How Big Is a Proton Anyway? This Decade-Long Debate May Have Just Been Solved

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Scientists thought they knew the approximate size of a proton until a 2010 experiment came back with a very different number, creating the proton-radius puzzle.

After almost a decade of reexamination, scientists think they’ve solved what’s known as the proton-radius puzzle.

First some basics: The proton itself is not a smooth billiard-ball, but more like a cloud of quarks held together by gluons. The quarks a proton is made up of give it its positive charge, and the threshold of that positive charge can be thought of as the proton’s size.

There are two main approaches scientists have used to find the radius of a proton’s boundary.

The first involves firing electrons at atoms, like hydrogen, which in its simplest form is a single proton nucleus with one orbiting electron. Then, based on how the electrons bounce off the nucleus, scientists can determine where the proton’s positive charge begins to fade.

The second method involves measuring how much energy it takes to excite an atom’s electron from one state to the next, and like method one, hydrogen is typically the atom of choice.

The other method measures how much energy it takes to excite an atom’s electron from one state to the next, and again, hydrogen is often the atom of choice.

Over the years, these two methods came more or less to the agreement that a proton’s radius was about 0.8768 femtometers, and all was well until about a decade ago when someone artificially swapped out hydrogen’s electron with a muon.

Now a muon is like an electron in every way, except it is 207 times more massive.

That’s right 207 times.

And that added weight means that the muon spends more time inside the proton, making its switch to a higher energy state millions of times more sensitive to the proton’s size than the electron in regular hydrogen. By measuring the proton using muonic hydrogen, they came back with a result 4% smaller than the previously accepted size, a difference that’s not insignificant.

So, were their previous measurements off? Or was this a hint at something more tantalizing? Did the discrepancy reveal some unknown physics or new elementary particles?

Find out more about a proton’s size and what we know so far, on this episode of Elements.

#Physics #Protons #Science #Seeker #Elements

New Subatomic Particles Are Shifting the Standard Model of Physics

Read More:
Proton-size puzzle deepens
"The proton might truly be smaller than was thought. Experiments on an exotic form of hydrogen first found1 a puzzling discrepancy with the accepted size in 2010. Now, evidence from a German and Russian team points to a smaller value for the size of the proton with ordinary hydrogen, too."

Scientists measure precise proton radius to help resolve decade-old puzzle
"The York University team studied atomic hydrogen to understand the deviant value obtained from muonic hydrogen. They conducted a high-precision measurement using the frequency-offset separated oscillatory fields (FOSOF) technique, which they developed for this measurement."

Physicists Finally Nail the Proton’s Size, and Hope Dies
"The new result implies that earlier attempts to measure the proton’s radius in electronic hydrogen tended to overshoot the true value. It’s unclear why this would be so."

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Elements is more than just a science show. It’s your science-loving best friend, tasked with keeping you updated and interested on all the compelling, innovative and groundbreaking science happening all around us. Join our passionate hosts as they help break down and present fascinating science, from quarks to quantum theory and beyond.

Seeker empowers the curious to understand the science shaping our world. We tell award-winning stories about the natural forces and groundbreaking innovations that impact our lives, our planet, and our universe.

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A proton, electron and a neutron get into a bar fight.
The bartender calls cops and they show up to arrest everyone. The cops cuff the proton and electron but they let the neutron go because nobody could press charges.

sebastianelytron
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Two hydrogen atoms are bouncing down a corridor and one says to the other "Hey, I think I've lost an electron!". The other replies "Are you sure?". "Yep, I'm positive!".

Omnifarious
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So, scientists think they have accurately measured the radius of protons... but are they positive?

Master_Therion
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Thanks for clearing decades old doubts and creating new ones at the same time.

agi
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*Proton:* I'm not Fat, I'm _THICC_

duchi
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Why are there 2 rasengans clashing in the thumbnail? 🤨🤔

zukodude
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I'm now picturing my years of science education as that dinner table cat from the meme and me the girl yelling "you deceived me all these years" at it.

wdp
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i dont think you realize how much our technology is lagging behind theory in particle physics. we literally are testing theories from like 60-70 years ago because the technology has just caught up

zachary
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Interesting... I just noticed that I never see anyone trying to "debunk" physics concepts using grade school level physics, but on the other hand I see it all the time in biology.

DasAntiNaziBroetchen
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The extra detail on what protons are really like is greatly appreciated. Another bizarre thing is that most of a proton's mass comes from the energy of the gluons holding it together.

Omnifarious
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Scientists: "We've figured out the size of protons! We're positive!"

masterimbecile
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I believe this guys is the BEST presenter by far among all the SEEKER presenters. And who can forget his last video's funny elements? Hahaha. You are the best here bro.

PuneetMehra
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How long do muons stick around? Can we have electricity with muons, “mounicity”?

danfg
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Just graduated from York two weeks ago, happy to see my alma mater continuing contributing to our knowledge of the fundamentals of reality :)

ItsRomanDrobot
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It's a little weird that you explained what protons actually are, but then went on to discuss the electron as an orbiting sphere. I guess it would be too difficult to get the main idea across while properly conveying the electron as an overlaying probability distribution?

Narutendo
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Now you have to make a video about that "quarks and antiquarks constantly annihilating each other" bit at the end

MrSaliVader
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Electron enters into Proton...
my whole life was a lie 😢😓😭

thanos
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Electronic Hydrogen?
I think I saw that band back in the 70's. They were highlighting for ELO.

diGritz
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Could someone explain to me why going inside a proton reduces the electron's excitation energy?

insearchofpeace
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If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don't understand quantum mechanics.

ShawnHCorey