Enter your keyword

8053+ OFFICERS SERVING THE NATION UNIVERSAL COACHING CENTRE Let's join hands together in bringing Your Name in Elite officers list. JOIN US 25 YEARS OF EXCELLENCE MEET NEW FRIENDS AND STUDY WITH EXPERTS JOIN US Nothing is better than having friends study together. Each student can learn from others through by teamwork building and playing interesting games. Following instruction of experts, you and friends will gain best scores.

ULP Click here! Click here! Classroom Programme NRA-CET Test Series
Click here ! Org code: XSHWV

post

How Deuterons Survive Extreme Particle Collisions

Why in the News ?

A recent study by the ALICE collaboration at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has resolved a long-standing puzzle about how fragile deuterons survive ultra-high-energy particle collisions, with implications for cosmic ray physics, astrophysics, and dark matter research.

Fragile Deuterons in a Violent Collider Environment:

  • The deuteron, nucleus of deuterium (hydrogen isotope), consists of one proton and one neutron, bound by very low binding energy.
  • Despite this fragility, deuterons and anti-deuterons are repeatedly observed in collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), where particles move close to the speed of light.
  • This created a paradox: such weakly bound nuclei should break apart in the extremely energetic collision environment.
  • Physicists proposed two explanations — direct emission, where deuterons form instantly from a hot source, and coalescence, where protons and neutrons combine later.
  • Understanding the correct mechanism is crucial not only for nuclear physics, but also for modelling high-energy reactions in outer space, such as cosmic ray–interstellar gas collisions.

ALICE Experiment and the Coalescence Breakthrough

  • Scientists from the ALICE Collaboration used the ALICE detector, one of the major experiments at the Large Hadron Collider, operated by CERN.
  • Using a technique called femtoscopy, researchers studied momentum correlations between pions and deuterons.
  • They searched for signals of the Δ(1232) resonance, a short-lived excited state of a proton or neutron that decays into a pion and nucleon.
  • The data showed a positive correlation, indicating that deuterons form after these decays, not during the initial collision.
  • The study estimated that ~62% of deuterons form after resonance decays, rising to ~80% when other short-lived resonances are included — strongly supporting the coalescence model.

Significance for Cosmic Rays and Dark Matter :

●      Cosmic rays are high-energy protons and atomic nuclei that frequently collide with matter in space.

●      Accurate models of light nuclei and anti-nuclei formation are essential for interpreting cosmic-ray detector data.

●      The findings help distinguish signals arising from astrophysical processes versus those potentially linked to dark matter interactions.

●      Since coalescence occurs away from the most violent collision zone, it explains how fragile nuclei can survive.

●      The study improves theoretical frameworks used in astrophysics, cosmology, and space missions, strengthening the link between collider experiments and cosmic phenomena.