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Charming beauty: CP violation and spectroscopy at LHCb

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bristol
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Why are the earth, the stars, our galaxy and everything we can see made out of matter? During the big bang, matter and antimatter were created in equal amounts, so where has the antimatter gone? There is no evidence of anti-matter galaxies or other large structures in the universe. These questions lead to a more profound question, given that the matter and antimatter should have destroyed each other; why are we here? These questions have fascinated me since my late teens and were responsible for guiding me into the field of physics and later specialising in particle physics. My career to date has focused on understanding differences between matter and antimatter, which are (almost) perfect mirror images of the other. The programme of research in this proposal aims to study these differences more precisely than ever before, and to look for new differences that are not explained by our current theories and models. In fact, we already know our theories are not a complete description of everything in the universe, and several hints have appeared recently in this field of particle physics. This research plan will provide new inputs to understand whether or not these hints are real effects of just statistical fluctuations. To achieve these goals, the equally exciting challenges of dealing with huge data samples and utilising the latest computing technologies and software must be conquered. These challenges are increasingly common and important in many fields of science, but also to businesses and the wider world.

I will perform these exciting measurements using data from the LHCb detector, based on the large hadron collider (LHC) at the CERN laboratory on the French-Swiss border near Geneva. The LHC collides particles, called protons, at incredible energies to produce other particles that we are interested in studying.

Related Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Award Value
ST/S004750/1 03/02/2020 04/01/2022 £544,050
ST/S004750/2 Transfer ST/S004750/1 05/01/2022 04/02/2025 £341,908
 
Description Advances in the field of charge-parity violation (seeing a difference between matter and it's mirror image, anti-matter) measurements on particles with beauty quarks in them. There have been further advances in spectroscopy of excited hadrons with charm quark(s) inside them, with a view to understanding the nature of tetrquark (4-quark) particles.
Exploitation Route This is fundamental particle physics research, the methods detailed in will be applicable to others in the future (e.g. https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-024-12615-x)

The results produced will enable new and important measurements in the beauty baryon sector, including first measurements of CP violation in the Xi_b baryon sector.
Sectors Other

 
Description Lord Kelvin/Adam Smith Fellowship
Amount £100,000 (GBP)
Organisation University of Glasgow 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2022 
End 02/2025