18 October 1976
The Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1976 Nobel Prize
for physics to be shared equally between Professor Burton
Richter, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, USA, and
Professor Samuel C.C. Ting, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge, USA, for their pioneering work in the discovery of a
heavy elementary particle of a new kind.
The prize is awarded for discoveries in the
exploration of the smallest components of matter, smaller than
atoms and their nuclei. According to Einstein's well-known law of
energy and mass, E=mc2, large amounts of kinetic
energy are required to create a heavy particle. In addition the
energy must be concentrated. The two prize experiments were made
independently of one another at two of the world's largest
particle accelerators. Ting and his associates have constructed
their equipment in connection with the proton machine at the
Brookhaven National
Laboratory. The accelerator is a device with a diameter of
some 200 metres and the measurement equipment of the Ting team is
close on 15 metres in length. Richter and his co-workers have
their equipment connected to the 3 km long, linear electron
accelerator at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. The Richter
equipment is of such a size that it cannot be kept indoors. When
exploring small object large microscopes are necessary and cannot
be avoided. For the smallest bits of matter the largest
installations are required.
The Richter equipment is a sort of carousel (storage ring) where
a stream of electrons and a stream of positrons go round in
opposite directions at very high speeds, which may be adjusted
exactly. In head-on collisions, all the energy of an electron and
a colliding positron may in principle give rise to a motionless
very heavy particle, which is expected to turn into several other
particles by decay in a very short space of time. It had not been
forecast that anything like that could possibly happen other than
at lower energies where the known, lighter elementary particles
exist. The research programme therefore concentrated on following
up in a specially built magnetic detector a very interesting and
significant line initiated at Frascati, Italy, and continued at
Cambridge, USA. The discovery of the new particle was sudden and
dramatic, although preceded by years of planning and
preparations. The speed at the head-on collisions may be adjusted
to more than a thousand different values. The new particle
appears at only one of these. About November 10, 1974, the
Richter team set the correct speed and found that an enormous
number of collisions gave the new particle, christened psi. What
was most remarkable was that the psi particle was transformed
unexpectedly sluggishly, or in other words, it lived about a
thousand times as long as it reasonably should.
Ting's experiment took place quite differently. High-speed
protons - the direction of the firing is here more important than
the speed setting - are allowed to collide with a motionless
target area of beryllium. The Ting team was hoping to find new
heavy particles, which are transformed into two others an
electron and a positron. Ting and his associates had for many
years achieved a world championship in this field, closely
studying how lighter, better known parent particles give rise to
electron and positron daughter pairs. From measurements of the
fast-flying daughters, the properties of the parent particle may
be calculated. The difficulty was sorting out a very small number
of daughter pairs from a horde of millions of other particles
streaming forth, in this context undesirable but unavoidable. It
was like hearing a cricket close to a jumbo jet taking off. The
equipment was therefore large, provide, with many refinements and
embedded in tons of radiation protection. In time it became clear
that a new, heavy parent particle was formed every now and then
in the collisions. It was christened the J particle.
On November 11, 1974, Richter and Ting met at the Stanford Linear
Accelerator Center and found that the two research teams had
discovered the same particle. The announcement appeared at once
and the scientific publications within a week. A short time after
the discovery was confirmed, first at Frascati, Italy, and then
at the Deutsches Electronen Synchrotron in Hamburg, West
Germany.
During the last 16 years many new elementary particles have been
discovered, which show kinship with one another in groups or
families. The new particle is something separate and new and it
has formed the beginning of a new family of its own. A new field
of research has been opened. Is there anything further in these
particles, thought to be the smallest building blocks of matter?
For centuries physicists and chemists have devoted much of their
efforts to a search for the smallest components of matter. The
limit of the smallest has slowly been moved from atoms via atomic
nuclei to what are known as elementary particles. For some years
now the physicists have had to move this limit downwards, and the
signs are that the elementary particles, too, consist of yet
smaller units, quarks. It was assumed that three quarks, in some
respects having different properties, would be enough. But to
understand the structure of the new psi particle a fourth quark
is very likely necessary, in the opinion of many researchers.