<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/news/evidence-of-new-physics-unexpected-behavior-from-fundamental-particles.aspx" dsn="blogs"><homehero/><unit>Faculty &amp; Staff,Research,College of Natural Science,Physics &amp; Astronomy</unit><pubDate>04/09/2021</pubDate><title>Evidence of new physics: Unexpected behavior from fundamental particles</title><description><p>MSU researchers have helped catch particles called muons behaving in a way that’s not predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics — the best theory that scientists have for explaining the universe’s fundamental particles and forces.The results from this experiment, called the Muon g-2 experiment, confirm a discrepancy that has been gnawing at researchers for decades. The team published its landmark result in the journal Physical Review Letters on April 7.</p></description><author/><hero-image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/9716E05E-AD4C-4661-AE91227989C08C0D_newsarticlehero.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></hero-image><image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/9716E05E-AD4C-4661-AE91227989C08C0D_medium.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></image><tags><tag>Muon g-2 Experiment</tag><tag>faculty</tag><tag>graduate students</tag><tag>muon behavior</tag><tag>postdoctoral researchers</tag><tag>research</tag></tags></item>