EMBARGOED for release on Thursday, February 8, 2001, 11 a.m. EST

contact: Karen McNulty Walsh, 631 344-8350, kmcnulty@bnl.gov, or Mona 
S. Rowe, 631 344-5056, mrowe@bnl.gov

Physicists Announce Possible Violation of Standard Model of Particle Physics

UPTON, NY -- Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven 
National Laboratory, in collaboration with researchers from 11 
institutions in the U.S., Russia, Japan, and Germany, today announced 
an experimental result that directly confronts the so-called Standard 
Model of particle physics. "This work could open up a whole new world 
of exploration for physicists interested in new theories, such as 
supersymmetry, which extend the Standard Model," says Boston 
University physicist Lee Roberts, co-spokesperson for the experiment.

The Standard Model is an overall theory of particle physics that has 
withstood rigorous experimental challenge for 30 years. The 
Brookhaven finding -- a precision measurement of something called the 
anomalous magnetic moment of the muon, a type of subatomic particle 
-- deviates from the value predicted by the Standard Model. This 
indicates that other physical theories that go beyond the assumptions 
of the Standard Model may now be open to experimental exploration. 
The results were reported today at a special colloquium at Brookhaven 
Lab and have been submitted to Physical Review Letters.
 
Scientists at Brookhaven, doing research at an experiment dubbed the 
muon g-2 (pronounced gee-minus-two), have been collecting data since 
1997. Until late last week, they did not know whether their work 
would confirm the prediction of the Standard Model. "We are now 99 
percent sure that the present Standard Model calculations cannot 
describe our data," says Brookhaven physicist Gerry Bunce, project 
manager for the experiment.

The Standard Model, in development since the 1960s, explains and 
gives order to the menagerie of subatomic particles discovered 
throughout the 1940s and 1950s at particle accelerators of 
ever-increasing power at Brookhaven and other locations in the United 
States and Europe. The theory encompasses three of the four forces 
known to exist in the universe -- the strong force, the 
electromagnetic force, and the weak force -- but not the fourth 
force, gravity.

The g-2 values for electrons and muons are among the most precisely 
known quantities in physics -- and have been in good agreement with 
the Standard Model. The g-2 value measures the effects of the strong, 
weak, and electromagnetic forces on a characteristic of these 
particles known as "spin" -- somewhat similar to the spin of a toy 
top. Using Standard Model principles, theorists have calculated with 
great precision how the spin of a muon, a particle similar to but 
heavier than the electron, would be affected as it moves through a 
magnetic field. Previous experimental measurements of this g-2 value 
agreed with the theorists¹ calculations, and this has been a major 
success of the Standard Model.
 
The scientists and engineers at Brookhaven, however -- using a very 
intense source of muons, the world's largest superconducting magnet, 
and very precise and sensitive detectors -- have measured g-2 to a 
much higher level of precision. The new result is numerically greater 
than the prediction. "There appears to be a significant difference 
between our experimental value and the theoretical value from the 
Standard Model," says Yale physicist Vernon Hughes, who initiated the 
new measurement and is co-spokesperson for the experiment.

"There are three possibilities for the interpretation of this 
result," he says. "Firstly, new physics beyond the Standard Model, 
such as supersymmetry, is being seen. Secondly, there is a small 
statistical probability that the experimental and theoretical values 
are consistent. Thirdly, although unlikely, the history of science in 
general has taught us that there is always the possibility of 
mistakes in experiments and theories."

"Many people believe that the discovery of supersymmetry [a theory 
that predicts the existence of companion particles for all the known 
particles] may be just around the corner," Roberts says. "We may have 
opened the first tiny window to that world."

All the physicists agree that further study is needed. And they still 
have a year's worth of data to analyze. "When we analyze the data 
from the experiment's year 2000 run, we'll reduce the level of error 
by a factor of 2," says physicist William Morse, Brookhaven resident 
spokesperson for g-2. The team expects that analysis to come within 
the next year. Furthermore, Hughes adds, substantial additional data 
that have not yet been used in evaluating the theoretical value of 
g-2 are now available from accelerators in Russia, China, and at 
Cornell University. These data could reduce significantly the error 
in the theoretical value.

This research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. 
National Science Foundation, the German Bundesminister fur Bildung 
und Forschung, and the Russian Ministry of Science, and through the 
U.S.-Japan Agreement in High Energy Physics.

The U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory 
creates and operates major facilities available to university, 
industrial and government personnel for basic and applied research in 
the physical, biomedical and environmental sciences and in selected 
energy technologies. The Laboratory  is operated by Brookhaven 
Science Associates, a not-for-profit research management company, 
under contract with the U.S. Department of Energy.

<30<

For a link to the Physical Review Letters paper and more information 
on g-2, go to: http://www.phy.bnl.gov/g2muon/home.html, and for 
pictures: http://www.phy.bnl.gov/g2muon/pixpage/home.html

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