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Physical Review D | 2006

Final report of the E821 muon anomalous magnetic moment measurement at BNL

Gw Bennett; B. Bousquet; H. N. Brown; G. Bunce; R. M. Carey; P. Cushman; G. T. Danby; P. T. Debevec; M. Deile; H. Deng; S. Dhawan; V. P. Druzhinin; L. Duong; E. Efstathiadis; F. J. M. Farley; G. V. Fedotovich; S. Giron; F. Gray; D. Grigoriev; M. Grosse-Perdekamp; A. Grossmann; M. F. Hare; David W. Hertzog; X. Huang; V. W. Hughes; M. Iwasaki; Klaus-Peter Jungmann; D. Kawall; M. Kawamura; B. I. Khazin

We present the final report from a series of precision measurements of the muon anomalous magnetic moment, a(mu)=(g-2)/2. The details of the experimental method, apparatus, data taking, and analysis are summarized. Data obtained at Brookhaven National Laboratory, using nearly equal samples of positive and negative muons, were used to deduce a(mu)(Expt)=11659208.0(5.4)(3.3)x10(-10), where the statistical and systematic uncertainties are given, respectively. The combined uncertainty of 0.54 ppm represents a 14-fold improvement compared to previous measurements at CERN. The standard model value for a(mu) includes contributions from virtual QED, weak, and hadronic processes. While the QED processes account for most of the anomaly, the largest theoretical uncertainty, approximate to 0.55 ppm, is associated with first-order hadronic vacuum polarization. Present standard model evaluations, based on e(+)e(-) hadronic cross sections, lie 2.2-2.7 standard deviations below the experimental result.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

Measurement of the negative muon anomalous magnetic moment to 0.7 ppm

Gw Bennett; B. Bousquet; H. N. Brown; G. Bunce; R. M. Carey; P. Cushman; G. T. Danby; P. T. Debevec; M. Deile; H. Deng; S. Dhawan; V. P. Druzhinin; L. Duong; F. J. M. Farley; G. V. Fedotovich; F. Gray; D. Grigoriev; M Grosse-Perdekamp; A. Grossmann; M. F. Hare; David W. Hertzog; [No Value] Huang; V. W. Hughes; M. Iwasaki; K. Jungmann; D. Kawall; B. I. Khazin; F. Krienen; [No Value] Kronkvist; A. Lam

The anomalous magnetic moment of the negative muon has been measured to a precision of 0.7 ppm (ppm) at the Brookhaven Alternating Gradient Synchrotron. This result is based on data collected in 2001, and is over an order of magnitude more precise than the previous measurement for the negative muon. The result a(mu(-))=11 659 214(8)(3) x 10(-10) (0.7 ppm), where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic, is consistent with previous measurements of the anomaly for the positive and the negative muon. The average of the measurements of the muon anomaly is a(mu)(exp)=11 659 208(6) x 10(-10) (0.5 ppm).


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Precise Measurement of the Positive Muon Anomalous Magnetic Moment

H. N. Brown; G. Bunce; R. M. Carey; P. Cushman; G. T. Danby; P. T. Debevec; M. Deile; H. Deng; Satish Dhawan; V. P. Druzhinin; L. Duong; E. Efstathiadis; F. J. M. Farley; G. V. Fedotovich; S. Giron; F. Gray; D. Grigoriev; M. Grosse-Perdekamp; A. Grossmann; M. F. Hare; David W. Hertzog; V. W. Hughes; M. Iwasaki; K. Jungmann; D. Kawall; M. Kawamura; B. I. Khazin; J. Kindem; F. Krienen; I. Kronkvist

A precise measurement of the anomalous g value, a(mu) = (g-2)/2, for the positive muon has been made at the Brookhaven Alternating Gradient Synchrotron. The result a(mu+) = 11 659 202(14) (6) x 10(-10) (1.3 ppm) is in good agreement with previous measurements and has an error one third that of the combined previous data. The current theoretical value from the standard model is a(mu)(SM) = 11 659 159.6(6.7) x 10(-10) (0.57 ppm) and a(mu)(exp) - a(mu)(SM) = 43(16) x 10(-10) in which a(mu)(exp) is the world average experimental value.


Reports on Progress in Physics | 2007

Muon (g − 2): Experiment and Theory

J. P. Miller; Eduardo de Rafael; B. Lee Roberts

A review of the experimental and theoretical determinations of the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon is given. The anomaly is defined by a = (g − 2)/2, where the Land´ e g-factor is the proportionality constant that relates the spin to the magnetic moment. For the muon, as well as for the electron and tauon, the anomaly a differs slightly from zero (of the order 10 −3 ) because of radiative corrections. In the Standard Model, contributions to the anomaly come from virtual ‘loops’ containing photons and the known massive particles. The relative contribution from heavy particles scales as the square of the lepton mass over the heavy mass, leading to small differences in the anomaly for e, µ and τ . If there are heavy new particles outside the Standard Model which couple to photons and/or leptons, the relative effect on the muon anomaly will be ∼ (mµ/me) 2 ≈ 43 × 10 3 larger compared with the electron anomaly. Because both the theoretical and experimental values of the muon anomaly are determined to high precision, it is an excellent place to search for the effects of new physics or to constrain speculative extensions to the Standard Model. Details of the current theoretical evaluation and of the series of experiments that culminates with E821 at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, are given. At present the theoretical and the experimental values are known with a similar relative precision of 0.5 ppm. There is, however, a 3.4 standard-deviation difference between the two, strongly suggesting the need for continued experimental and theoretical study. (Some figures in this article are in colour only in the electronic version)


Physics Letters B | 2004

Update: A reanalysis of hadronic cross section measurements at CMD-2

R. R. Akhmetshin; E. V. Anashkin; A.B Arbuzov; V.Sh. Banzarov; A. Baratt; L. M. Barkov; A.V Bogdan; A. Bondar; D. V. Bondarev; S. Eidelman; D. Epifanov; G.V. Fedotovich; N. Gabyshev; D.A. Gorbachev; A.A. Grebenuk; D.N. Grigoriev; V. W. Hughes; F.V. Ignatov; V. F. Kazanin; B.I. Khazin; P. Krokovny; E.A Kuraev; L. M. Kurdadze; A. Kuzmin; Yu. E. Lischenko; I.B. Logashenko; P. Lukin; K.Yu. Mikhailov; J. P. Miller; A.I. Milstein

The updated results of the precise measurements of the processes e+e-->rho->pi+pi-, e+e-->omega->pi+pi-pi0 and e+e-->phi->KLKS performed by the CMD-2 collaboration are presented. The update appeared necessary due an overestimate of the integrated luminosity in previous analyses.


Physics Letters B | 2002

Measurement of e+e- → π+π- cross-section with CMD-2 around ρ-meson

R. R. Akhmetshin; E. V. Anashkin; A.B. Arbuzov; V.M. Aulchenko; V.Sh. Banzarov; L.M Barkov; S. E. Baru; N.S. Bashtovoy; Alexander Bondar; D. V. Bondarev; A.V. Bragin; D. V. Chernyak; S. Dhawan; Semen Eidelman; G.V. Fedotovich; N. Gabyshev; D.A. Gorbachev; A.A. Grebenuk; D.N. Grigoriev; V.W. Hughes; F.V. Ignatov; S.V. Karpov; V. F. Kazanin; B.I. Khazin; I.A. Koop; P. Krokovny; E.A. Kuraev; L. M. Kurdadze; A. Kuzmin; I.B. Logashenko

The cross section of the process e+e- ->pi+pi- has been measured using about 114000 events collected by the CMD-2 detector at the VEPP-2M e+e- collider in the center-of-mass energy range from 0.61 to 0.96 GeV. Results of the pion form factor determination with a 0.6% systematic uncertainty are presented. Implications for the hadronic contribution to the muon anomalous magnetic moment are discussed.


Physics Letters B | 2007

High-statistics measurement of the pion form factor in the ρ-meson energy range with the CMD-2 detector

R. R. Akhmetshin; V.M. Aulchenko; V.Sh. Banzarov; L.M. Barkov; N.S. Bashtovoy; A. Bondar; D.V. Bondarev; A.V. Bragin; S. Dhawan; S. Eidelman; D. Epifanov; G.V. Fedotovich; N. Gabyshev; D.A. Gorbachev; A.A. Grebenuk; D.N. Grigoriev; V. W. Hughes; F. V. Ignatov; S.V. Karpov; V. F. Kazanin; B.I. Khazin; I.A. Koop; P. Krokovny; A. Kuzmin; I.B. Logashenko; P. Lukin; A. P. Lysenko; K.Yu. Mikhailov; J. P. Miller; A.I. Milshtein

We present a measurement of the pion form factor based on e+e- annihilation data from the CMD-2 detector in the energy range 0.6<sqrt(s)<1.0 GeV with a systematic uncertainty of 0.8%. A data sample is five times larger than that used in our previous measurement.


Physics Letters B | 1998

First direct observation of time-reversal non-invariance in the neutral-kaon system

A. Angelopoulos; K. Jon-And; J. Derre; C.W.E. van Eijk; A. Muller; M. Schäfer; M. Carroll; C. Santoni; P. Kokkas; G. Backenstoss; H.-J. Gerber; R. Rickenbach; J. R. Fry; P. Carlson; Marc Dejardin; A. Schopper; O. Behnke; F. Touchard; F. Henry-Couannier; R. Gamet; T. Nakada; P.-R. Kettle; R. Le Gac; L.A. Schaller; M. Fidecaro; P. Pavlopoulos; A. Go; R. Kreuger; I. Mandić; A. Filipčič

Abstract We report on the first observation of time-reversal symmetry violation through a comparison of the probabilities of K 0 transforming into K0 and K0 into K 0 as a function of the neutral-kaon eigentime t. The comparison is based on the analysis of the neutral-kaon semileptonic decays recorded in the CPLEAR experiment. There, the strangeness of the neutral kaon at time t=0 was tagged by the kaon charge in the reaction p p → K ± π ∓ K 0 ( K 0 ) at rest, whereas the strangeness of the kaon at the decay time t=τ was tagged by the lepton charge in the final state. An average decay-rate asymmetry 〈 R( K 0 t=0 → e + π − ν t=τ )−R( K 0 t=0 → e − π + ν t=τ ) R( K 0 t=0 → e + π − ν t=τ )+R( K 0 t=0 → e − π + ν t=τ ) 〉=(6.6±1.3 stat ±1.0 syst )×10 −3 was measured over the interval 1 τ S τ S , thus leading to evidence for time-reversal non-invariance.


Physical Review D | 2009

Improved limit on the muon electric dipole moment

G. W. Bennett; B. Bousquet; H. N. Brown; G. Bunce; R. M. Carey; P. Cushman; G. T. Danby; P. T. Debevec; M. Deile; H. Deng; S. Dhawan; V. P. Druzhinin; L. Duong; E. Efstathiadis; F. J. M. Farley; G. V. Fedotovich; S. Giron; F. Gray; D. Grigoriev; M. Grosse-Perdekamp; A. Grossmann; M. F. Hare; David W. Hertzog; X. Huang; V. W. Hughes; M. Iwasaki; K. Jungmann; D. Kawall; M. Kawamura; B. I. Khazin

G.W. Bennett, B. Bousquet, H.N. Brown, G. Bunce, R.M. Carey, P. Cushman, G.T. Danby, P.T. Debevec, M. Deile, H. Deng, W. Deninger, S.K. Dhawan, V.P. Druzhinin, L. Duong, E. Efstathiadis, F.J.M. Farley, G.V. Fedotovich, S. Giron, F.E. Gray, D. Grigoriev, M. Grosse-Perdekamp, A. Grossmann, M.F. Hare, D.W. Hertzog, X. Huang, V.W. Hughes, M. Iwasaki, K. Jungmann, D. Kawall, M. Kawamura, B.I. Khazin, J. Kindem, F. Krienen, I. Kronkvist, A. Lam, R. Larsen, Y.Y. Lee, I. Logashenko, R. McNabb, W. Meng, J. Mi, J.P. Miller, Y. Mizumachi, W.M. Morse, D. Nikas, C.J.G. Onderwater, Y. Orlov, C.S. Özben, J.M. Paley, Q. Peng, C.C. Polly, J. Pretz, R. Prigl, G. zu Putlitz, T. Qian, S.I. Redin, O. Rind, B.L. Roberts, N. Ryskulov, S. Sedykh, Y.K. Semertzidis, P. Shagin, Yu.M. Shatunov, E.P. Sichtermann, E. Solodov, M. Sossong, A. Steinmetz, L.R. Sulak, C. Timmermans, A. Trofimov, D. Urner, P. von Walter, D. Warburton, D. Winn, A. Yamamoto and D. Zimmerman (Muon (g − 2) Collaboration) Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215 Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973 Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics, 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia LEPP, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853 Fairfield University, Fairfield, CT 06430 6 Kernfysisch Versneller Instituut, University of Groningen, NL-9747 AA, Groningen, The Netherlands 7 Physikalisches Institut der Universität Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany 8 Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801 9 KEK, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0801, Japan Department of Physics, University. of Minnesota., Minneapolis, MN 55455 11 Science University of Tokyo, Tokyo, 153-8902, Japan 12 Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8551, Japan 13 Department of Physics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520 † Deceased


Physical Review Letters | 2004

New Method of Measuring Electric Dipole Moments in Storage Rings

F. J. M. Farley; Klaus-Peter Jungmann; J. P. Miller; W. M. Morse; Y. Orlov; Bradley Lee Roberts; Yannis K. Semertzidis; Alexander J. Silenko; E. J. Stephenson

A new highly sensitive method of looking for electric dipole moments of charged particles in storage rings is described. The major systematic errors inherent in the method are addressed and ways to minimize them are suggested. It seems possible to measure the muon EDM to levels that test speculative theories beyond the standard model.

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B. I. Khazin

Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics

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G. T. Danby

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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H. N. Brown

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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G. Bunce

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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G. V. Fedotovich

Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics

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