Supercomputer Adds Credence to Standard Model 120
ScienceDaily is reporting that researchers at the University of Edinburgh and Southampton in cooperation with partners from Japan and the US have shed some light on the Standard Model of physics using a new computer model. "The project's enormously complex calculations relate to the behavior of tiny particles found in the nuclei of atoms, known as quarks. In order to carry out these calculations, the researchers first designed and built a supercomputer that was among the fastest in the world, capable of tens of trillions of calculations per second. The computations themselves have taken a further three years to complete. Their result shows that the Standard Model's claim to be the best theory invented holds firm. It raises the stakes for the riddle to be solved by experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, which will switch on later this year. Physicists' efforts to confront Standard Model predictions using the most powerful computers available with the most precise experiments offer no clues about what to expect."
Wow! (Score:2, Funny)
No 42 (Score:3, Funny)
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-Peter
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No! (Score:4, Funny)
We are philosophers (though we may not be). We are here as representatives of Amalgamated Union of Philosophers, Sages, Luminaries, and Other Professional Thinking Persons and we want this machine off and we want off now.
What's the use of our sitting up all night saying there may (or may not be) a God if this machine comes along next morning and gives you his telephone number?
We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!
You'll have a National Philosopher's Strike on your hands!
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Mersenne prime (Score:1)
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Boycott ScienceDaily (Score:5, Informative)
I wish people would stop posting crappy science articles from ScienceDaily and related sites.
From this article, we learn that computer modeling confirmed something "about the behavior of quarks". That's it. There is nothing of substance in the article other than this and that the computation took three years.
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Computer models cannot expand (or confirm) the frontiers of any research of any kind. All this has done is said "We made a computer program that gives us the results we would expect from running this computer program." Nothing in computer modeling makes a connection to reality and truth.
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What did they model? The answer is: nothing, because math is not reality. They used a computer to create a proof of a mathematical problem. The rules of the problem do not map, or even purport to map, to the real world.
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Don't know, but it often is - perhaps maths is just mapping the functioning of our perceptions. Anyway because math has been usefull we continue to use it to model the real world and make testable predictions. TFA is describing a prediction that the LHC may falsify.
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I disagree. Knowledge of math is a priori, language is not. There is a reason for this. While we still haven't unlocked all of the secrets of mathematical modeling th
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FOR NOW it hasn't been proven that quantummechanics doesn't allow postmodern thought, although it HAS been proven that it's "limit" (ie. when we're not talking about trillionths of a second but about tenths) that it does indeed not allow the many-worlds view of the postmodernists.
This is a necessity to allow for the magic thinking that is required for postmodern interpretations of .
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(..ok, or your mom does..)
Re:Boycott ScienceDaily (Score:5, Insightful)
All this has done is said "We made a computer program that gives us the results we would expect from running this computer program."
No, it's not nothing more than a tautology as you're implying. You're ignoring the nature of the program, which aims to embody the standard model well enough to make predictions about reality for phenomena that it's not been possible to directly observe. It's a little more than just a program that spits out arbitrary but predictable results, since the results do in fact have some relation to reality. If the model is any good at all, the correspondence will be very good.
Nothing in computer modeling makes a connection to reality and truth.
You must also believe that computer models of aerodynamics that predict a racecar will experience less drag than a Hummer also have no connection to reality and truth. I'd argue that to the extent that a model makes accurate predictions again and again, there is some connection to reality and truth.
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If you can't observe the phenomena in the real world, then how do you know the model has any correspo
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If you can't observe the phenomena in the real world, then how do you know the model has any correspondence? Or are you going to say that my computer model of classical mechanics is proof that general relativity is incorrect?
No, but you could do some very accurate classical mechanics calculations in order to compare them to experiment. While computers were not used, this method was used to calculate the orbit of Mercury, and it was found that using classical mechanics and the known planets that something was wrong. This gave us the hint that either something was wrong with gravity or that there were unknown planets. So by doing calculations of what you think is true and comparing to reality you can find where the holes in your
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I would agree that the article was somewhat lacking in details about which processes they analysed. I am not connected with the research group, but I was hoping someone here could fill us in on which processes the group was concentrating on.
We have several flagship projects, including the calculation of the neutral kaon mixing parameter called B_K http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/hep-ph/pdf/0702/0702042v4.pdf [arxiv.org] which allows us to look at CP violation (a symmetry involving particle charge and parity which has been shown to be slightly broken); the non-perturbative renormalisation of some important operators http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0712/0712.1061v1.pdf [arxiv.org] allowing them to be used in various calculations; and KL3 http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/ [arxiv.org]
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If you can't observe the phenomena in the real world, then how do you know the model has any correspondence?
The whole point is that many phenomena are observable, and predictions by the model have been verified again and again. Those that cannot currently be verified may be verified in the future, and if they are falsified, that tells us that one of the simplifications that was made in order to create the computer program was not warranted or that there is some factor that our program failed to incorpora
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Largest Prime.
Optimal Golumb Ruler.
Big bang simulation.
Black Hole Simulation.
Tuskunga Simulation.
Actually, Universal machines and cellular automata.
Monte Carlo statistical methods.
Airfoil design.
Traffic flow design.
Space Shuttle design.
ARCHITETUCRE.
"Nothing in computer modeling makes a connection to reality and truth."
I am sorry, I cannot agree. There are so many counter examples where computer simulation has
Space Shuttle design.
ARCHITETUCRE.
"Nothing in computer mod
Re:Boycott ScienceDaily (Score:5, Informative)
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The first two sentences from the physorg article give more information than the entire ScienceDaily article:
Which was my point exactly. Thanks for the link.
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My mind is going..,
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Re:Boycott ScienceDaily (Score:5, Informative)
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Thanks for the reference. Eurekalert does look much better than ScienceDaily.
I get most of my science news from Science News [sciencenews.org], which I'm really happy with, but they are a little slower (and more thorough), so a bit behind the quickest to publish.
I just wish Slashdot editors would exercise some judgment. A good first step would be never linking to ScienceDaily.
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Article not just vague: spectacularly wrong! (Score:2)
The Standard Model actually encapsulates understanding of just under 5% of the material which makes up the Universe. ~20% of the material is dark matter which is not consistent with any SM particle and ~75% is dark energy which we don't even have a good theory for!
Please Boycott ScienceDaily, read TechReview (Score:1)
There is ABSOLUTLY NOTHING of substance in the article.
At Least you could have told us WHICH supercomputer/0
HECHoR is brand new, or Maxwell or some
beowolf cluster of bagpipes?
ScienceDaily is a terciary source. ( also its 'related' site are also devoid of interest' )
We should all just *ignore* it. Its not like there is any substance.
Much better is Scientific America, or MIT's TechReview.
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Scientists take the long (empirical?)route, philosophers take the short (personal experience?) route. But in either case maybe the question is not satisfactorily answerable.
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Hmmm, your response has nothing to do with my post, the gist of which was that ScienceDaily is a very poor quality Science-related website that Slashdot should avoid linking to.
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I don't believe as you say that "science is full of uncertainty", but even if that were the case, it would not follow that every article relating to science must therefore be low-quality crap. The criticism was not that there was uncertainty in the article, but that it was utterly devoid of content.
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Oh, and an article could quite easily meet my (not exceptionally high) quality standards: http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/PR_display.asp?prID=08-x5 [bnl.gov].
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljbI-363A2Q [youtube.com]
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Or should I say the reboot?
Re:The answer to life, the universe and everything (Score:1)
Uncertainty (Score:5, Funny)
I presume that means they have absolutely no idea where it is?
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It is in the old locker, just behind the recently bilt wall.
But now that you know that, it may be as slow as a 90's server :)
Higgs (Score:5, Informative)
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I for one am hoping they find something totally unexpected with the LHC.
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As cool as that would be (and I think it is actually quite likely) I tend to be more impressed by a new observational tool that finds exactly what was predicted then one that is used to "look at new weird stuff". Serendipitous discovery is good, but observational confirmation of what you think you know is the bread and butter of science.
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If all we did was poke at things and record how they behave in accor
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Say what? That's ri-damn-diculous. The "bread and butter of science" IS finding things that deviate with our predictions.
No, it is not. What distinguishes science from all other endeavors is that we put what we think we know to the test. That we go out of our way to make a new tool to look for the subtle little effect nobody has ever seen that should be there if our understanding is right.
Finding new and unexpected things is cool -- but it is not science. No science is needed to find stuff you never expected. As a matter of fact it happens all the time to all kinda people.
Sure, we do other experiments to see if what learn, and think is true from a new novel result is correct, but that's not the exciting part.
The bread and butter of any endeavor is rarely "
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This sure is a bold assumption. Top-notch scientists work their butts off every day to extract minute deviations from statistics from gazillions of experiments that would point towards the possibility that the Higgs boson is here, but *you* are pretty sure... Care to give your reasons for being that affirmative ?
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Is there more detail online somewhere (Score:2)
Re:Is there more detail online somewhere (Score:4, Informative)
It has to be said... (Score:3, Funny)
Supermodel Adds Credence to Standard Computer
Did Dell get Gisele Bündchen as a spokesmodel or something?
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What, no gravity? (Score:1)
From the summary of the TFA (The Flimsy Article):
(..) however, it excludes the force of gravity, which is its shortcoming.
Gravity - (arguably) the most important if not strongest force that makes our universe into what it is, given the distances over which it works, and it is NOT included in a theory that's supposed to explain same universe. That's no small shortcoming indeed!
Maybe I'm naive in this respect, but IMHO the best theories (on any subject matter) are simply the ones that describe what we can observe in real life (aka empirical evidence) with the simplest/smalle
Of course, no gravity! (Score:4, Informative)
Gravity -- certainly the weakest force -- is completely irrelevant as far as the physics of elementary particles is concerned. In real life there is no way to observe any kind of gravitational interactions on the scales where the other forces are relevant. In particular, if there is physics just beyond the standard model it need not have any connection to gravity. It's true that gravity is relevant on extremely large scales, but for these scales we have perfectly good theories (GR; in fact Newtonian gravity is quite sufficient in almost all cases). You'd have to go to Planck scale before there'll be any guarantee of gravitational effects playing a role.
This is not to say that a quantum theory including gravity is not an important goal of theoretical physics, it's just to say that so far we have not found any real-life situations where such a theory would be needed, that is when corrections due to quantum gravity would play any role whatsoever. Hopefully the LHC will probe the physics beyond the standard model. The number of orders of magnitude between the energy scales we can actually observe and the quantum gravity energy scale make it extremely unlikely, however, that gravity will be relevant to experimental fundamental physics for many millenia.
trivial roots (Score:2)
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The big bang is a long way off ... (Score:2)
Actually, this computation has nothing to do with the big bang. This a computation is about trying to see whether we can make sufficiently accurate (computer) calculations within QCD (our theory of quarks and elementary particles made from them) to understand particles at ordinary energy scales. This is actually quite hard (for reasons that would be hard to explain here). Making sure QCD correctl
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after three years ... (Score:2, Funny)
If my own purchases are any indication, three years out the damned thing's now completely outmoded, and a pocket calculator will do the same thing ...
An article with actual substance (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/PR_display.asp?prID=08-x5 [bnl.gov]
TFA - enjoy... :) (Score:2, Informative)
ScienceDaily (Feb. 29, 2008) -- Scientists have used a supercomputer to shed new light on one of the most important theories of physics, the Standard Model, which encapsulates understanding of all the material that makes up the universe. This 30-year-old theory explains all the known elementary particles and three of the four forces acting upon them - however, it excludes the force of gravity, which is its shortcoming.
I asked my supercomputer... (Score:5, Funny)
I only had to wait a few seconds for the answer: "Reply hazy, try again".
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Is the Standard Model correct?
Eliza: I see...
That's deep :)
In other words... (Score:2)
I would have to agree. Observations tend to provide "eureka" information that theory might miss or not become main stream for a while. Running models can extol supercomputers to a point - and peer reviews may be a big obstacle to the progress of science in many ways. I hope CERN offers us some groundbreaking material.
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Theory and Experiment equally important (Score:4, Interesting)
I completely disagree. It is only when theory and observation both agree that you have a "eureka" moment. For example we have an observation that there is lots of dark energy (not dark matter - that is different) in the universe. However, so far, there is no good theory as to what it is. I don't seem to remember anyone going "Eureka! We have discovered dark energy!". Rather everyone is sitting around scratching their heads and wondering what it is.
To get a Eureka moment you must have BOTH theory AND experiment in agreement. The SNO experiment is an excellent example. Experiment: not enough electron neutrinos coming from the sun; theory: neutrinos can change flavour from electron to tau or muon so the total flux of neutrinos will be correct; experiment: SNO measured the total neutrino flux and discovered that it agreed with solar model predictions while still seeing a reduced electron neutrino flux. Result: EUREKA! Neutrinos oscillate!
Conclusion: theory and experiment are both EQUALLY important to advancing science. One without the other may be interesting but not very useful.
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Uh...what?
Validity of Computation Reinforcement? (Score:1)
It's a subtle point, but I think it's something that should always be double checked. How do we know that our mathematical equations apply in all simulated situations, and that they don't break down under different circumstances? What assumptions are we making about reality, and how su
42 (Score:2)
CCR! (Score:1)
That's nothing! (Score:1)
Actually, yes. I can. (Score:3, Funny)
I'm copying 2GB of photos from a share to my pen drive under Vista right now, so I don't have to imagine it.
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Now given that the speed of computers supposedly doubles every 18 months, instead of building a computer now and let it number-crunch for three years, you could wait 18 months while letting your money earn interest; then buy the then biggest computer and do the same computation in half the time...
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