Neutrino Experiment Restores Standard Model Symmetry 83
perturbed1 writes "A Fermilab press release announced that MiniBooNE's latest results have salvaged the Standard Model of particle physics. The experiment ruled out the simple neutrino oscillation interpretation of the 1990s LSND experiment. Neutrinos have a tiny amount of mass, required by their oscillations, as observed in solar, atmospheric, and reactor neutrino experiments. Combining this mass with the LSND experiment's results required the presence of a fourth but 'sterile' neutrino, breaking the 3-fold symmetry of particle families in the standard model." Nice to see some good news out of Fermilab after the CERN debacle.
Good news (Score:4, Funny)
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x = 100x
0 = 100x - x --- Subtract x from both sides
0 = (100 - 1)x -- Factor a little
0 = 99x ------- Oooh! Arithmetic!
0 = x --------- Divide through by 99...
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Mine comes from nearly a decade in a sedentary job, and way too much cola over same time period. What does that have to do with the speed of light, though?
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It's all that mass that you've gained over the years that's slowing light down.
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anyway.. I'm quite happy to say we don't know enough to say one way or another whether or not the speed of light is a real barrier to an advanced civilization.
Exotic matter is believed to exist. Techniques for using energy to make the gravitational effects of exotic matter are believed to be possible. So wormholes and warp drives are not out of the question, theoretically.. but it's still an insanely difficult engineering proposition, even if we knew how t
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causality and locality are already dead aint they?
Really? I missed the obituray. Got a journal citation? (something other than Cramer's interpretational abuse of "retarded wave functions" I hope.)
anyway.. I'm quite happy to say we don't know enough to say one way or another whether or not the speed of light is a real barrier to an advanced civilization.
Are you saying that there is significant doubt about relativity? Relativity is solid; "star trek" type interstellar voyages are beyond unlikely. You seem implying a doubt in relativity that does not exist within the physics community. There is I suppose in some technical sense we don't know for sure, but this is not like a late 1800's claim that man will ne
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Inertia is a fashion garment worn by ladies in the 1920s, but mostly forgotten today. Originally, it was spelled inner-tiara, but with time the word contracted into its present form: inertia. It originated in Paris, as every fashion-garment from the 1920s did. Physicists are still stumbling with how to explain fashion garments. Using the standard model, this task has proved extremely difficult. Most physicists agree that in order to explain fashion garments fully, a new theory is needed. Often this theory i
Processor speed? (Score:1, Offtopic)
(Yeah, yeah, b
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NOT good news! (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't exactly what most scientist would consider "good news". We already know that both the standard model and the general relativity are wrong or at least incomplete, but they continue to pass every experiment, including this one...
The reason they keep trying is because they hope to finally find something different from what those theories predict: this will probably open a very exciting period of progress for our understanding of the universe.
More infos: start from unsolved problems in physics [wikipedia.org] and click links.
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Congratulations (Score:2)
You've just given a meta description of string theory.
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Not trolling, but the above statement reminds me of the following quotation:
All models are wrong, some are useful.
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_E._P._Box/ [wikiquote.org]
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Not trolling, but the above statement reminds me of the following quotation:
All models are wrong, some are useful.
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_E._P._Box/ [wikiquote.org]
Indeed, that's exactly the point. The Standard Model is quite useful, but also "wrong" and (even worse) wrong in a rather boring sort of way. The problem is that to find a new model that's slightly less wrong, or at least a more interesting kind of wrong, we need to find ways in which the Standard Model is less useful.
Thus, yet more confirmation of its utility boils down to "that's great, but now what?"
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Re:NOT good news! (Score:5, Insightful)
(Emphasis mine). If that's true, then how do we "already know" that the standard model and GR are broken? The way that we tell if a theory is broken is by experimentation.
I know you're probably talking about the whole dark matter/energy debate, but neither of those means general relativity is broken, necessarily. They could be indications that general relativity needs some elaboration or, most likely, there exists circumstances where we can experimentally show it to be broken (i.e., not just by observing cosmology from afar but actually in a lab). If we haven't found those circumstances yet, experimentation is how we keep looking. The good news of this article is that one experiment's results, which if accepted would have required major rewriting of theories, were not reproducible. We're one step closer to explaining them.
Because they disagree (Score:4, Insightful)
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As an engineer something isn't "broken" until it stops working. That's why we still use Newtonian physics for solving simple problems, the theory may be fundamentally "broken," but for our interests it works well enough.
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Legal departments do, however, offer a close approximation.
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That is not entirely true. A theory which also gives infinite answers to certain questions, or answers which contract results from other (accepted) theories must be broken as well. For the standard model, however, we DO have results that conflict with observation. For example, there is the so called cosmological constant problem [wikipedia.org]. For GR, I assume the poster was referring to the problem of trying to integrate GR with quantum field theory. M
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We already see many other such simplifications in physics: Quantum mechanics simplifes to Newtonian mechanics in the limit of large sizes. General relativity simplifies to special relativity in the limit of no gravity. General relativity simplifies to Newtonian gravity in the limit of low velociti
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>The reason they keep trying is because they hope to finally find something different from what those theories predict: this will probably open a very exciting period of progress for our understanding of the universe.
I disagree. This is good news because finding the truth is good news. The purpose of Science is to find the truth (or as close an approximation as possible), not to find more Science to do. Whatever the reality of the Universe, discovery of that is what is important. If we find the Higgs bos
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Bad News (Score:1)
I still hope to see real interstellar travel before I die (not sticking a bunch of corpsicles in a solar sail powered coffin and sending them out into deep space for a million years), and considering I'm 30 now, I hardly find that likely if the standard model turns out to be right.
Honestly, for those of us who want to see the human race EVER reach the stars (before we succeed in creating another Dark Ages or get smashed by a meteor), the wo
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Seriously, perhaps you've heard of the Permian extinction? [wikipedia.org]
In the long run you can throw a billion dollars into a mismanaged charity to completely fail to feed the starving (because all the food is stolen by warlords), or you can possibly secure a future for the human race as a whole.
And just look how much good saving [wikipedia.org] humanity [wikipedia.org] from war [wikipedia.org] has done in the past.
I think it's easier to reach Alpha Proxima.
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But do they continue to pass every experiment at the same time?
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This isn't exactly what most scientist would consider "good news". We already know that both the standard model and the general relativity are wrong or at least incomplete, but they continue to pass every experiment, including this one...
If you bothered to read the post you would have noticed:
The experiment ruled out the simple neutrino oscillation interpretation of the 1990s LSND experiment. Neutrinos have a tiny amount of mass, required by their oscillations, as observed in solar, atmospheric, and reactor neutrino experiments. Combining this mass with the LSND experiment's results required the presence of a fourth but 'sterile' neutrino, breaking the 3-fold symmetry of particle families in the standard model.
Let me translate this to you: there was an experiment that implied that there must be an additional neutrino not currently accounted by the Standard Model, but the new experiment ruled out this possibility. Okay?
Neither of the two has much (if anything at all) to do with the general theory of relativity, they neither prove nor disprove it, just with the Standard Model of particle physics.
This was pretty much expected (Score:4, Interesting)
Science and non-science (Score:3, Insightful)
So it would be bad news if an experiment showed something you were hoping you wouldn't get? That isn't science. Science is being happy when your experiment successfully tests the hypothesis, regardless of whether it confirmed it or not. A success is in gathering more data, a failure having the experiment give no useful information.
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You need to start thinking like a scientist, and look for the BIG badabooms!
OK, so I'm really just a bored programmer expressing my urge for more excitement here...
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And then it exploded.
-Galaxy Quest
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Some background (Score:5, Informative)
Neutrino oscillations are a process by which different types of neutrino can turn into each other. The elementary particles (quarks, leptons and neutrinos) all come in three "families". We are made of the lightest family: up and down quarks (which are the constituents of protons and neutrons) and electrons. Members of the heavier families are unstable and decay rapidly into lighter particles.
However, it turns out that the weak nuclear interaction can mix quarks of different families. Down quarks turn out to be somewhat mixed with strange quarks of the next heaviest family due to this effect.
For a variety of reasons, it was natural to ask if neutrinos were mixed in the same way. In particular, this could account for the unexpected deficit of electron-type neutrinos from the sun [queensu.ca]. Various terrestrial experiments were done in the 80's and 90's to try to detect this effect, including LSND.
Neutrino experiments are extremely difficult and subject to all kinds of backgrounds, making them highly susceptible to errors in calibration and calculation. The LSND results were at odds with everything else that had been seen, but the stakes were high and no one wanted to give up on a result that might be right although it was not widely believed by people outside the LSND collaboration itself.
The experiment described in TFA has tried to independently reproduce the LSND results. This is somewhat easier to do than the original experiment because you can design things so that you are most sensitive to the most interesting region. They have failed to find the effect that the LSND result would predict if it was due to neutrino oscillations, and it is likely that this is the end of it.
The article never says so, but the most likely cause of the LSND result is some error in analysis, particularly in accounting for backgrounds and instrument effects. This kind of thing happens, particularly in neutrino physics, where the background processes are fundamentally many orders of magnitude stronger than the effects you are looking for, and have to be designed out with the most excruciating care.
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All while Odo watches for "just one wrong move".
Is it just me (Score:1)
Not an accident, but not Fermilab either (Score:2, Funny)
God. The forbidden Tree of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden was just the first barrier. Exploding magnets are just God's way of saying "Discovereth not the Higgs Boson, for in what day soever thou shalt discover it, thou shalt die the death." Of course, the scientists are all like "Yeah yeah, that's what you said about the Tree of Knowled
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Wrong numbers = wrong results? (Score:2)
This could explain an error. At least in their web site, as the correct answer is 42, as everyone knows!
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Cosmology predicted that ages ago (Score:3, Interesting)
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It appears that nobody seems to be asking the next logical question: if the neutrinos aren't there, then what about the Sun?
Neutrinos are the required result of nuclear fusion within the Sun. They are not charged particles and they will travel through a light-year of lead. Now that Sudbury has been scrapped, there remains a severe deficit of neutrinos coming from the Sun for the nuclear fusion model.
They're not asking the question because that is not at all what this result implies. This result does not rule out all neutrino oscillations, but rather deals with a specific result (produced at Los Alamos, not Sudbury) which significantly complicated the neutrino oscillation theory by requiring an additional fourth type of neutrino. The neutrino oscillation theory used to describe the yield of various species from the sun is still quite intact, I believe.
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There are no shortage of crackpot physics theories supported by allegedly upstanding scientists. Often it's not even anyone's fault. Someone sees a sliver of evidence for some wild theory and latches on to it, wildly grasping at straws to support it. It's human nature, but most scientists manage to overcome the desire to selectively interpret evidence for their own p
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Wallace Thornhill accurately predicted *all* of the anomalous results from the Deep Impact Mission to Comet Tempel 1. Results that remain anomalous to NASA to this day were all natural byproducts of EU Theory. Did it make him famous? No, not really. People still blew him off. It is a fact, actually, that pretty much all of the anomalies in the space sciences today have an electrical
Hardly salvaged... (Score:3, Informative)
Secondly neutrino oscillations are not in the Standard Model and the problem with the LSND result was that it could not be reconciled with the other neutrino mising results from SNO and SuperK. So while this results is still very interesting it simply confirms that a simple neutrino mixing EXTENSION to the the Standard Model may be sufficien without needing to invoke more exotic alternatives.
Clarification (Score:5, Informative)
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