Tetraneutron Discovered 60
Caid Raspa writes "According to this
Press Release the French have (accidentally) produced six nuclei of tetraneutron (nucleus with four neutrons and no protons). Theoreticians have previously thought that tetraneutron does not exist. As there is no electric charge in these nuclei, they allow better studies of the nuclear forces. The scientific article is also available at
arXiv.org."
April 25? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:April 25? (Score:1)
'may have' (Score:1)
The trouble with high-level physics is that theoritical models are actually built on clay... nothing is ever sure, there are always things you need to adjust, and such...
Re:'may have' (Score:5, Insightful)
The trouble with high-level physics is that theoritical models are actually built on clay... nothing is ever sure, there are always things you need to adjust, and such...
More to the point, nothing is ever certain in any science. Science can only disprove hypotheses - it can never prove anything. The language is pretty standard for researchers talking about an unconfirmed result. They're pretty sure that they got it, but until it's been checked by other independent teams, no one will consider this a done deal.
It's just like Einstein saying he "may" have had new gravitational laws, or Pasteur saying he "may" have found a way to prevent disease. Both were sure, but the results were yet to be confirmed.
Give 'er a year and we'll have a definitive answer.
Re:'may have' (Score:1)
" is based on proofs that are absolutely certain. "
... And self-consistent, .. but not reality-complete...
( Godel's theory of incompleteness proves that to know the 'truth' of a self-consistent system, one has to check it against something outside that system )
Re:'may have' (Score:2)
Mathematics (and by extension computer science) actually has very little to do with the universe around us. It is simply the study of patterns and logic. I'm not saying that math is bad or anything --- merely that it is different from empirical science.
You're right, of course. I just think that math can't be called a "science" properly... It's not a science, nor is it really an art. It's math, and it's unique.
IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:1, Funny)
Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:1, Troll)
"In Soviet Russia, the Tetraneutron discovers YOU!"
In fact, that would be a fairly standard format for Yakov Smirnoff's jokes.
Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:1)
-T
Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:1, Offtopic)
Accidentally? (Score:1)
Re:Accidentally? (Score:5, Interesting)
In other words, whatever we can do is already being done in that great laboratory in the sky. Literally in the sky - a few hundred miles over our heads.
Re:Accidentally? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Accidentally? - correction (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Accidentally? - correction (Score:1)
"Probably very low" is not very reassuring to the average person on the street. They had a fit when the Galileo probe was launched because of its nuclear power cell (and risk of contaminating Jupiter with earth life).
I imagine the protests generated some funny cartoons. Anybody got links?
Re:Accidentally? (Score:2)
In other words, if you were able to make 4 round trips to the moon all in a single second, by the time you'd gone the first 37 millimeters, he would already have evaporated.
Re:Accidentally? (Score:2)
In other words, if you were able to make 4 round trips to the moon all in a single second, by the time you'd gone the first 37 millimeters, he would already have evaporated.
Wow, those numbers you used before were so confusing, but this analogy makes it easy for me to understand now! Thank you!!
Um... Penicillin? (Score:4, Interesting)
No... (and I know penicillin was found, not really created, but my point stands)
I see no problem with 'creating' forms of matter, accidentally or on purpose, particularly as it can be argued that, like penicillin, these forms aren't really being created but are being discovered. They might exist elsewhere in the universe, or might have existed. And they're not really making new forms of matter - they're taking matter that already exists (neutrons) and putting them together in a way they haven't seen before (tetraneutrons). Kinda like molding sugar into cubes.
-T
Re:Um... Penicillin? (Score:3, Informative)
Um, you really need to work on your argument.
First, penicillin isn't a new form of matter. It might be a new molecule, or one that mankind didn't know about before, but it doesn't rate the "new form of matter" moniker.
Second, just because something exists somewhere in the universe does not mean that it is thus safe or wise to have it here on earth. Black holes are fine, as long as they don't come near. Quasars are fine, as long as they aren't nearby and shining at us. Supernovas? Wonderful, but please keep them many light years away.
Maybe tetraneutron is something that is commonly made when cosmic rays hit our atmosphere, and maybe not. You should be at least a little startled by it, and that it was made _accidentally_.
FUD... (Score:3, Insightful)
Check what I said - I didn't say it was a new form of matter, I said it was an accidentally discovered form of matter.
Second, just because something exists somewhere in the universe does not mean that it is thus safe or wise to have it here on earth. Black holes are fine, as long as they don't come near. Quasars are fine, as long as they aren't nearby and shining at us. Supernovas? Wonderful, but please keep them many light years away.
Really? Now, do you know all the properties of sub-atomic black holes? How about naked ones (no Swartzchild radius)? Quite possibly those could be pretty damn harmless - rather than simply saying "gee, the big ones are really scary, let's not even consider the little ones," doesn't it merit more study? No need for FUD here, you know. No one is claiming that they're going to make a star-sized black hole in their particle accelerator.
Maybe tetraneutron is something that is commonly made when cosmic rays hit our atmosphere, and maybe not. You should be at least a little startled by it, and that it was made _accidentally_.
Yes, how cool. Now, why should we be afraid of it, as grandparent suggests? It merits more study, not FUD. Thousands of other useful things were made accidentally - teflon, for one - and just because they weren't intentional doesn't mean that we should run and hide in fear from them.
-T
Re:FUD... (Score:2)
But we have to protect the CHILDREN!
-
Re:FUD... (Score:2)
Check what I said - I didn't say it was a new form of matter, I said it was an accidentally discovered form of matter.
Penicillin isn't an accidentally discovered form of matter, it's an accidentally discovered chemical. We already knew about chemicals.
Re:FUD... (Score:2)
Ohmigosh! Chemicals aren't matter? Wow! This is astounding! Here, I always thought that chemicals were matter, and you're telling me they're really energy? That's amazing!
Point delivered, I think.
-T
Re:Accidentally? (Score:3, Funny)
I've often thought that a typically French line of inquiry would be "I've never seen (bacteria - mold - fungus) do _that_ to (milk - fruit - treeroots) before, I wonder if it tastes good? Of course some of my favorite rotten milk and fruit comes from France, and you gotta love anybody who builds Citroens. On the other hand
Re:Accidentally? (Score:2)
Re:Accidentally? (Score:2)
The mouse ears probably violate some Disney copyright.
Is this... (Score:2)
Re:Is this... (Score:1)
If we considered a tetraneutron to be element 0 then wouldn't a single neutron be an isotope of element 0?
peter
Line between Quantum and Classical (Score:5, Interesting)
This appears to be another case. At some point of glomming neutrons together you get a neutron star, though that's still an odd beast. Where do you cross the line between Tetra/Penta/Hexa-neutrons and a teeny-tiny neutron star? (I suspect this one's easy to figure, in terms balancing gravity against residual strong and weak forces, but I don't know how to do it.)
Re:Line between Quantum and Classical (Score:5, Informative)
I did this as an undergrad problem in Nuclear physics - take a ball of N neutrons, assume nuclear type densities, and calculate the neutron ball's radius and mass (and thus it's gravitational binding energy = G * M(neutron) * N
When you balance this with the typical binding energy per neutron (erm, cant remember the numbers we used, sorry), you get two simple equations and you solve for N the number of neutrons.
AFAI remembber, you get a radius of 10km and about 2 solar masses - pretty damn good for a back of the envelope calculation!
If I can dig out the old problem sheet, I can post the number later....
Dr Fish
Dumb question for the physicists out there (Score:3, Insightful)
Neutrons' function in a nucleus is supposedly to provide strong nuclear force to help counteract the protons' mutual repulsion. Seems to me that, without protons, neutrons should stick together even more readily.
So why aren't we finding small (or sometimes not-so-small) clumps of neutrons all over the place?
Re:Dumb question for the physicists out there (Score:5, Informative)
beta-stability versus particle-emission stability (Score:5, Informative)
Since the paper appears to establish that process #1 does not happen, process #2 is what must happen. There is no doubt at all about its being beta-stable --- it's not.
So to answer the original poster's question, here's why people were expecting that the tetraneutron would fly apart. The reason is the Heisenberg uncertainty principle plus the Pauli exclusion principle. If you try to corrall 4 neutrons into a nucleus, their small delta-x requires a large delta-p. That's why they're moving at ~1% of the speed of light. Since they're moving so fast, their attraction might not be enough to hold them together.
So far, this reasoning applies to 4He just as much as it applies to a tetraneutron. So why would 4He be so much more stable? Well, the Pauli exclusion principle says that in a tetraneutron, the first two neutrons can both go in the lowest energy level, with their spins in opposite direction, but the third and fourth have to go in a higher energy level.
The real question is whether the experiment is right or not. Neutron detection is notoriously difficult. In their paper, they go to great lengths to try to show that it wasn't just four neutrons from unrelated events that happened to hit the same detector --- a random coincidence. Their arguments appear convincing, but it's the kind of thing that you could easily get wrong. I'd like to see it reproduced at another lab. If it is correct, then the next step is to start measuring the properties of element zero (zeronium?). What's its lifetime? Its binding energy? Its rms radius? Does it have any bound excited states?
Re:beta-stability versus particle-emission stabili (Score:3, Interesting)
I told you it's been too long; of course the energy level structure is why you'd expect it to decay to 4He if it held together long enough.
We used to do 2-neutron correlation out of heavy ion collisions, and even that required a good timing signal on when the beam pulse arrived on target so we could eliminate detections clearly not from the reaction (eg, if it arrived such that its speed was greater than c, we knew it wasn't from the reaction). This "time of flight" was also how we energy callibrated.
The detectors we used (for the unitiated reading this) were big jars of napthalene. Large organic molecule=lots of protons for neutrons to hit---then the smacked protons gave off light as they moved, which gets collected. Never break one of these; you smell for weeks. Take it from one who knows.
Re:beta-stability versus particle-emission stabili (Score:3, Interesting)
By this reasoning, we'd expect 2n to be much more stable than 4n. Has this construct been produced and studied?
Lastly, what could we expect for 3n, 5n, and 6n? Would the odd number of nucleons make 3n less stable (vs. the strong force) than 4n due to some shell-filling rule? Ditto 5n vs. 6n? Would 6n be more or less stable (vs. the strong force) than 4n? (more particles to mutually attract, but more of them in the higher energy shell).
My apologies for being a pest, but I've been interested in the subject for quite a while, but lack the background to derive the numbers for myself (went into engineering, not physics).
Re:beta-stability versus particle-emission stabili (Score:4, Informative)
The best evidence is that the dineutron is unbound. That's why this is an extremely surprising result. The paper does say that calculations can produce a bound tetraneutron, but the problem is that the calculations depend a lot on the parameters you assume for the strong force.
Lastly, what could we expect for 3n, 5n, and 6n? Would the odd number of nucleons make 3n less stable (vs. the strong force) than 4n due to some shell-filling rule? Ditto 5n vs. 6n?
Pairing means that evens are always more bound than odds. I don't think there's a chance in hell that the 3n, etc. are bound.
Would 6n be more or less stable (vs. the strong force) than 4n? (more particles to mutually attract, but more of them in the higher energy shell). :-)
Yeah, interesting question. Since theorists didn't think 4n was bound, I don't think they're ready to predict whether 6n is or not
Unobtanium obtained! (Score:2)
Neutronium. If you'd spent a little less time with dusty old physics books, and more time with bold, fun comic books, you'd know that, wouldn't you?
Re:Dumb question for the physicists out there (Score:2, Interesting)
Heisenberg said: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Dumb question for the physicists out there (Score:2)
I got asked a very similar question on my PhD final oral exam, and even gave the right answer: It's a phase space thing!
(the PDG gives 885.7s+/- 0.8s, by the way ... about 14.75 minutes)
Paging Dr. Forward! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Paging Dr. Forward! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Paging Dr. Forward! (Score:1)
Re:Paging Dr. Forward! (Score:1)
Re:Paging Dr. Forward! (Score:2)
Character and story (Score:1)
Re:Character and story (Score:2, Funny)
Forward is the worst author I happily buy books in hardcover from. :-)
The French (Score:1, Offtopic)
According to this Press Release the French have (accidentally) produced six nuclei of tetraneutron (nucleus with four neutrons and no protons).
Did they surrender soon afterward?
(sorry)
Re:The French (Score:1)
"Nucleus"? (Score:1)