12th Annual Meeting of the Northwest Section of the APS
Volume 55, Number 6
Friday–Saturday, October 1–2, 2010;
Walla Walla, Washington
Session C1: Particle and Nuclear Physics
1:30 PM–3:57 PM,
Friday, October 1, 2010
Room: Science 276
Chair: Harry Miley, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and Mary Alberg, Seattle University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.NWS.C1.2
Abstract: C1.00002 : In a muon's lifetime: From Fermi's constant to ``calibrating" the sun
2:06 PM–2:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Peter Winter
(University of Washington)
This presentation will cover three experiments at the Paul
Scherrer Institute, Switzerland, all measuring the muon lifetime
with high precision.
The MuLan experiment [2] uses a simple soccer-ball like
scintillator array to detect the positrons from the decay of
positive muons. We collected twice 10$^{12}$ muon decays in two
different target materials to obtain the final precision of 1 ppm
for the lifetime. This determines the Fermi constant
G$_{F}$ to 0.5 ppm precision [1].
The muon capture experiment MuCap uses a negative muon beam
stopped in a time projection chamber as an active target filled
with ultra-pure hydrogen gas. The elementary capture process $\mu
^{-}$+p $\to $ n+$\nu $ offers a rare (0.15{\%}) additional
disappearance channel. The measured difference of the positive
and negative muon's lifetime determines the rate of the capture
process to a final precision of 1{\%}. This can be used to derive
an improved value of the proton's pseudoscalar form factor
g$_{P}$ to 7{\%} precision. A first result g$_{P}$ = 7.3 $\pm $
1.1 has been published [3]. This is a first precise, unambigous
determination of g$_{P}$ and an important test of QCD symmetries.
Recently, we started a new experiment, MuSun [4] to measure the
$\mu ^{-}$+d $\to $ n+n+$\nu $ doublet capture rate. This
measurement will provide a benchmark of the understanding of weak
processes in the two nucleon-system. It was shown, that other
weak reactions involving the two nucleon system (pp $\to $
de$^{+}\nu $ or $\nu $+d reactions) are related to the same
low-energy constant, characterizing the two nucleon system at
short distances. This constant is not well constrained and
therefore the MuSun experiment comes closest to calibrating these
basic astrophysical reactions under terrestrial conditions.
\\[4pt]
[1] In preparation for publication\\[0pt]
[2] Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 032001 (2007)\\[0pt]
[3] Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 032002 (2007)\\[0pt]
[4] http://www.npl.uiuc.edu/exp/musun/documents/prop07.pdf
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.NWS.C1.2