Experiment Shows Neutrinos Have Mass 233
Tuzanor writes: "Physicists have found the most convincing evidence yet that neutrinos, subatomic particles that were thought to have no mass whatsoever, actually do have a very tiny mass after all. The story is at Yahoo!" We mentioned the experiment yesterday, but this is big news. The New York Times has a thorough article on the whole experiment and its meaning.
Not reall true, it's a different thing! (Score:2)
Back around 1993, John Edwards, et al, came to the conclusion that neutrinos have no mass after a 10 year, $100 million neutrino mass experiment funded by the nuclear energy commission.
The theory still holds that a neutrino with a detectable mass significantly smaller than the new clamined mass would in fact be detected in the apparatus. The apparatus used
for mass detection was, in terms of mass detection, more accurate to the one described in the article above.
A possible explaination is that Neutrinos sometimes have mass.
But it is more likely that there are two types of "neutrinos", one rare type with mass (so called mneutrinos), and one much more common type without mass (neutrinos). The theory behind each are very very different!
For more information, see http://www.autodynamics.org/new99/Neutrino/NeutDe
Oh, just great... (Score:2)
Re:I can't help myself.... (Score:2)
This defense brought to by the guy who is trying to explain to his 5 year old that "ain't", as used by his redneck mother, is less acceptable than "isn't" or "aren't".
cheers,
-l
Re:Geez, we learned this in 1st year college physi (Score:2)
The largest part of the 'mass' (energy) of the neutrino still comes from its kinetic energy. What has been found in the experiment is that it also has a *rest* mass (ie. a mass at zero velocity).
They guess. (Score:2)
Maybe they invent particles to make their theories look good - said theories having been proposed vaguely enough to encompass almost anything - then coalesce the theories down around the data as it arrives, calling anything which doesn't fit ``anomalous'' (note the perspective: reality doesn't fit the theory, so reality must be the anomaly, not theory!), then either delete the few offending data from their datasets because it's anomalous, or occasionally when it can't be swept under the carpet, declare it to be a great and rare mystery then set about making a special-case patch to the theory in the hope of eventually having it all work.
Want a clear, real-world example of this? Try radio-isotope dating.
You'd only need one, but... (Score:2)
The only obvious way to shield is very expensive: use several, and go mining on Mercury and maybe Mars (both totally hostile environments) to bury many tonnes of delicate instruments a mile or so down. I'd like to see the budget for that!
Flavour of the month (Score:2)
Yah, that does explain a lot more. And here's another with a slightly different angle [electric-universe.de].
Uh, I think that would be ``reframing an observation.'' There's no shortage of exciting and imaginitive - and, unfortunately, bankrupt - explanations proposed for ``anomalies'' in orthodox theories, rather than cleanly rewriting the theories as should be done. Just ask J Harlan Bretz [ccrh.org] about that.
Re:Not just that they have mass... (Score:5)
Just because physically observed particles have mass, it is not necessarily required that the theory has particle masses in its bare Lagrangian form from which the perturbation theory Feynman rules are determined. (And I'm not talking about the Standard Model's Higgs Mechanism for mass generation by spontaneous symmetry breaking - which is another thing altogether...)
Non-perturbative calculations using the Schwinger-Dyson equations, Ward identities and renormalisability constraints show that masses can be generated dynamically through interactions of massless fields.
Some (8-10 year old) references can be found via this [dur.ac.uk] HEPDATA query. Note that this is not talking directly about neutrinos, but rather about generating masses for electrons in a simplified version of QED in which electrons start out massless.
There are almost certainly some newer papers that you could find either at HEPDATA or SPIRES.
(Full Disclosure: Mike Pennington was my Ph.D. Supervisor, although I didn't work in the non-perturbative SD equations field myself except for a short while at the start)
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Re:Also a Supernova early warning system! (Score:2)
seconds before the radiation brightening.
Not much notice.
If neutrinos have mass, they'd travel a little
slower than the speed of light. So you'd expect
some delays in that 1987 was about 150K light
years away.
Re:"Will have to be revised" (Score:2)
Umm... this pretty much is the definition of science. No scientist worth his or her salt would ever present a theory to you as fact. A fact is an observation - "When I let go of this ball, it falls to the earth." The theory is the attempt to explain the fact, and any scientist should tell you, quite cheerfully, that you can never prove a theory, you can only disprove it.
Now, if you want to disparage the educational system for forgetting to teach this important distinction; or the media for conveniently overlooking it in order to present a sensationalist story; or the socialists and athiests who use it in place of religion; or the politicos who use it to ram through purely political agendas like the Kyoto treaty... well, then you've got a case for being disgusted. Don't mistake the medium for the message, though.
Re:what about the velocity? (Score:2)
Even if you could get low energy neutrinos ( less than an eV), you'd still have to collimate a beam them. That would be very difficult to do, since they react so little.
So yeah, its not impossible to measure the mass of a neutrino directly. But I'd be very surprised if we find a direct way to measure the mass of a neutrino anytime soon. Indirect will have to be good enough for a while.
...
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I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations
Re:what about the velocity? (Score:5)
So, neutrinos don't travel at c, but its pretty darn close.
...
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I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations
More Summary, for us non-physicists: (Score:2)
Anyone care to elucidate on this part?
OK, so... (Score:2)
Neutrinos have a little mass, so they can't be quite moving at the speed of light. Therefore, when we see a Supernova go off, the light ought to arrive a little ahead of the neutrino burst.
As I recall, on the big, nearby Supernova 1987A, a neutrino burst was detected. My question is, did anyone get the timing nailed down from this event well enough toconfirm that the neutrinos were a little late?
Re:The Super-K results were not *that* bad. (Score:2)
Re:The Super-K results were not *that* bad. (Score:2)
Re:More Summary, for us non-physicists: (Score:2)
Well. . . (Score:2)
Re:Not just that they have mass... (Score:2)
Sure, but we ignore relativity when doing simple physics in high school, pretending that F = m*a, and that mass, length and time are all constants. The fact is, for the most part Newtonian mechanics are pretty much correct, even if they're mathematically wrong. The equations are just simpler if the speed of light isn't a limit.
Re:"Will have to be revised" (Score:2)
- StaticLimit
Re:Also a Supernova early warning system! (Score:2)
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
This is a test of the Supernova Early Warning System. This is only a test. If there had been an actual supernova within a hundred light years of Earth, you would have been instructed to...
Ummmm...
Neutrino IMAGINARY rest mass shown a decade ago (Score:5)
Cramer quotes an anonymous source as saying that if the sign of these numbers had been reversed (positive instead of negative), there would have been a big press conference announcing that they had shown the neutrino to have a nonzero rest mass.
I sent email to Cramer maybe five years or so later, asking what had happened with these results. He told me that nothing had happened; there has been no followup, and nobody has shown them to be wrong.
The super-Kamiokande experiment seems to have been carefully designed to show nonzero rest mass for at least one kind of neutrino while yielding no information on the actual value of the squared rest mass (in particular, its sign.) This experiment measured only the difference in squared rest masses between two types of neutrinos. (If this difference is nonzero, then one of the two neutrino types must have a nonzero squared rest mass.) It is consistent with either a positive or negative squared rest mass.
This latest result also carefully avoids the issue of the actual value (and sign) of the squared rest mass. It appears that everybody wants to get their Nobel for showing that the neutrino has a nonzero rest mass, but nobody wants to be labeled as a crank for presenting data that would indicate the neutrino has an imaginary rest mass!
Re:Not sure about this (Score:2)
Can't make a decent beer? Try Sleeman's [sleeman.com] or Granville Island Brewery or some other microbrew. Hell, even Kokanee isn't too bad.
I can't believe that someone from the United States, home of beer with alcohol content so low it has to be expressed in scientific notation, is insulting Canadian beer.
I find it hard to believe that Canada has the scientific know how to be trusted
In certain areas, such as some types of condensed matter physics (Mu-SR, beta-NMR), superconductor research, and some other fields, Canada leads the world. Our research programs are not as large as the US (since we're a smaller country, population-wise), but they're top-notch.
Re:Not sure about this (Score:2)
At UBC [www.ubc.ca], Dr. Hardy [physics.ubc.ca]'s lab grows the world's highest-quality YBCO superconductors in the world. (YBCO is the common abbreviation for them--yes, I know the proper name, but it's too ugly in HTML). He is part of a larger Superconductivity Research Group [physics.ubc.ca] at the University of British Columbia [www.ubc.ca]. That group also works closely with the Muon Spin Rotation Group [triumf.ca] based at UBC and nearby TRIUMF [triumf.ca]. Disclaimer: I'm part of the Muon Spin Rotation Group.
We're also in the process of commissioning a Beta-Nuclear Magnetic Resonance apparatus and beamline at TRIUMF, which will be very useful for probes of the local magnetic fields within superconductors (and other condensed matter physics applications).
This is by no means an exhaustive list of the areas in which Canada leads in physics--it's just what I'm familiar with. I know we also recently opened a (privately funded) institute for theoretical physics, and they pay very generous salaries. We've also managed to recruit a few key quantum computing people up from the US.
I'm not trying to say Canada is the best in the world at everything, but we do have some very solid, well-respected programs in physics.
Re:Not sure about this (Score:2)
Nope. Hardy has been at UBC for decades, and has won a shitload of awards. Take a look at his bio, which I linked to in my last message. Also, producing highest-Tc superconductors is mostly a game right now, since it's all very small incremental improvements. The real research involves growing and studying high-quality single-crystal samples to learn how they work, so we can make the next big leap. That's where Canada leads.
Full of crap (Score:2)
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Caimlas
Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:2)
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Re:Dark matter v. anti matter (Score:2)
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what about the velocity? (Score:5)
So this this mean that:
Please, some physics geek tell us how to resolve "neutrinos has mass" with "neutrinos travel at c.
Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | http://www.infamous.net/
Re:Geez, we learned this in 1st year college physi (Score:2)
Great, all I need is a piece of lead several light-years thick, and I can then melt it down and extract the at-rest neutrinos to make neutrinonium (as long as I'm fantasizing, I wonder if a lump composed of neutrinos at rest would shimmer or somehow change color as the component neutrinos oscillated between three states ;-)
(Seriously, mad props to the SNO guys. I remember hearing about the Solar Neutrino Problem years ago, and hoping that Sudbury would get the funding to actually carry the experiment through to its conclusion.)
Re:OK, so... (Score:2)
I don't think we really knew when we SN1987A visibly started brightening - IIRC we saw it after the fact.
In any event, given that neutrinos could pass through the shell of the star faster (i.e., almost the speed of light) than the star could tear itself apart (i.e. minutes/hours), I'd expect the neutrino burst to be observed before the light from the supernova.
(That is, the light travels faster than the neutrinos, but the neutrinos get out of the supernova before the shock wave hit the star's surface.)
Come to think of it, if I were running SNO or Super-Kamiokande, and I saw multiple events all within a few seconds of each other, I'd eliminate the possibility of detector error ASAP, and then look at the angle of incidence (all the neutrinos would appear to be coming from a point source) and start phoning every telescope operator on (and off :) the planet to look in that general direction for something going boom.
How do they know? (Score:2)
How do they know that? I mean how do they know what type of neutrinos are coming out of the sun since their detectors are on the earth?
Catch-22? (Score:2)
Re:Catch-22? (Score:2)
Thanks for the excellent explanation. I think I need to find out why particle theory insists that only massive particles can oscillate.
Re:Catch-22? (Score:2)
Ah. The assumption seems to be that, between the time that massless particles like photons are emitted by the sun and the time they arrive here on earth they will not change because they are traveling at c in "empty" space. However, it is my understanding that neutrinos are created from deep inside the sun and must travel huge distances at speeds lower than c within the sun's body before they make it to outerspace. It appears that there are plenty of opportunities for the neutrinos to interact with other particles of matter and possibly change their state. After all, even massless photons can change their "spin" during interactions.
It seems to me that a better way to determine whether or not neutrinos are massless might be to calculate their speed to determine if they travel at c. One way to do that might be to detect whether an observed solar explosion or flare is accompanied by a conincident surge in the number of detected neutrinos. Just a thought.
If they have mass, why do they travel do fast? (Score:2)
Re:If they have mass, why do they travel do fast? (Score:2)
Makes sense. One last question. Why is it so hard for neutrinos to interact with ordinary matter?
Re:If they have mass, why do they travel do fast? (Score:2)
Re:If they have mass, why do they travel do fast? (Score:2)
This sound a little weird to me because I learned that the weak and EM charges could not be separated according to the electroweak theory. I guess I'll have to leave it at that for the time being. Thanks for taking the time to reply to all my questions.
Re:Umm, yeah (Score:2)
However, there had been no direct evidence for oscillations of electron neutrinos, which are the neutrinos produced by the sun and which are by far the most numerous neutrinos in the universe. The number of electron neutrinos detected from the sun was 1/3 of what solar models predicted. The SNO result shows that the total number of neutrinos of all flavours coming from the sun matches the solar models, and so the other 2/3 that were missing are oscillating into other flavours. So there must be a mass splitting between electron neutrinos and whatever neutrinos they're oscillating into. Therefore, those neutrinos must have mass.
So this is a new and significant result, but this is not the first direct piece of evidence for neutrino mass.
[TMB]
Neutrino detector array (Score:2)
Maybe Dubya could unificate the world to put some of these "new treeno" detectors up in the sky.
Finally an article that... (Score:3)
Can you imagine the gravity of this situation?
Re:what about the velocity? (Score:2)
Using speed differences from a bright neutrino source to estimate their mass was done ages ago -- assuming you accept that Supernova 1987A [google.com] is bright enough. The data showed an upper bound of 20eV, but couldn't rule out masslessness.
Re:m or m0? (Score:2)
I though neutrinos traveled at the speed of light, is that wrong? Otherwise, the total mass would be m0/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) which goes to infinity as v->c. What's wrong with this reasoning?
Re:m or m0? (Score:2)
If it doesn't need to travel at the speed of light, that means you could theoreticaly stop one (which you cannot do with a photon, at least in vaccum). I wonder what a 1 kg "ball" of neutrinos would look like...
Re:Not just that they have mass... (Score:2)
But what's REALLY exciting, is they'll probably figure out how to use this in the first episode of Star Trek Enterprise as some sort of new kind of weapon or something.
"Lieutenant, fire the Neutrino Cannon!!!"
"I am sir, but it doesn't seem to be having any effect on the ship. It's almost as if the neutrinos are just passing right through it."
Okay, stupid, I know. Sorry.
Manipulation? (Score:2)
Re:Of course they have mass (Score:2)
Otherwise known as ... (Score:2)
I'm not sure if this is cool or depressing.
Re:Not just that they have mass... (Score:2)
Re:Do neutrinos decay? (Score:2)
More technically the oscillations is caused because the faviour eigenstates of neutrinos as not the mass eigenstates.
I'll decode the technical jargon for you there. When neutrinos are create or destroyed (by the weak interaction) a neutrinos is formed/destroyed as one of three flavours: electron, muon or tau, (named because of the particle it must be created/destroyed with). However when a neutrino travels it does so as one of three types (call them A, B and C) which each has a different mass, these are the mass eigenstates (Eigen is german for same).
The strange thing is that A, B and C are actually each mixtures of E, mu and tau neutrinos. and because different massed particles (given a fixed ammount of momentum and energy) will travel a slightly different distance in a given time: if you look at a beam of neutrino that started out as one particular flavour, at each distance in the beam you'll see a different mixture of the different flavours.
All of this is very strange, and probably wouldn't have been believed if neutral K mesons hadn't been observed in great detail doing the same thing.
Physists write the numbers that describe how much of each mass eigenstate (i.e. the A, Bs and C), make up each flavour of neutrino as a 3 by 3 matrix known as the Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata matrix.
The down, strange and bottom quarks 'mix' the same way and the here the matrix is known as the Cabbibo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix.
Finally Lepton number conversation does still apply: the total ammount of Leptons minus the ammount of anti-Leptons always stays the same. However the Lepton flavour numbers i.e. Number of electrons and electronic neutrinos - (numbers of anti electrons + electronic anti neutrinos), which was thought to be conversed, is voliated by neutrino oscillation.
Re:Geez, we learned this in 1st year college physi (Score:2)
So in that sense, a neutrino has mass, in that it has energy. But this result is saying a neutrino has rest mass -- if you were to (somehow) stop the neutrino, so that it had no kinetic energy, it would still have mass, just like an electron.
-Erf C.
Re:Are there others? (Score:2)
-Erf C.
Re:Neutrino IMAGINARY rest mass shown a decade ago (Score:2)
There isn't some great conspiracy to cover up funny results, either. If it was shown that neutrino mass was imaginary, to a high degree of certainty (and having error bars not covering zero doesn't cut it by itself), physicists would go "huh, that's funny", try and measure it again, and if it was shown true just accept it and move on. The rest of quantum mechanics is so weird, I don't think anyone would have that much trouble buying the idea of imaginary mass...
-Erf C.
Re:Are there others? (Score:2)
These things are really really cool. You may be interested in the ALTA [ualberta.ca] project -- they're putting cosmic ray detectors on the tops of high schools across Alberta, and letting the students there run them. The idea is to have a huge area over which to detect these things; they're pretty rare.
They're pretty mysterious, too. Nobody's really sure what sort of mechanism would throw off particles with this much energy. And it's not like we can just look up in the direction they came from, either -- the galaxy has a very slight magnetic field (but we don't know it that well), which bends the paths of charged particles (most cosmic rays), so the direction they hit the Earth from isn't the direction they really came from...
-Erf C.
Re:Not just that they have mass... (Score:3)
In physics, almost everything is an approximation. :)
-Erf C.
See SNO's homepage for more (Score:5)
-Erf C.
Re:Not just that they have mass... (Score:5)
Not only that, but the different neutrino flavours must have different masses in order to oscillate. The fact that they have mass at all is the most exciting bit, of course, but the fact that they're all different is pretty cool, too.
-Erf C.
Umm, yeah (Score:5)
poetic license? (Score:5)
They have no charge, they have no mass.
They do not interact at all.
The Earth is just a silly ball
to them through which they simply pass
Like photons through a sheet of glass
Or dustmaids down a drafty hall.
They snub the most exquisite gas,
Insult the stallion in his stall,
Cold-shoulder steel and sounding brass
And pass, like tall and painless guillotines,
through you and me into the grass.
At night they enter Nepal
And pierce the lover and his lass
from underneath the bed.
You call it wonderful? I call it crass.
- John Updike
Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:2)
ISTR that they were able to put a fairly solid cap on the rest mass of the neutrino based on some observations made during the big 1987 supernova. They detected a neutrino "pulse" (IIRC they only detected 7 neutrinos, but that is a lot for an event taking place that far away) just a few hours after the supernova was first apparent. That let them calculate a lower bound on the ratio of kinetic energy to rest mass for the neutrino and hence (since they can measure the kinetic energy) an upper bound on the rest mass.
Poetic license? Not for you! (Score:2)
Reader, you are much more likely to enjoy an unaltered transcription of Updike's Cosmic Gall [www.hut.fi]. (Actually, I'm not sure it is unaltered, but it's at least as good as my memory, and it has the indentation. Depressingly, most versions I found on the web are wrongly formatted and have at least one obvious textual mistake.)
Re:Blame Canada, Neutrinos have mass! (Score:2)
Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:2)
More technically, the rest mass of an object can be found through:
with E the energy and p the momentum. For photons, where E=pc, it's clear that m = 0. For a long time we thought the same thing applied to neutrinos, but apparently not...If you're jumping up and down saying, "But mass increases with velocity", you're using an outmoded lexicon. The idea of relativistic mass simply isn't useful, and can lead to a lot of misconceptions.
Re:"Will have to be revised" (Score:2)
Science is not about knowledge. Science is about a carefully quantified ignorance. Properly done, and properly presented, science is more about what we don't know than what we do.
Science is not a collection of facts. Science is a process of validation.
We sacrifice "certainty" on many many things so that we can claim true certainty on what remains. Science is a severe filter with rigorous standards of what can be accepted as "proven". Eveything that is "proven" is done so provisionally, because scientists understand that we cannot ever have the whole truth. All we can be sure of is further approximations to the ultimate truth.
It sort of irks me when creationists (not necessarily the poster, but others) point to the process of scientific refinement as "evidence" that, say, the Big Bang is "just" a theory. I teach high school physics, and around May 1, we begin modern physics -- relativity and quantum mechanics. There is always a student or two who throw their arms up in frustration: "Why'd we bother learning that other stuff if it isn't true? What good is a theory if it can be overturned later?"
But very few theories are actually overturned and discarded. What usually happens is that their regime of applicability shrinks. Newtownian theory is "true", for human-scale objects moving not too quickly. Sure, Relativity is true for those objects, too, and more besides: it's a more accurate, more general theory. But for the sorts of objects
Re:OK, so... (Score:2)
Re:Dark matter v. anti matter (Score:2)
The centripetal force, Fc, must be provided by gravity alone, Fg. So
You might be thinking of Kepler's Third Law, which says that the square of the period is proportional to the cube of the distance. We can get there from here if we recall that where T is the period. Plugging that in above we'd have Ta-da!Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:2)
OK, more technically correct, tensors are like a generalization of vectors. They can be defined through the way they behave under rotations. And you're right: tensors are often represented through matrices.
In this forumulation, a scalar is a tensor of rank 0, a vector is a tensor of rank 1, and so on. Tensors are real bears to deal with. I went through an undergraduate program in Physics and never encountered them... they only really popped up in a class on General Relativity. Ugh.
Re:Proofs? (Score:3)
I don't recall ever seeing anything that threw the fundamental basis of QM (OK, really, QED) into doubt. Indeed, quite the opposite -- things like the Aspect experiments, the stuff about Bell's inequality, and even the "teleportation" stuff seem to say, the Universe is actually as weird as QM makes it out to be.
Dark matter v. anti matter (Score:4)
"dark" matter: Matter that, for one reason or another, is not luminous. There is growing evidence that we cannot see all the matter in the Universe. The best evidence, IMHO, comes from studies of galaxy rotation, which show that galaxies are not rotating in a so-called "Keplerian" manner. A collection of particles orbiting a central mass should have a velocity that falls off (as 1/sqrt(r)) with distance. Saturn's rings do this, for example, which was how they were proven not to be solid.
It turns out that galaxies (which are rotating systems) do not obey this relation, as one might expect (since most of the luminous matter is contained near the center). This implies that there is something else "adding" mass as we travel out from the center of a galaxy. We can't see it, so it must be dark.
There are also cosmological arguments for dark matter. Most especially, there's a paramter (called Omega) which is the ratio of the Universe's density to "critical density". If Omega 1, the Universe will eventually collapse under the gravitational attraction of its elements. Observation of luminous matter indicates that Omega = 0.1. For a long time people had a bias that Omega should be exactly, leading to the claim that 90% of the matter must be "dark". Since that number agrees reasonably well with the one from galaxy rotations, people saw these as mutually supporting each other. (For the record, I find the cosmological evidence quite unconvincing.)
So, once you believe there is dark matter, you start to wonder what it's made of. In essence there are three classes of candidates:
Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:2)
Re:OK, so... (Score:2)
However, an upper limit on the neutrino mass could be made based on the spread in arrival times for the neutrinos. If the higher-energy neutrinos arrive before the lower-energy ones, then there might be a mass.
Of course, all this is complicated by the supernova itself, which might eject higher-energy neutrinos first, but, given that our models of supernovae are correct, then the spread in arrival times put a limit on the electron neutrino mass of about 19 eV or so.
Terrestrial experiments have put an upper limit on the electron neutrino mass of about 3 eV.
The best guess for the electron neutrino mass from the SNO results is much, much smaller; probably it is less than .01 eV.
Re:Neutrino IMAGINARY rest mass shown a decade ago (Score:5)
As one of the authors of the result to which you refer, I can authoritatively say that Cramer managed to get it almost completely wrong.
In fact, there was a paper written by Stephenson that showed that the result could not come from tachyonic neutrinos. In that case, we would have seen a completely different signature.
The most likely physical explanation for the result would have been another unknown particle. Lobashev still believes in that, but I think the evidence has accumulated that there is no significant excess at the endpoint of the tritium spectrum.
Of course, it is worth pointing out that nobody has ever found any error in the original data, and we spent something like 2 years trying to find problems before we published it in the first place!
Re:Not reall true, it's a different thing! (Score:2)
Autodynamics? Hee hee hee hee. Oh...I needed a good laugh.
For those who don't know, the autodynamics crowd seems to think that the physicists of the last 100 years are too corrupt and stupid to notice that Special Relativity is completely false. Not only can't the autodynamics crowd perform a simple derivation, but they choose to ignore the thousands of experiments, measurements, and papers written and peer reviewed, in order to come to their loony conclusion. They misrepresent and misunderstand almost all of modern physics, from condensed matter to particle physics to astrophysics, in coming to their unsupportable conclusion.
But like I said, thanks for the post! I needed a good laugh :-)
Re:Proofs? (Score:2)
You have to admit that what we call quantum mechanics today doesn't much resemble the quatum mechanics of the 1930's. But in the 1930's the perception was that physics had been "solved".
That's not even close to true. The QM you might study as an undergraduate physicist today is IDENTICAL to the QM derived in the 1930s. What HAS changed is not the theory, but the models the theory is applied to. And there were few physicists in the 1930s (nor today!) that would have claimed physics was "solved" as you put it; that sort of misunderstanding is usually based on popular accounts of cutting edge research, misunderstood and misinterpreted for nonscientists by other nonscientists. When trying to transfer knowledge to the nonscientist, things often have to be simplified, not only to explain it to a non-technical crowd, but also to simply fit it into the time allotted (it takes six or seven years of training and study to get to the point where you can even begin to understand the theories of modern physics at the level necessary to do research ... you can't transfer all that detailed knowledge to a non-scientist is a few minutes or hours, so something has to give).
As for how much of modern theory will be around in 50 years, just think of how much of modern theory existed 50 years ago: almost all of it! It's only the models, not the derivable theory, that has changed dramatically.
Re:Flavour of the month (Score:2)
Wow! I'm amazed! You've given me a good laugh TWICE in one day! First Autodynamics, and now the CCRH!
CCRH is the same organization that requires its members to take an oath that they won't accept ANY scientific evidence that contradicts a strictly literal interpretation of the Bible. They are REQUIRED to REJECT evidence that DOESN'T fit their preconceived notions of the planet. And you are holding them up as a paragon of scientific thought and developer of scientific theories?
Wow...I'm really thankful for all the humor you have injected into my day!
Re:The Super-K results were not *that* bad. (Score:2)
Where were you doing SKAT work?
The Super-K results were not *that* bad. (Score:3)
Re:Not sure about this (Score:2)
They use it to water down the good beer.
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It's really too bad they do have mass... (Score:2)
Hype or real? (Score:2)
It is interesting to see if there is solid statistics behind this, or if it is just about making sure to hype it up to get more funding. (one shouldn't have to over-hype good research to get good grants, but those who sitting on the money don't care about science).
Not just that they have mass... (Score:5)
One of the biggest astronomical mysteries was why the sun was not producing anywhere near the predicted amount of electron neutrinos. This experiment proves that it is in fact producing them, but that 60% of them transform into other neutrinos before reaching the earth.
Furthermore, it is this transformation that proves that they have mass.
From the article:
But on Monday, representatives of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory in Canada announced that neutrinos made by nuclear reactions in the sun's core change from one type to another during their 93-million-mile journey to Earth. And only particles with mass can change form.
--
Garett
Wrong Category (Score:3)
Re:How do they know? (Score:2)
What I took from the article was that the sun doesn't produce enough energy to create the other two particles, muon neutrinos and tau neutrinos, only electron neutrinos. It would take the energy of a supernova or equivalent to produce the other two.
Re:flamebait from me... (Score:2)
As for your complaints about the +5, I agree. The mod system on Slashdot is far from balanced, and always favors the newest posts over later ones. It's worked against me, IMO, far more often then it's worked to my advantage.
Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:5)
Uh, er... how utterly... quaint... (Score:2)
The big problem then is that if you choose to ignore science and it's many approximations, you lose out on the wonderful things we get out of it...
Like cars, watches, computers, TVs, radios, plastic bottles, aluminum alloy wheels, titanium golf clubs, etc.
With each refinement of science we get ever more unexpected observations, and with each new observation we get new opportunities in which to create new and unexpected devices.
As we refine the neutrino and the elementary particles we can eventually devise gadgets that rely on the characteristics that these neutrinos have.
Seriously, what would you have us do? Decide "Physics, chemistry, and science is done. No more research, everything is finished."
Science is the process by which we try to deduce the pattern, the weave, the weft, of creation, and to satisfy your set of beliefs, the underlying structure as given to us by God. Without science we would have no understanding. Science is constrained to be an approximation, to use heretical thoughts, because the Universe and God is unknowable; we can get infinitely close without ever reaching our destination.
Geek dating! [bunnyhop.com]
mass vs momentum (Score:2)
It is energy and momentum that are related, not energy and mass. There is a fine line between the two. For instance, when calculating reactions, you must conserve energy (a scalar quantity) and momentum (a vector quantity), not energy and mass.
Some confusion arises from people quoting the equation
E=mc^2
but this is an abridged version, and many people leave out some critical subscripts. In actual fact, it should be
E^2 = (p^2)(c^2) + (m_0^2)(c^4)
where p is the momentum of the quanton, and m_0 is its REST mass. Thus, for photons with no rest mass, take the square root of both sides and substitute p = mv, where v=c, the speed of light, and
E = mc^2
It is also from this simplified equation that we can substitute the energy of a wave (E = hc/lambda) and get the deBroglie relationship
h/lambda = mc = p
Now, back to the subject at hand, both of you are kind of correct. Light has no rest mass, but light with any amount of energy does have momentum (which can be interpreted as it having mass, but only loosely). If light bends because it is travelling in a straight line through curved space-time, it is only travelling in that straight line because it has momentum, and that momentum is being conserved.
Personal Experience (Score:2)
I've been to the SNO! Nyah nyah nyah!! There are no public tours, but I got it!
Heck, I even got a t-shirt (really!)
But, to be serious, the whole project is really quite impressive. It's 6800 feet down in the Creighton Mine, which is an active Nickel mine that extends to about 7200 feet (it's something like the 2nd deepest in the world). Being surrounded by so much dense rock means that very little radiation other than Neutrinos reaches the Heavy Water (s/Hydrogen/Deuterium/) tank.
The ambiant air temperature (outside the air-condition and pressure-sealed lab area) is somewhere aroung 25-30 degrees C (it gets hotter the deeper you dig).
The Heavy Water (1000 tons) is on loan from various Canadian nuclear power plants. I believe that Canada is the world's biggest producer of Heavy Water (Fact: ~.05% of the water you drink is Heavy!)
If you're ever in Sudbury, visit Science North, which has some great displays about SNO.
Re:Geez, we learned this in 1st year college physi (Score:2)
Re:Geez, we learned this in 1st year college physi (Score:2)
Light does not have mass. Light does respond to the curvature of spacetime, as does everything. But this in no way even hints that light has mass. Which is why I'm pretty sure this is a troll. I could almost buy into that someone might mistake radiation pressure and the fact light has momentum as proof light has mass, but not this.
However, should my estimation be wrong, I have a few suggestions.
Relativity by Albert Einstein, Wings books ISBN 0-517-029618 (cloth) -025302 (paper)
Modern Physics by Tipler, Worth Publishers ISBN 0-87901-088-6
Relativity is actually pretty light on math, short and easy to read. I'd say one could read it easily in an evening. Tipler's on the other hand is my old text book, it's solid in that respect, but not particularly enthralling.
The gravitational lensing which you describe is mearly the result of light following a straight line on spacetime (which is curved). As such it's totally independant of whether or not light has mass.
anti-neutrinos (Score:3)
Wow, I didn't even know they were Catholic! (Score:3)
flamebait from me... (Score:2)
I guess I just think it's odd that someone can get a plus 5 for regurgitating completely obvious information, with no take on it at all.
Now maybe if you'd thrown in some colored bar graphs with neutrino icons, you'd be on your way toward a serious journalistic career in this country...
Re:Proofs? (Score:2)
An empirical proof has only traditionally been accepted as valid if it can be replicated. Scientists are a sceptical bunch. They don't want to be told what's so, they want to be told how to prove to themselves that it's so. Otherwise they're just taking it on faith.
And this neat high/low energy stuff requires such specialised equipment that it's largely a case of doing the experiment, publishing the results and saying "Believe it or not..."
Are we coming full circle on the whole religion/science thing? I mean, how many of us have personally and quantifiably verified that E=mc^2, let alone the tricky stuff? ;)
Re:Manipulation? (Score:2)
There must be. I mean, Geordi did it all the time on Next Gen. He could even see "neutrino streams" scattering from the side. And that was years ago! Think what we should be able to do now.
Uhhh, wait, my beeper's going off. I have to take a pill. Don't go away...
Re:Also a Supernova early warning system! (Score:2)
Proofs? (Score:3)
Re:m or m0? (Score:3)
Re:Summary, for the non-physicists: (Score:4)