Monday, September 05, 2022

Protons inside some types of hydrogen and helium are behaving weirdly

By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan

Artist's impression of a helium-3 atom


Inside the nucleus of some atoms, protons appear to be doing very unexpected things. They are pairing up far more often than usual when they get extremely close to each other, and physicists don’t fully understand why. Getting to the bottom of this phenomenon could help us better understand the strong nuclear force, which governs interactions on extremely small scales.

John Arrington at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California and his colleagues directed a beam of very energetic electrons onto a target made of a lighter version of helium called helium-3 and tritium, the radioactive version of hydrogen, to get an insight into previously unexplored interactions between protons and neutrons in their nuclei.

When protons and neutrons inside a nucleus get as close to each other as a quadrillionth of a metre they briefly pair up, then fly away with lots of momentum. Arrington says that by measuring the speed or energy of electron’s in the beam ricocheting off the pairs, the researchers could count the number of particle duos that were either proton-proton or proton-neutron pairs.

The ultimate tally was unexpected, says Arrington. Similar experiments that used atoms such as carbon or lead in the past had found that only about 5 per cent of pairings in each nucleus were between two protons, but for helium-3 and tritium the researchers found that number to be closer to 20 per cent.

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Arrington says that helium-3 and tritium nuclei are less tightly packed with particles than previously investigated nuclei, which may mean that particles approach each other closely less often, but with more preference for pairing up protons. Such an imbalance could be a property of how exactly nuclear forces work at very small distances, which is not yet fully understood, he says.

Lawrence Weinstein at Old Dominion University in Virginia says that the large number of proton pairs may hint at some new wrinkle in the strong nuclear force, but that more refined and detailed theoretical models of the experiment must be developed before the finding is considered definitive.

Mark Strikman at Pennsylvania State University says that if future studies confirm these findings, they may influence how physicists think about neutron stars. In these stars particles are packed so closely together that the stars are the densest objects in the universe. How massive a neutron star can be then partly depends on how neutrons and protons interact when they are so close to each other, Strikman says.

Journal reference: Nature, DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05007-2

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