that provided the first confirmation of a
leptonic
neutral current interaction. A
neutrino interacts with an
electron, the track of which is seen horizontally, and emerges as a neutrino without producing a
muon. The first main quest of Gargamelle was to search for evidence of hard-scattering of muon-neutrinos and
antineutrinos off
nucleons. The priorities changed in March 1972, when the first hints of the existence of
hadronic neutral current became obvious. It was then decided to make a two-prong attack in the search for neutral current candidates. One line would search for
leptonic events — events involving the interaction with an
electron in the liquid, e.g. or . The other line would search for
hadronic events — involving a neutrino scattered from a hadron, e.g. , or , plus events with many hadrons. The leptonic events have small
cross-sections, but correspondingly small background. The hadronic events have larger backgrounds, most extensively due to neutrons produced when neutrinos interact in the material around the chamber. Neutrons, being of no charge, would not be detected in the bubble chamber, and the detection of their interactions would mimic neutral currents events. In order to reduce the neutron background, the energy of the hadronic events had to be greater than 1 GeV. The first example of a leptonic event was found in December 1972 at Gargamelle by a graduate student from
Aachen. By March 1973 166 hadronic events had been found, 102 events with the neutrino beam and 64 events with the antineutrino beam. In this way one has a monitor of the neutron background flux. On the 19th of July 1973 the Gargamelle collaboration presented the discovery of neutral currents at a seminar at CERN. The Gargamelle collaboration discovered both
leptonic neutral currents — events involving the interaction of a neutrino with an electron — and
hadronic neutral currents — events when a neutrino is scattered from a nucleon. The discovery was very important as it was in support of the
electroweak theory, today a pillar of the
Standard Model. The final experimental proof the electroweak theory came in 1983, when the
UA1 and
UA2 collaboration discovered the
W± and Z0 bosons. Initially the first priority of the Gargamelle had been to measure the neutrino and antineutrino cross-sections and
structure functions. The reason for this was to test the
quark model of the nucleon. Firstly the neutrino and antineutrino cross-sections were shown to be linear with energy, which is what one expects for the scattering of point-like constituents in the nucleon. Combining the neutrino and antineutrino structure functions allowed the net number of quarks in the nucleon to be determined, and this was in good agreement with 3. In addition comparing the neutrino results with results from
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in the US, using an electron beam, one found that quarks had fractional charges, and experimentally proved the values of these charges: +
e, − e. The results were published in 1975, providing crucial evidence for the existence of quarks. In 2009, the Gargamelle Collaboration was awarded the
High Energy Particle Physics Prize of the
European Physical Society "for the observation of the weak neutral current interaction". ==See also==