics / astronomy
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

    Dr. Thomas Faestermann and Dr. Roman Gernhäuser at the tandem Van de Graaff accelerator on the Garching research campus. Here, more than ten million volts accelerate lithium ions to about 12 percent of the speed of light.


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    Schematic representation of the reaction from lithium-7 to carbon-10 and the long-sought tetra-neutron.


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