Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/mesons

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Pionium

Composite particle of two mesons


Composite particle of two mesons

Pionium is a composite particle consisting of one and one meson. It can be created, for instance, by interaction of a proton beam accelerated by a particle accelerator and a target nucleus. Pionium has a short lifetime, predicted by chiral perturbation theory to be (i.e. 2.89 femtoseconds). It decays mainly into two mesons, and to a smaller extent into two photons.

It has been investigated at CERN to measure its lifetime. The Dimeson Relativistic Atomic Complex (DIRAC) experiment at the Proton Synchrotron was able to detect 21,227 atomic pairs from a total of events, which allows the pionium lifetime to be determined to within statistical errors of 9%. |display-authors=etal

In 2006, the NA48/2 collaboration at CERN published an evidence for pionium production and decay in decays of charged kaons, studying mass spectra of daughter pion pairs in the events with three pions in the final state K± → π±(ππ)atom → π±π0π0. |display-authors=etal |display-authors=etal

The results of the above experiments will provide crucial tests of low-energy QCD predictions.

References

Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Pionium — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report