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American physicist who received the 1995 Nobel Prize for Physics for
discovering a subatomic particle that he named the tau, a massive lepton
with a negative charge. The tau, which he found in the mid-1970s, was
the first evidence of a third "generation" of fundamental
particles, the existence of which proved essential for completing the
so-called standard model of particle physics. Perl was jointly awarded
the Nobel Prize with physicist Frederick Reines, who discovered another
subatomic particle, the neutrino, in the 1950s. In 1966 Perl was part of a research team that made an unsuccessful
attempt to discover new charged leptons by colliding electrons at the
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). A new particle accelerator
that began operation at SLAC in the early 1970s had the capacity to
reach high energy levels that were previously inaccessible. With this
new machine, Perl recorded frontal collisions between electrons and
their antiparticles, positrons. In a series of experiments conducted
between 1974 and 1977, he found that the collisions formed heavy leptons,
later called tau particles, that decay in less than a trillionth of
a second into neutrinos and either an electron or a muon. He also discovered
the antitau, which decays into neutrinos and either a positron or an
antimuon.
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