LHCb experiment
Experiment at the Large Hadron Collider From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Experiment at the Large Hadron Collider From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
LHC experiments | |
---|---|
ATLAS | A Toroidal LHC Apparatus |
CMS | Compact Muon Solenoid |
LHCb | LHC-beauty |
ALICE | A Large Ion Collider Experiment |
TOTEM | Total Cross Section, Elastic Scattering and Diffraction Dissociation |
LHCf | LHC-forward |
MoEDAL | Monopole and Exotics Detector At the LHC |
FASER | ForwArd Search ExpeRiment |
SND | Scattering and Neutrino Detector |
LHC preaccelerators | |
p and Pb | Linear accelerators for protons (Linac 4) and lead (Linac 3) |
(not marked) | Proton Synchrotron Booster |
PS | Proton Synchrotron |
SPS | Super Proton Synchrotron |
The LHCb (Large Hadron Collider beauty) experiment is a particle physics detector experiment collecting data at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN.[1] LHCb is a specialized b-physics experiment, designed primarily to measure the parameters of CP violation in the interactions of b-hadrons (heavy particles containing a bottom quark). Such studies can help to explain the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the Universe. The detector is also able to perform measurements of production cross sections, exotic hadron spectroscopy, charm physics and electroweak physics in the forward region. The LHCb collaborators, who built, operate and analyse data from the experiment, are composed of approximately 1650 people from 98 scientific institutes, representing 22 countries.[2] Vincenzo Vagnoni[3] succeeded on July 1, 2023 as spokesperson for the collaboration from Chris Parkes (spokesperson 2020–2023).[4] The experiment is located at point 8 on the LHC tunnel close to Ferney-Voltaire, France just over the border from Geneva. The (small) MoEDAL experiment shares the same cavern.
The experiment has wide physics program covering many important aspects of heavy flavour (both beauty and charm), electroweak and quantum chromodynamics (QCD) physics. Six key measurements have been identified involving B mesons. These are described in a roadmap document[5] that formed the core physics programme for the first high energy LHC running in 2010–2012. They include:
The fact that the two b-hadrons are predominantly produced in the same forward cone is exploited in the layout of the LHCb detector. The LHCb detector is a single arm forward spectrometer with a polar angular coverage from 10 to 300 milliradians (mrad) in the horizontal and 250 mrad in the vertical plane. The asymmetry between the horizontal and vertical plane is determined by a large dipole magnet with the main field component in the vertical direction.
The Vertex Locator (VELO) is built around the proton interaction region.[6][7] It is used to measure the particle trajectories close to the interaction point in order to precisely separate primary and secondary vertices.
The detector operates at 7 millimetres (0.28 in) from the LHC beam. This implies an enormous flux of particles; VELO has been designed to withstand integrated fluences of more than 1014 p/cm2 per year for a period of about three years. The detector operates in vacuum and is cooled to approximately −25 °C (−13 °F) using a biphase CO2 system. The data of the VELO detector are amplified and read out by the Beetle ASIC.
The RICH-1 detector (Ring imaging Cherenkov detector) is located directly after the vertex detector. It is used for particle identification of low-momentum tracks.
The main tracking system is placed before and after the dipole magnet. It is used to reconstruct the trajectories of charged particles and to measure their momenta. The tracker consists of three subdetectors:
Following the tracking system is RICH-2. It allows the identification of the particle type of high-momentum tracks.
The electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters provide measurements of the energy of electrons, photons, and hadrons. These measurements are used at trigger level to identify the particles with large transverse momentum (high-Pt particles).
The muon system is used to identify and trigger on muons in the events.
At the end of 2018, the LHC was shut down for upgrades, with a restart currently planned for early 2022. For the LHCb detector, almost all subdetectors are to be modernised or replaced.[8] It will get a fully new tracking system composed of a modernised vertex locator, upstream tracker (UT) and scintillator fibre tracker (SciFi). The RICH detectors will also be updated, as well as the whole detector electronics. However, the most important change is the switch to the fully software trigger of the experiment, which means that every recorded collision will be analysed by sophisticated software programmes without an intermediate hardware filtering step (which was found to be a bottleneck in the past).[9]
During the 2011 proton-proton run, LHCb recorded an integrated luminosity of 1 fb−1 at a collision energy of 7 TeV. In 2012, about 2 fb−1 was collected at an energy of 8 TeV.[10] During 2015–2018 (Run 2 of the LHC), about 6 fb−1 was collected at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. In addition, small samples were collected in proton-lead, lead-lead, and xenon-xenon collisions. The LHCb design also allowed the study of collisions of particle beams with a gas (helium or neon) injected inside the VELO volume, making it similar to a fixed-target experiment; this setup is usually referred to as "SMOG".[11] These datasets allow the collaboration to carry out the physics programme of precision Standard Model tests with many additional measurements. As of 2021, LHCb has published more than 500 scientific papers.[12]
LHCb is designed to study beauty and charm hadrons. In addition to precision studies of the known particles such as mysterious X(3872), a number of new hadrons have been discovered by the experiment. As of 2021, all four LHC experiments have discovered about 60 new hadrons in total, vast majority of which by LHCb.[13] In 2015, analysis of the decay of bottom lambda baryons (Λ0
b) in the LHCb experiment revealed the apparent existence of pentaquarks,[14][15] in what was described as an "accidental" discovery.[16] Other notable discoveries are those of the "doubly charmed" baryon in 2017, being a first known baryon with two heavy quarks; and of the fully-charmed tetraquark in 2020, made of two charm quarks and two charm antiquarks.
Quark content[lower-roman 1] | Particle name | Type | Year of discovery | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Excited baryon | 2012 | ||
2 | Excited baryon | 2012 | ||
3 | Excited meson | 2013 | ||
4 | Excited meson | 2013 | ||
5 | Excited meson | 2013 | ||
6 | Excited meson | 2013 | ||
7 | Excited meson | 2013 | ||
8 | Excited meson | 2013 | ||
9 | Excited meson | 2014 | ||
10 | Excited baryon | 2014 | ||
11 | Excited baryon | 2014 | ||
12 | Excited meson | 2015 | ||
13 | Excited meson | 2015 | ||
14 | Excited meson | 2015 | ||
15 | Excited meson | 2015 | ||
16[lower-roman 2] | Pentaquark | 2015 | ||
17 | Tetraquark | 2016 | ||
18 | Tetraquark | 2016 | ||
19 | Tetraquark | 2016 | ||
20 | Excited meson | 2016 | ||
21 | Excited baryon | 2017 | ||
22 | Excited baryon | 2017 | ||
23 | Excited baryon | 2017 | ||
24 | Excited baryon | 2017 | ||
25 | Excited baryon | 2017 | ||
26 | Excited baryon | 2017 | ||
27[lower-roman 3] | Baryon | 2017 | ||
28 | Excited baryon | 2018 | ||
29 | Excited baryon | 2018 | ||
30 | Excited baryon | 2018 | ||
31 | [19] | Excited meson | 2019 | |
32 | Pentaquark | 2019 | ||
33 | Pentaquark | 2019 | ||
34 | Pentaquark | 2019 | ||
35 | Excited baryon | 2019 | ||
36 | Excited baryon | 2019 | ||
37 | Excited baryon | 2020 | ||
38 | Excited baryon | 2020 | ||
39[lower-roman 4] | Excited baryon | 2020 | ||
40 | Excited baryon | 2020 | ||
41 | Excited baryon | 2020 | ||
42[lower-roman 5] | Tetraquark | 2020 | ||
43[lower-roman 6] | Tetraquark | 2020 | ||
44 | Tetraquark | 2020 | ||
45 | Excited baryon | 2020 | ||
46 | Excited meson | 2020 | ||
47 | Excited meson | 2020 | ||
48 | Excited meson | 2020 | ||
49 | Tetraquark | 2021 | ||
50 | Tetraquark | 2021 | ||
51 | Tetraquark | 2021 | ||
52 | Tetraquark | 2021 |
Studies of charge-parity (CP) violation in B-meson decays is the primary design goal of the LHCb experiment. As of 2021, LHCb measurements confirm with a remarkable precision the picture described by the CKM unitarity triangle. The angle of the unitarity triangle is now known to about 4°, and is in agreement with indirect determinations.[20]
In 2019, LHCb announced discovery of CP violation in decays of charm mesons.[21] This is the first time CP violation is seen in decays of particles other than kaons or B mesons. The rate of the observed CP asymmetry is at the upper edge of existing theoretical predictions, which triggered some interest among particle theorists regarding possible impact of physics beyond the Standard Model.[22]
In 2020, LHCb announced discovery of time-dependent CP violation in decays of Bs mesons.[23] The oscillation frequency of Bs mesons to its antiparticle and vice versa was measured to a great precision in 2021.
Rare decays are the decay modes harshly suppressed in the Standard Model, which makes them sensitive to potential effects from yet unknown physics mechanisms.
In 2014, LHCb and CMS experiments published a joint paper in Nature announcing the discovery of the very rare decay , rate of which was found close to the Standard Model predictions.[24] This measurement has harshly limited the possible parameter space of supersymmetry theories, which have predicted a large enhancement in rate. Since then, LHCb has published several papers with more precise measurements in this decay mode.
Anomalies were found in several rare decays of B mesons. The most famous example in the so-called angular observable was found in the decay , where the deviation between the data and theoretical prediction has persisted for years.[25] The decay rates of several rare decays also differ from the theoretical predictions, though the latter have sizeable uncertainties.
In the Standard Model, couplings of charged leptons (electron, muon and tau lepton) to the gauge bosons are expected to be identical, with the only difference emerging from the lepton masses. This postulate is referred to as "lepton flavour universality". As a consequence, in decays of b hadrons, electrons and muons should be produced at similar rates, and the small difference due to the lepton masses is precisely calculable.
LHCb has found deviations from this predictions by comparing the rate of the decay to that of ,[26] and in similar processes.[27][28] However, as the decays in question are very rare, a larger dataset needs to be analysed in order to make definitive conclusions.
In March 2021, LHCb announced that the anomaly in lepton universality crossed the "3 sigma" statistical significance threshold, which translates to a p-value of 0.1%.[29] The measured value of , where symbol denotes probability of a given decay to happen, was found to be while the Standard Model predicts it to be very close to unity.[30] In December 2022 improved measurements discarded this anomaly.[31][32][33]
In August 2023 joined searches in leptonic decays by the LHCb and semileptonic decays by Belle II (with ) set new limits for universality violations. [31][32][34][35]
LHCb has contributed to studies of quantum chromodynamics, electroweak physics, and provided cross-section measurements for astroparticle physics.[36]
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