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Spacefed / Explore / Physics / CODATA Proton Charge Radius; The History Of This Fundamental Measurement 
Physics

CODATA Proton Charge Radius; The History Of This Fundamental Measurement 

Haramein’s generalized holographic solution precisely predicted the mass and radius of the proton in 2012, resulting in a radius 4% smaller than the Standard Model's calculations and experiments gave at the time. This prediction, which did not utilize adjusting parameters, was later confirmed at the Paul Scherrer Institute utilizing muons in a proton accelerator. Further experiments utilizing electrons confirmed the radius in 2017-2018. The value of the proton RMS charge radius has since been validated by the adjusted 2018 CODATA value, which is the standard for all fundamental physical constants.

Dr. Inés Urdaneta
Last updated: 2024/02/09 at 11:33 AM
Dr. Inés Urdaneta
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Haramein’s generalized holographic solution precisely predicted the mass and radius of the proton in 2012 [2, 3], resulting in a radius 4% smaller than the Standard Model’s calculations and experiments gave at the time. This prediction, which did not utilize adjusting parameters, was later confirmed in 2013 at the Paul Scherrer Institute utilizing muons in a proton accelerator. Further experiments utilizing electrons confirmed the radius in 2017-2018. The value of the proton RMS charge radius has since been validated by the adjusted 2018 CODATA value, which is the standard for all fundamental physical constants.

Read the most recent paper The Origin of Mass and the Nature of Gravity, published in the CERN preprint server Zenodo, to see the importance of a precise proton charge radius to calculating the mass-energy of the proton. 

In September 2019 the charge radius of the proton was finally confirmed experimentally as detailed in the study from Eric Hessels [1], of York University in Canada, and his colleagues.  

In his paper entitled Quantum gravity and the holographic mass (published first in the Library of Congress in 2012, and later in a peer-reviewed journal in 2013), Nassim Haramein had anticipated this value proposing a generalized holographic model that enables us to compute from first principle calculations the now-confirmed value for the proton charge radius, which was then adjusted by the CODATA (Committee on Data for Science and Technology) to that same value in 2018. This all is part of the so-called Proton Puzzle, which we will address in this article.  

Since the nucleus of a hydrogen atom consists of a single proton and this atom has only one electron, hydrogen is a suitable platform for determining the proton’s intrinsic properties, such as the proton charge radius, which is the spatial extent of the distribution of the proton’s charge. The established proton charge radius rp found by experimental techniques performed before 2010 (such as elastic electron–proton scattering and hydrogen spectroscopy) produced the mean value of rp = 0.8768±0.0069×10−13 cm. Another way of expressing this value is: rp = 0.8768 femtometers (1 fm is 10–13 cm, or 13 zeros after the decimal point) with an uncertainty of 0.0069×10−13 cm. This was the CODATA recommended value for the proton charge radius until 2018, when it was updated to a value in agreement with the one predicted by the generalized holographic model.  

 

Image: from Dipangkar Dutta’s presentation. Mississippi State University

As explained in this Nature article, according to quantum mechanics, there is small probability that the electron will be found inside the region of the proton (let’s recall that protons and electrons are not solid balls). When inside, the electron is less strongly influenced by the proton’s electric charge than it would otherwise be. This effect slightly weakens the binding of the electron to the proton and causes a tiny shift in the energy of the electron state with respect to other electronic states. The high precision achieved both by experiments and by the theory of quantum electrodynamics allows the proton radius to be extracted from measurements of this energy shift. 

In 2010, Randolf Pohl, of the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, and his colleagues measured a highly accurate value of the proton radius using spectroscopy of muonic hydrogen; a form of hydrogen in which the electron is replaced by a heavier version of the particle called a muon, whose much higher mass causes it to orbit 207 times closer to the hydrogen nucleus than the electron, increasing the probability of the moun being inside the proton and making it much more sensitive to the size of the proton. Since the associated energy shift is about 8 million times larger for muonic hydrogen than for regular hydrogen, and since muons and electrons have the same electrical charge, we would have expected an increase in the accuracy of the already known value for the proton radius. The community was confused when it obtained a radius that was 4% smaller than the previously accepted one, which is a huge difference at that scale. 

The disagreement opened the possibility that protons interact differently with muons and electrons, an anomaly that would contradict the standard model of particle physics and would require new physics to explain why and under what conditions the proton might behave differently. Given the heavy consequences that this new value would have on a very well established theory, and because this new measurement could be due to some mistake in the experiments or in their interpretations, further confirmation from other groups and experiments was required, if it was to be considered a real issue.  

Figure 1 (taken from Nature) : Values for the proton radius expressed in femtometres (1 fm = 10exp(-13) cm). The data points are values for the proton radius obtained over the past decade, including the latest results, from Bezginov (from Hessels group) et al. 4 and Xiong et al., with uncertainties indicated by the error bars. The data were obtained using three different measurement techniques: electron–proton scattering, spectroscopy of ordinary hydrogen, and spectroscopy of an exotic type of hydrogen called muonic hydrogen. The error bars for the two data points associated with muonic-hydrogen spectroscopy are too small to be depicted in this figure. The bands denote the values adopted by the Committee on Data for Science and Technology (CODATA) in 2014 (0.8751(61)×10exp(−13) cm) and in 2018 (see go.nature.com/2bwkrqz). 

Three years later, on January 25, 2013, the journal Science reported results from Aldo Antognini et al. on the measurements of the charge radius of the proton. The team was able to obtain measurements with 1.7 times more precision than the 2010 muonic hydrogen result from Pohl et al., while also confirming the earlier findings. Antognini’s team reported 0.84087(39) fm ( = 0.84087(39)×10−13 cm) for the charge radius. This new value posed huge challenges to the standard model, and the problem was coined The Proton Radius Puzzle. 

At this time in 2013, Haramein was publishing his article Quantum gravity and the holographic mass, and Antognini’s latest results for the proton charge radius had just been released, casting serious doubts on the theoretical value predicted by the standard model. Using Antognini’s value, the generalized holographic model prediction of the proton radius is rp = 0.841263(28)×10−13 cm.  which is within 1 standard deviation (written as 1 σ and being 0.00037×10−13cm) of that experimental result. The predicted value falls inside the accuracy of the experiment. 

Then, a September 2019 study by Eric Hessels, of York University in Canada, and his colleagues confirmed with spectroscopy measurements that the proton radius of muonic and electronic hydrogen are the same. They performed a measurement analogous to that of Pohl and his coauthors, but for the electronic hydrogen this time, which required experimental strategies to reach parts-per-million accuracy. The authors developed an experimental method based on a technique used in atomic clocks that has many technical advantages over other approaches, including the elimination of systematic uncertainties, filtration of the environmental noise, and the increase in the simplicity of the spectral shape. This allowed Hessels et al. to carry out a meticulous study of systematic uncertainties and to extract a precise value for the proton radius, obtaining rp = 0.833 ± 0.010 femtometres (1 fm is 10–13 cm), consistent with the value from Pohl’s team.  

Meanwhile, electron scattering measurements still consistently yielded a larger value for the proton radius. Therefore, the PRad Experiment, a new experiment in which electrons were scattered off the protons in hydrogen gas, was performed by Ashot Gasparian of North Carolina A&T State University and his colleagues at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in Virginia. The improved accuracy allowed them to measure rp = 0.831 ± 0.007 fm, which supports the value found by the two previous muonic hydrogen experiments. Additionally, their finding agrees with the revised value (announced in 2019) for the Rydberg constant, one of the most accurately measured fundamental constants in physics.

All these different experiments with electronic hydrogen have consistently yielded a smaller value for the proton radius, possibly resolving the mystery at the experimental level. For the standard model, however, this is not good news. 

In 2018, the CODATA commission actualized the proton radius to the one that is still recommended, which is rp = 0.8414 x 10-13 cm, with a standard uncertainty of 0.00019 x 10-13 cm. This adjustment occurred before the latest electronic hydrogen measurements of September 2019  (Hessel’s rp = 0.833 x 10-13 cm), which totally validate the 2018 update.

As it says here, “the best measurement is the one using muonic hydrogen rp = 0.84087 fm (ANTOGNINI 2013), that is far more precise.” Which is also the one closest to Haramein’s prediction! 

Redefinition of the SI units

It is worth noting that the most accurate value for the Planck constant was announced in 2019. Measuring the Planck constant to a suitably high precision of ten parts per billion required decades of work by international teams across continents, which allowed this constant to be fixed at exactly 6.626070150 × 10−34 kg⋅m2/s. 

Our article entitled From the Planck constant to the Kilogram gives a detailed description of the redefinition of the unit of mass, enabling scientists to define mass in terms of Planck’s constant h which is an unchanging feature of the universe, instead of using as a reference or unit of mass a 130-year-old, platinum-iridium cylinder weighing 2.2 pounds (1 kilogram) that is sitting in a room in France. 

Centenary Commemoration Stamp http://www.jgiesen.de/briefmarken/institutionen1.html

The MKS units (Meter for distance, Kilogram for mass, and Seconds for time) of measure are now completely described in terms of vacuum and quantum regime properties, which are fundamental agents. The units of mass, time, and distance have unified around the Planck constant!

Having all units defined relative to the Planck constant, the only remaining issue is the limitation posed by the gravitational constant G upon which all Planck units depend. G is the constant with the lowest accuracy at 10-5 digits, while other constants have accuracies at least of 10-9. Therefore, the accuracy of Gis a limiting factor.  Now that the Planck constant has been fixed to a more accurate value and now that the units of mass depend on it, the increase in the accuracy of G depends only on achieving the solution to quantum gravity, and that’s where the generalized holographic model reaches its climax. We already have the complete solution to quantum gravity expressed in terms of our surface-to-volume ratio 𝝓, and it is beautiful. 

In our coming paper, entitled Scale invariant Unification of Forces, Fields, and Particles in a Quantum Vacuum Plasma, we will demonstrate the unification of all the units, constants, forces, and increase the accuracy of the Planck Units by calculating the gravitational constant G up to  10-12 digits of accuracy.

Unified Science in Perspective

After all the above, the proton puzzle was solved, at least at the experimental level. The discrepancy with the former larger value for rp from 2010 and before was likely due to measurement errors. Nevertheless, most mainstream media claimed this smaller radius would not require new physics because it gave the same result in both electronic and muonic hydrogens. This statement is misleading. The standard model’s theoretical prediction at the time was off by 4%, so evidently, major modifications to the standard model were required. Additionally, let us not forget that it uses at least 17 adjusting parameters, while the generalized holographic model is a first principle calculation. Fortunately, the confirmation of the proton charge radius validates the Generalized Holographic Model.

The fact that Planck Units are no longer just the result of human convention makes them real universal constants. Any other advanced civilization would therefore find the same values for them. 

Redefining the SI units so that they derive from the fixation of the Plank constant, means they now depend on fundamental values from nature instead of human convention. Together with the fact that the Planck Spherical Unit (PSU) is necessary to achieve Quantum Gravity, this all implies that the PSU is not just related to a unit of measure … it IS a fundamental unit of the Universe. This is because the PSU is a real voxel or volume unit with mass-energy density of the order of 1093 gr/cm3, that quantize space and is directly related to the quantum of action or angular momentum h.  

More at: The Proton puzzle may be solved

References

[1] N. Bezginov, T,. Valdez, M. Horbatsch, A. Marsman, A.C. Vutha, and E. A. Hessels, A measurement of the atomic hydrogen Lamb shift and the proton charge radius, SCIENCE 365, 1007 (2019), DOI: 10.1126/science.aau780

[2] N. Haramein, Quantum gravity and the holographic mass solution, Phys. Rev. Res. Int. 3, 270 (2013).

[3] N. Haramein, “Addendum to ‘Quantum gravity and the holographic mass’ in view of the 2013 muonic proton charge radius measurement,” OSF Preprints (2012). Preprint DOI 10.31219/osf.io/4uhwp

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Dr. Inés Urdaneta 9. February 2024. 28. August 2021.
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By Dr. Inés Urdaneta
Dr. Inés Urdaneta is a multi-published research physicist in the domain of light-matter interaction at the atomic, molecular, and nano/solid-state scales. In her more than 20 years of research she participated in national and international research projects throughout France, USA, México and Venezuela, on an extensive variety of topics. At present, as part of our research staff at the International Space Federation, Inés focuses on developing physical-chemical models in the frame of the generalized holographic model (GHM) and unification theory developed by Nassim Haramein, together with quantum information processes and their connection to black holes and to proto-consciousness.
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