3:30 PM–5:18 PM, Monday, April 24, 2006
Hyatt Regency Dallas - Cumberland J
Sponsoring Unit:
DPF
Chair: Bill Carithers, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.APR.S6.1
3:30 PM–4:06 PM
John Jaros
(Stanford Linear Accelerator Center)
The lifetimes of the (then) newly discovered tau lepton and b hadrons were unmeasured when detectors began studying 30 GeV e+e- collisions at the PEP and PETRA storage rings. The addition of a high precision drift chamber, the Mark II Secondary Vertex Detector, led the Mark II collaboration to make its first significant measurements of the tau and charmed particle lifetimes. The b hadron lifetime was popularly presumed to be very short, and out of reach. But with a healthy dose of luminosity during 1982-1983, both the MAC and Mark II experiments at PEP saw unmistakable signs that the b lifetime was in fact long, measured it, and showed that the responsible CKM element, Vbc, was small. I'll review this history, talk about the rather far reaching implications of a long b lifetime, and chart the rapid progress in the art of vertex detection.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.APR.S6.1