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Download by George Alexander The notion of a magnet with only one pole is
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by George Alexander The notion of a magnet with only one pole is difficult to imagine, but physicists say it ought to exist. or the past fifty years physicists—like so many dedicated collectors—have resolutely tracked down and captured an impressive number of subatomic particles: neutrons and neutrinos, positrons and antiprotons, pi mesons a n d K mesons, m u o n s and taus, to name but a few. T h e scientists have found these bits a n d pieces of nature in the interactions between thin metal targets and streams of helium nuclei from radioactive sources, b e t w e e n gas molecules a n d molecule-shattering cosmic rays, and between a variety of targets and electrons or protons whipped to high energies in particle accelerators. sity. If the direction of the magnetic field were away from the center of the particle, the monopole would be said to be a north monopole; if toward the center, it would be a south. These characteristics—equal b u t opposite properties—are basically the same as those of the positively charged p r o t o n and the negatively charged electron; the proton's electric field is depicted as pointing outward from its center and the electron's as pointing inward. It was this parallel between electrical and magnetic fields that intrigued the British theoretical physicist Paul A. M. Dirac back in the early 1930s, as he contemplated the equations that Scottish scientist James Clerk Maxwell had formulated more than 50 years earlier to describe the interrelatedness of electricity and magnetism. Dirac was delighted by the elegance of Maxwell's equations (an elegance, say most scientists, that can be fully appreciated only by those with s o m e m a t h e m a t i c a l b a c k ground). T h o u g h he was convinced of their truth, he was nonetheless troubled by what he perceived to be a blemish, an apparent Indeed, the scientists have been so successful for so long at this business that it might seem a simple matter: theoretical physicists hypothesizing the existence of new particles and experimenters seeking and finding them. The reality, however, is that a few species of particles have long been predicted to exist—there is, in fact, widespread accord a m o n g physicists in the belief of their existence—anu yet not one example nas so far been discovered. T h e magnetic monopole is one such elusive particle. An arcane particle A magnetic monopole is precisely w h a t its name implies: a magnetic particle that has only one pole, either north or south. T h e concept is difficult, at least initially, for those accustomed to envisioning magnetic field lines as emerging from one end of an ordinary bar magnet and t h e n curling back and around to the opposite end. This is the pattern of a dipole, in w h i c h the direction of field lines is considered to be from north to south. The field lines of a monopole, conversely, would extend radially in all directions from the center of the particle, like pins sticking out of a pincushion, and continue along straight lines to some practical limit of inten- Mn.QAIP. Ma\//.liine1Qft1 1Q asymmetry, in the equations. T h e equations did indeed establish the unity of electricity and m a g n e t i s m (they are a U [ l ] symmetry in the language of gauge theory; see " G r a n d U n i f i c a t i o n : A n Elusive G r a i l / ' Mosaic, Volume 10, N u m b e r 5). N o n e t h e less, they incorporated no basic unit of magnetic charge as they did the q u a n t u m as the unit of electric charge. As D i r a c r e e x a m i n e d the p r i n c i p l e s of quantum electromagnetism, he could perceive no good reason why there should not be a q u a n t u m of magnetic charge. Such a quantum would constitute the unit needed to balance Maxwell's equation neatly. In 1931, Dirac predicted the existence of magnetic monopoles. Seeking, seeking Since then, a number of investigators have looked high and low—literally—for monopoles. T h e physicists of the 1930s looked through their cloud chamber records for signs of passage of these particles, but those instruments were not at all suited to such research. T h e difficulty of the search, and the dim prospects of reward, discouraged others for m a n y years from pursuing it further. In the 1960s, interest revived. A team of Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientists searched iron ore deposits and meteorites for a n y monopoles that might have been created in the e a r t h ' s u p p e r a t m o sphere by energetic cosmic rays. T h e premise of the MIT physicists was that the m o n o poles created in the collisions b e t w e e n cosmic rays a n d molecules in the a t m o sphere would fall to earth at relatively low speeds; because of their large pole strength, the particles would lose speed rapidly in interactions with atmospheric matter. Moreover, if they landed on surface deposits of iron ore, magnetic monopoles would be effectively trapped there by the iron's own magnetic field. T h e monopoles would not be so tightly b o u n d to the ore, however, that they could n o t be extracted b y a more powerful magnetic field. T h e MIT team took a 60,000-gauss electromagnet (the earth's field is about one g a u s s ) to an i r o n - o r e f o r m a t i o n in N e w York State's Adirondack M o u n t a i n s . Using the instrument in much the same way as they'd have used a v a c u u m cleaner, they s w e p t o u t an a p p r o x i m a t e l y t e n - s q u a r e meter surface area. Any monopoles in the ore would have been sucked o u t of the formation by the electromagnet and accelerated u p w a r d t h r o u g h a pair of emulsion plates. Their passage would have been marked in Alexander is a science Angeles Times. writer 20 MOSAIC Mav/.lunfi1Qft1 for the Los the plates by holes t h r o u g h the emulsion as far as an iron b a c k s t o p . T h e MIT physicists found not a hint of a monopole in either the A d i r o n d a c k iron ore or in a n u m b e r of meteorites made available for the experiment by Harvard University. Then in 1973, with the availability of more sophisticated equipment, scientists at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Illinois, processed 2,000 liters of Atlantic Ocean water, h o p i n g to find any monopoles that might have wandered into the earth's h y d r o s p h e r e and that might still be there, bobbing along like some sort of exotic flotsam. T h e seawater was exposed, in small, continuous quantities, to the field of a superc o n d u c t i n g e l e c t r o m a g n e t , a device that would surely have attracted (or repelled) any monopoles present and directed them against a stacked series of carefully calibrated counters. T h e counters would have stopped any such particle and provided an estimate of its magnetic charge. None was detected. Efforts to create monopoles in the highenergy beams of accelerators were no more successful, and more than one physicist began to wonder if (1) the search simply h a d n ' t been directed to the right places or (2) there were something in n a t u r e forbidding m o n o poles' existence. Hope springs eternal T h e n in the s u m m e r of 1975, a team of physicists from the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Houston startled their c o l l e a g u e s e v e r y w h e r e by claiming—tentatively—to have found the first hard evidence of a monopole. The evidence was a particle track in a sandwiched stack of plastic sheets, film, and photographic emulsion. Back in 1973 the team—P. Buford Price of Berkeley; E d w a r d K. Shirk, n o w an Oakland-based consultant; W. Zack Osborne, n o w at the University of Oklahoma; and Lawrence S. Pinsky of Houston—attached the package to a helium balloon and flew it to an altitude of 40 kilometers above Iowa for several days. T h e scientists were looking for ultraheavy cosmic rays and were richly rewarded. As a b o n u s , it appeared that they had also caught a monopole. Cosmic rays, which range from protons to the heavy nuclei of elements like iron or oxygen, riddle materials like plastic and photographic film as easily as shotgun pellets p e n e t r a t e s t y r o f o a m . T o identify cosmic ray strikes, scientists are able to make the tracks in the plastic sheets visible by a chemical etching process. T h e y can them determine, from the width, d e p t h , and angle of etched-out tracks, m a n y of the properties of the particles responsible. Of the 75 etched pits that the BerkeleyHouston team found on their detector, 74 were clearly the marks of cosmic rays. (Tostate the finding that simply belies the painstaking perusal of each track; the elapsed time between the experiment and the report was two years.) The remaining track was strikingly different. Its area of d a m a g e was not only much larger than the other pits, but it had punched its way through all the layers of plastic and film w i t h o u t any a p p a r e n t change in speed. Price concluded—prematurely, as he was later to concede—that the track seemed to have been the product of a massive particle having an ionizing charge 137 times that of an electron. It also appeared to be relatively slow moving, having a velocity roughly half that of the speed of light. These two factors—its slow speed and the ionization charge 137 times that of a singly charged particle—seemed to be compatible with the expected behavior of a very massive monopole and incompatible with any k n o w n atomic nucleus, Price says. However random the n u m b e r 137 might sound, It happens to be exactly twice the value (68.5) that Dirac had calculated as the smallest q u a n t u m of pole strength that a monopole could possess. The charge of an electron has been shown to occur in Integral multiples (1, 2, 3, 4, etc.) of its basic value (1.60 X 10~19 coulombs); so magnetic charges should also occur in integral multiples of some basic value. W h a t ever it was that tore through the BerkeleyHouston a p p a r a t u s , it certainly appeared to have two units of magnetic charge; Price declared it "a monopole—two plus." Unfortunately for the team, the ionization charge later came down from 137 to 114, plus or minus 4, when Price recalibrated what might be termed the damage index for the plastic sheets. While this is certainly a whopping charge, it is not an integral multiple of that of a monopole; the revision seriously weakened the claim that the penetrating particle was the elusive monopole. Nor, other scientists w h o s t u d i e d the m e a s u r e m e n t s made by the team concluded, was there any reason to assume that the particle was traveling at about half the speed of light. It could have been half, or it could have been nine-tenths; either assumption was valid. These two revisions wiped out the claim for a found m o n o p o l e . W h e n the BerkeleyHouston scientists published their final analysis, they concluded that, though there were no grounds to attribute the anomalous track to a monopole, it appeared to represent the only example to date of a nucleus with unusual properties. Perhaps its ionization charge of 114 signified that it was the first example of a long-sought "superheavy" element with an anticipated atomic number of approximately 114. " U n t i l further examples of such a particle can be f o u n d , " says Price, "it will remain in the scientific literature as a mystery, one of several cases of observations that have not been confirmed by further evidence." Undaunted Has Price's experience discouraged him or others from seeking monopoles? No more t h a n archaeologists were put off by the discovery that most of the pyramids and tombs of Egyptian pharoahs had been plundered long before the scholars arrived at the site; after all, England's Howard Carter did happen u p o n the largely intact tomb and treasures of T u t a n k h a m u n , didn't he? Perhaps a similar piece of luck will strike some physicist. " M a y b e m o n o p o l e s d o n ' t e x i s t , " says David Fryberger, a Stanford Linear Accelerator Center physicist who at present, along with Price, is mounting a search for the elusive particle. "Or maybe they're very well hidden, or maybe there just aren't very many of them. M y betting is that they're scarce in nature and very well concealed." It could also be that monopoles exist only as colossi, at least in the realm of elementary particles. According to some grand unification theories, monopoles would have been made as gargantuan objects during the first few seconds of the Big Bang. At that time, when the universe began and everything was a near-homogeneous blend of high temperature, high-density radiation and fundamental particles, monopoles would have been fashioned with mass equivalents of 10 25 electron volts. (For comparison, the most energetic particles k n o w n are the rare, highest-energy cosmic rays, at 10 20 electron volts.) A mass equivalent to 10 25 electron volts— for a particle—borders on being i n c o m p r e hensible. And if monopoles exist only as such objects, then the approximately fortybillion electron-volt (4 X 10 10 ) detector that some accelerator physicists are n o w setting out for them stands about as much c h a n c e of catching one as a mousetrap does an African elephant. Fryberger, however, b e lieves that monopoles may exist in a wide M O S A I C Mav/June 1981 21 range of sizes and energies; he is working collaboratively with Price and Kay Kinoshita, a Berkeley graduate student, in an effort to find some in the mouse-sized range. The three scientists have designed a detector for the Positron-Electron Project ring at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, a facility s u p p o r t e d by the D e p a r t m e n t of Energy. T h e detector is a polyhedral structure less than 30 centimeters wide between any opposing two of its twelve faces. Each face is a sandwich of plastic sheets; the resulting dodecahedron envelops a length of the accelerator's main ring—a thin-walled, f i v e - c e n t i m e t e r - d i a m e t e r stainless steel pipe, inside of which beams of highly energetic p o s i t r o n s and electrons circulate in opposite directions. W h e n the high-energy beams collide and particles of opposite charge annihilate each other, they disappear in a burst of electromagnetic energy. The burst, after the briefest of brief instants, is transformed into a spray of new particles. (Those particles are not thought to be buried deep inside the annihilating positron or electron as seeds are in a melon; instead, the resulting particles are formed out of the energy as Einstein's special theory of relativity-™-E = mc2— dictates.) The mousetrap. Kay Kinoshita and Buford Price with the polyhedral detector which, installed in Stanford's accelerator (lower left), will show a monopole as a track like that in plastic mockup. The researchers can derive the ratio of the ionization charge to the velocity of the penetrating particie from microscopic measurements of the pits' dimensions. Certain proportions could indicate the existence of monopoles. Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory; Buford Price, by permission. 22 MOSAIC Mav/June1Qft1 The experiment N o one really k n o w s the a n n i h i l a t i o n energies at which monopoles might appear among the resultant particles. Fryberger, Price, and Kinoshita plan to look for them at energies up to the energy limit of the colliding beams: 36 billion electron volts. If the experiment does p r o d u c e monopoles, Fryberger says, he w o u l d expect them to be made in pairs. These pairs would fly off in opposite directions, penetrate the thin walls of the steel v a c u u m pipe, and p r o d u c e tracks in the plastic sheets of the detector. The detector is expected to remain a r o u n d the vacuum pipe for several m o n t h s at a time, recording the tracks of ionizing particles. T h e n Fryberger will pull the plastic sheets and send them to Price and Kinoshita at Berkeley. Using a technique that Price developed, the Berkeley scientists will dip the sheets in a caustic solution of sodium h y d r o x i d e . T h e s o l u t i o n eats a w a y the material in a particle-caused track at a rate proportional to the a m o u n t of ionization that went into the m a k i n g of the track. T h e result is a conical pit at the top and b o t t o m of every plastic sheet traversed by the particle. From microscopic measurement of the pits' dimensions, the researchers can derive the ratio of the i o n i z a t i o n c h a r g e to the velocity of the p e n e t r a t i n g particle. Particles with ratios of certain proportions will be analyzed m o r e closely and carefully; these are the ones that could be monopoles. Dirac's number—68.5—is one to be checked. Fryberger has his o w n number—about 25— which he'd like to be able to reach. A determining factor will be the e x p e r i m e n t e r s ' ability to eliminate " b a c k g r o u n d noise" in the detectors. " W e ' d like to get d o w n to 20 or even to 10," the Stanford scientist says. The three California scientists operated the detector on the Stanford machine for three months in mid-1980, b u t the machine was producing colliding beams of positrons and electrons for only a week or two during that span. The accelerator was just starting up then, and the experimenters consider those runs as only b a c k g r o u n d studies. T h e y weren't really looking until the machine went into p r o d u c t i o n - r u n n i n g — c o l l i d i n g beams most of the time—early in 1981. " W e won't find t h e m if they exist only as 10 16 GeV [billion-electron-volt] particles," Price says, "because the machine can't reach those levels. But if there are what we might call not-so-grand monopoles, with masses no more than some 18 billion electron volts each [1.8 X 10 10 ] , m a y b e we'll find some. But I wouldn't w a n t to pin the whole experiment on just monopoles alone—what if we don't find any?—so we're using plastic sheets that could also detect electrically charged particles less highly ionizing than monopoles but which could be discovered by the bigger detectors at PEP." Elsewhere Another niche being searched for the elusive magnetic monopoles is in pulsars, those extremely compact n e u t r o n stars that rotate rapidly and emit lighthouse-like beams of radio noise. M. Bonnardeau of the National Center for Scientific Research near Paris and A. K. Drukier of the Institute for Low T e m p e r a t u r e Research in M u n i c h have suggested that the very violent collisions between electrons and the surface of a pulsar might produce monopoles in the mass range being explored in California. T h e resulting monopoles would be accelerated by the star's e n o r m o u s l y powerful magnetic field. One would be driven toward, or into, the pulsar; the other away from it, toward interstellar space. Because a monopole d e s t r o y s magnetic fields (it d r a w s energy from the fields by the act of being accelerated), the production of monopoles should be seen initially as a reduction of the pulsar's rotation rate. A s t r o n o m e r s are now c h e c k i n g the projections a g a i n s t actual pulsar observations. But what if monopoles come only in the grand variety? Despite the fact that they were created, with the universe, some 16 billion or 18 billion years ago, there should still be some drifting about that have so far managed to escape an annihilating encounter with an oppositely charged monopole. Richard A. Carrigan, jr., assistant head of the Fermi National Laboratory's research division, believes that some of these massive particles might have found a home deep in the interiors of the earth and other planets. Being so massive, these monopoles would have responded appreciably to gravitational fields as well as to magnetic forces. Some could well have been d r a w n into young galaxies like the Milky W a y , and a still smaller fraction may have found their way into the solar nebula when it began to condense and form the solar system. If this happened, Carrigan has conjectured, the gigantic monopoles picked up by the accreting earth (and Venus, M a r s , and other bodies) would have settled slowly deep into the planet until, at last, they reached an equilibrium point with the planet's magnetic, gravitational, and other force fields. His calculations s h o w that e q u i l i b r i u m point to be less than 1,600 kilometers out from the center of the earth—well within the approximately 3,500-kilometer radius of the body's molten core. There the monopoles would separate ac- cording to their polarity. S o u t h monopoles w o u l d c o n g r e g a t e all a r o u n d the n o r t h facing side of this equilibrium shell as the north particles would the south-facing side. As long as they remained in equilibrium, the monopoles would pretty much stay put. But they would still be immersed in a fluid medium, the molten core, and could move. Motion could be induced, Carrigan says, if the earth's magnetic polarity reversed; indeed, this is k n o w n to occur every h u n d r e d thousand years or so. Suddenly, then, the monopoles would find themselves in disequilibrium because they would be in magnetic fields of the same, and therefore repulsive, sign. The particles would immediately begin to migrate toward the opposite pole. If, in this migration, a s o u t h - b o u n d north monopole were to come within anything less than a millionth of a centimeter of a north-bound south monopole, Carrigan calculates, the two would be attracted to each other. The outcome: annihilation and the release of a large q u a n t i t y of heat. There is much that is either not k n o w n or is poorly understood about the earth's deepseated heat. Compression and radioactive decay are usually invoked to explain it. But if only a fourth of the planet's total heat o u t p u t were derived from monopole annihilation, Carrigan calculates, the earth's monopole population could average as high as 1.5 particles per t h o u s a n d cubic centim e t e r s . T h u s even a relative h a n d f u l of monopoles could have—or have had—significant impact on planetary evolution. Although all sorts of science-fiction uses have been conjectured for monopoles, should any ever be found and isolated, physicists would be satisfied initially to k n o w that they exist and what their properties are. " D o we need m o n o p o l e s to m a k e m a g netism w o r k ? " Fryberger asks rhetorically. " T h e answer is ' n o ' ; electric charge and electric fields can e x p l a i n e v e r y t h i n g we currently k n o w about electromagnetism. It really is an aesthetic argument—electric and magnetic fields are so much alike and yet one has something the other doesn't. T h a t doesn't seem right, s o m e h o w . " If there is a dogma in modern physics, it might be that in nature anything not expressly forbidden to exist by a specific law must be presumed to exist. Barring the discovery of some principle that prohibits them, then, there must be magnetic monopoles. Physicists are just going to have to get clever enough to find them. • The National tributed to the in this article ticle Physics Science Foundation has consupport of research discussed through its Elementary ParProgram. MOSAIP. Mflv/.lune1QR1 93