Particle mass predicted with lattice quantum chromodynamics, then confirmed at Fermilab. Lattice QCD has come far in recent years (for a primer, see the article by Carleton DeTar and Steven Gottlieb, Physics Today, February 2004, page 45), and it has now joined other theoretical methods of predicting the mass of a hadron—in this case the charmed B meson, B c. A reliable treatment of the heavy quarks allowed a team of theoretical physicists to capitalize on earlier improvements in lattice QCD. Those earlier developments provided a realistic treatment of the light “sea quarks,” the virtual quarks whose ephemeral presence influences the “valence” quarks—the anti-bottom and charmed quarks for the B c —that are considered the nominal constituents of a hadron. The remarkably precise predicted value was 6304 ± 20 MeV. Shortly after the theorists submitted their paper for publication, the first good experimental measurement of the same...
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
1 July 2005
July 01 2005
Citation
Phillip F. Schewe; Particle mass predicted. Physics Today 1 July 2005; 58 (7): 9. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2012425
Download citation file:
PERSONAL SUBSCRIPTION
Purchase an annual subscription for $25. A subscription grants you access to all of Physics Today's current and backfile content.
Sign In
You could not be signed in. Please check your credentials and make sure you have an active account and try again.
66
Views
Citing articles via
France’s Oppenheimer
William Sweet
Making qubits from magnetic molecules
Stephen Hill
Learning to see gravitational lenses
Sebastian Fernandez-Mulligan