First measurement of a long-lived π+ π- atom lifetime
Abstract
The adapted DIRAC experiment at the CERN PS accelerator observed for the first time long-lived hydrogen-like π+π- atoms, produced by protons hitting a beryllium target. A part of these atoms crossed the gap of 96~mm and got broken up in the 2.1~m thick platinum foil. Analysing the observed number of atomic pairs, nAL= .436+157-61|tot, the lifetime of the 2p state is found to be τ2p=(.0.45+1.08-0.30|tot) ·10-11s, not contradicting the corresponding QED 2p state lifetime τ2pQED=1.17 · 10-11s. This lifetime value is three orders of magnitude larger than our previously measured value of the π+π- atom ground state lifetime τ=(.3.15+0.28-0.26|tot)· 10-15s. Further studies of long-lived π+π- atoms will allow to measure energy differences between p and s atomic states and so to determine ππ scattering lengths with the aim to check QCD predictions.
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