TOTEM and DØ collaborations announce odderon discovery
Tuesday 16 March 2021

Part of the TOTEM
installation in the LHC tunnel 220 m downstream from the CMS experiment /
Une partie de l'installation TOTEM dans le tunnel du LHC, à 220 m du
détecteur CMS (Image: M. Brice/CERN) CERN, Geneva 16 March 2021
The
TOTEM collaboration at the LHC, together with the DØ collaboration at
the Tevatron collider at Fermilab, have announced the discovery of the
odderon – an elusive state of three fundamental particles called gluons
that was predicted almost 50 years ago. The result was presented on
Friday 5 March during a meeting at CERN, and follows the joint submission in December 2020 of a CERN/Fermilab preprint by TOTEM and DØ reporting the observation. “This
result probes the deepest features of the theory of quantum
chromodynamics, notably that gluons interact between themselves and that
an odd number of gluons are able to be “colourless”, thus shielding the
strong interaction,” says TOTEM spokesperson Simone Giani of CERN. “A
notable feature of this work is that the results are produced by
combining the LHC and Tevatron data at different energies.” States
comprising two, three or more gluons are usually called “glueballs”,
and are peculiar objects made only of the carriers of the strong force.
The advent of quantum chromodynamics (QCD) led theorists to predict the
existence of the odderon in 1973. Proving its existence has been a major
experimental challenge, however, requiring detailed measurements of
protons as they glance off one another in high-energy collisions. While
most high-energy collisions cause protons to break into their
constituent quarks and gluons, roughly 25% are elastic collisions where
the protons remain intact but emerge on slightly different paths
(deviating by around a millimetre over a distance of 200 m at the LHC).
TOTEM measures these small deviations in proton–proton scattering using
two detectors located on either side of the CMS experiment 220 m from
the interaction point , while DØ employed a similar setup at the
Tevatron proton–antiproton collider.
At lower energies,
differences in proton–proton vs proton–antiproton scattering are due to
the exchange of different virtual mesons – particles made up of a quark
and an antiquark. At multi-TeV energies, on the other hand, proton
interactions are expected to be mediated purely by gluons. In
particular, elastic scattering at low-momentum transfer and high
energies has long been explained by the exchange of a pomeron – a
“colour-neutral” virtual glueball made up of an even number of gluons. However, in 2018, TOTEM reported
measurements at high energies that could not easily be explained by
this traditional idea. Instead, a further QCD object seemed to be at
play, supporting models in which a three-gluon compound, or one
containing higher odd numbers of gluons, was being exchanged. The
results were sufficient to claim evidence for the odderon, although not
yet its definitive observation. The new work is based on a
model-independent analysis of data at medium-range momentum transfer.
The TOTEM and DØ teams compared LHC proton–proton data (recorded at
collision energies of 2.76, 7, 8 and 13 TeV and extrapolated to 1.96
TeV), with Tevatron proton–antiproton data measured at 1.96 TeV, and
found evidence again for the odderon. When the teams combined the result
with measurements at much smaller scattering angles at 13 TeV by the
TOTEM collaboration, the significance of the result was boosted to the
discovery level.
“When combined with the measurements at 13
TeV, the significance of the result is in the range of 5.2–5.7 standard
deviations and thus constitutes the first experimental observation of
the odderon,” said Christophe Royon of the University of Kansas, who
presented the results on behalf of DØ and TOTEM last week. “This is a
major discovery by CERN and Fermilab.”
In addition to the new
TOTEM-DØ model-independent study, several theoretical papers based on
data from the Intersecting Storage Rings, the Super Proton Synchrotron,
the Tevatron and the LHC, and on model-dependent inputs, provide
additional evidence supporting the conclusion that the odderon exists. This update is a modified version of a story originally published in the CERN Courier. Picture: https://cds.cern.ch/record/2215532#4
Video: https://videos.cern.ch/record/2754247
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