At Long Last: IceCube Spots 28 High-Energy Neutrinos 109
Wired reports that IceCube, the detection facility built just to detect such things, has seen just what it was looking for, even though the researchers involved didn't know it at the time. High-energy neutrinos, the target that IceCube was seeking, weren't showing up as had been hoped, but it turns out that there were quite a few (nearly 30 already, with 2013's data still being recorded) in the three years that the detector has been operating — they just weren't obvious until the data was combed for it. "Most of the 28 high-energy neutrinos so far detected originate from parts of the night sky that don’t include the Milky Way, making it quite likely that they are arriving from a distant source. There are still too few neutrinos to make any specific conclusions about AGNs or gamma-ray bursts, but the IceCube team will continue gathering new data."
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THIS IS THE Dopest SHIT,
Since he split Dr Dre.
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sheepishly....
Aren't they in the tea?
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Is this lab STRAIGHT OUT OF COMPTON?
Thanks, OP. I appreciate the thread.
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Neutrinos With Attitudes (Score:4, Funny)
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28 Neutrinos later and the damn kids are still asking, "Are we there yet?"
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LOL. I swear I took at least 30 seconds reading the fucking title wondering, "What the fuck is IceCube doing looking neutrinos?"
For a second guys.... My brain rationalized it. For just a little bit I accepted a reality where a gangsta rapper put the thug life on hold to look for secrets of the universe, not with weed, but with physics bitches.
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I don't mean to treat the man unfairly. I'm speaking about his gangsta persona. It's not like his real name is Ice Cube you know...
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You know, Mister Ed, that if "ice cube" on slashdot makes you think about a rapper, maybe you're at the wrong site?
I'm REALLY disappointed. A bunch of offtopic, unfunny rapper jokes in a threat about an important scientific discovery and the fucking normals have to drown out any intelligent conversation I came here to read.
Come on, normals, STFU and let the smart folks educate you. That's what I come here for, not rapper jokes I could hear at a ghetto tavern.
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I think someone needs to lighten the fuck up
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I was posting in response to somebody ASKING for funny thoughts about Ice Cube.
Get over yourself.
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Welcome to Slashdot. This place always got shit floating at the top. At least the site moved on past GNAA and Natalie Portman crap.
All the early posts are made by those that don't read the article or (at most) quickly skim wikipedia on the subject. So just do what the rest of us are doing: scroll down past first 3-4 threads and at that point you might come across something more insightful and worthwhile.
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Because it's Friday, I ain't got no job, and ain't got shit to do!
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Post your knot jokes here.
I don't knot what you are talking about.
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This would be a much better article to have the 'rocket' error that was on an earlier article; or, just to be different, NO ERRORS.
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Knot Knot
Who's There?
I'm Knot
I'm Knot Who?
I'm Knot Who You Think I Wood Be.
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Knot Knot :(
Who's there?
Knot
Knot who?
Don't knot
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from that joke man.
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I'm a frayed knot... Said the mixed up rope..
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Probably just some string theory conspirator.
Thanks for the link (Score:3)
At first I thought these rappers had more on the ball than met the ear.
Some of the facilities built for detecting particles are pretty fascinating, including one in northern Arizona, where the water is so pure it will corrode a screwdriver to iron oxide within a few days.
Very cool (no pun intended) observatory. Has it been in James Bond, yet?
Psssh (Score:1)
Ive Cube? Pssssh. What has Ice T spotted?
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Re:Excellent Editors (Score:5, Funny)
No it has knot
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To be fair, at least one of my "jokes" was modded down and it deserved to be because it was woefully unfunny.
On the other hand, my posting history does at least show I've occasionally attempted to clarify or explain various parts of cosmology that are within the bounds of my expertise (as a professional cosmologist of some seven or eight years post-doctoral experience). I think I'm allowed to make the occasional comment that I really wish I hadn't because it's simply not funny.
Ugh (Score:5, Insightful)
Is Slashdot powered by Mechanical Turk?
BAD:
At Long Last: IceCube Spots 28 High-Energy Neutrinos
Wired reports that IceCube, the detection facility built just to detect such things, has seen just what it was looking for, even though the researchers involved didn't knot it at the time. High-energy neutrinos, the target that IceCube was seeking, weren't showing up as had been hoped, but it turns out that there were quite a few (nearly 30 already, with 2013's data still being recorded) in the three years that the detector has been operating — they just weren't obvious until the data was combed for it. "Most of the 28 high-energy neutrinos so far detected originate from parts of the night sky that don’t include the Milky Way, making it quite likely that they are arriving from a distant source. There are still too few neutrinos to make any specific conclusions about AGNs or gamma-ray bursts, but the IceCube team will continue gathering new data."
Good:
At Least 28 High-Energy Neutrinos Detected by IceCube
From Wired ( http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/11/icecube-neutrinos-detected/ [wired.com] )
The high-energy neutrino detector IceCube ( http://icecube.wisc.edu/ [wisc.edu] ) has detected at least 28 high-energy neutrinos in the past 3 years. Until recently, this number was thought to be zero.
The quote from an unknown person is useless because it doesn't tell us what high-energy neutrinos are, why they didn't know about the 28 detections until now, or what AGNs are.
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Fortunately, links are provided and we can go off and read. More will undoubtably be in the paper (when published)
Icecube is pretty neat, too. I've been to a lecture on a similar type observatory, which is used to detect rays, their direction and wavelength which precede visible light of stellar events (such as novae).
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"The quote from an unknown person is useless because it doesn't tell us what high-energy neutrinos are, why they didn't know about the 28 detections until now, or what AGNs are."
AGNs? OMFG. Are we going to be inundated with reports about Anthropogenic Global Neutrinos now?
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Maybe "timothy" is a Turk, but I don't mean to insult the Turks (mechanical or otherwise).
Anyways, the neutrinos are likely from distance sources, so no indirect confirmation of dark matter, eh?
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"Most of the 28 high-energy neutrinos so far detected originate from parts of the night sky that don’t include the Milky Way, making it quite likely that they are arriving from a distant source.
Since neutrinos can pretty much zip through the entire planet unimpeded, they could enter Ice Cube from any angle at any time. So, how do they know which part of the sky the detected neutrinos are coming from?
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Re:Ugh (Score:5, Informative)
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...neutrinos are most obvious when they are coming upward having traveling through the Earth which would block other kinds of cosmic rays.
[Lightbulb]Riiiight![/Lightbulb] I was picturing the Earth blocking the neutrinos, so the directionality of IceCube would be skyward. I never thought of looking at it the other way, with the Earth filtering everything else out and the directionality being downward.
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A bit more clearly (but yeah, dmitrygr said it all), when a neutrino hits an atom it leaves a trail of light with a nonzero length.
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A bit more clearly (but yeah, dmitrygr said it all), when a neutrino hits an atom it leaves a trail of light with a nonzero length.
A trail of light? I was picturing just a flash of light, a single, pinpoint flash. That's why I was wondering how it could detect direction.
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Yep, there is a trail, or (as somebody else already said) more specifically a tree, with all branches nearly parallel.
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It was really easy-e, they were Neutrinos With Attitudes.
Well there you have it... (Score:1)
... undeniable evidence that Earth is 6,000 years old and Noah had baby dinosaurs on the Ark.
N-ice (Score:5, Interesting)
Nice to see another big science project providing results. The data from all these recent big experiments should be quite helpful in winnowing out some theories. It looks some supersymmetry theories appear inconsistent with the data being seen. Things seem to be resolving towards the standard model, and yet it has problems. Interesting times ahead I'm sure.
Electron Shape Measurement, Most Precise Yet, Rules Out New Physics Theories [nature.com]
Observation of micro–macro entanglement of light [nature.com]
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Correction for the first link:
Electron Shape Measurement, Most Precise Yet, Rules Out New Physics Theories [huffingtonpost.com]
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Nice to see another big science project providing results. The data from all these recent big experiments should be quite helpful in winnowing out some theories. It looks some supersymmetry theories appear inconsistent with the data being seen.
Don't worry, there are plenty more...
Queen and IceCube (Score:2)
I bet Brian May could help Icecube. They should collaborate.
BBT (Score:1, Troll)
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How dare you associate Sheldon with such an imbecilic experiment. Sheldon and any other mathematician worth his weight had ALREADY proven the existence of high speed neutrinos. I takes a pack of idiots to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to "prove" something when we had already done so YEARS ago.
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Sheldon and any other mathematician...
How dare you lump Sheldon in with lowly mathematicians. He's a theoretical physicist, not some school teacher.
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Um.....what do you think a theoretical physicist [wikipedia.org] is, ignoramus?
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This is about right...
http://xkcd.com/435/ [xkcd.com]
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How dare you lump Sheldon in with lowly mathematicians.
Steven hawking: "There's an arithmetic error on page three" of Sheldon's report.
George Smoot: "With all due respects, Dr. Cooper, but are you on crack?"
Great news. (Score:3)
Anyway, I bet they're glad; after 3 fruitless years, the project must have been on the rocks.
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHH
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Actually, I think it's on the knots
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28 high-energy neutrinos, great! (Score:2)
28 high-energy neutrinos, great! Nuclear submarines can now communicate at faster rates than 1 bit/s while deep under water without raising an antenna wire to the surface!
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2012/mar/19/neutrino-based-communication-is-a-first [physicsworld.com]
I worked on this a bit (Score:5, Interesting)
In 2005 I was a sysadmin at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory headquarters in Madison, Wisconsin. Biggest project I worked on was porting RS 485 serial drivers from a legacy unix system to Linux 2.6 and setting up the HP rack servers which we then shipped down to the pole from New Zealand on a C-130 Hercules. Also, I built a data visualization system in python+django which ran over a 1km-long DSL network between the drilling site and the south pole base. Never got to down there myself (my FTE boss did), but it was a fun project for a student and looks good on the resume and all. Did I mention SSH connections over satellite to Antarctica are pretty slow?
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The python was slow.
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Around 1 mbps, but with *huge* round-trip times (over 1000 ms). Additionally, geosync sats are below the horizon (their coverage is only from ~80N-80S and nobody else in the world lives between 80-90), so they have to use deprecated sats that aren't in the "groove" anymore, Iridium sats, and NASA's TDRSS network. Those old sats and the TDRSS birds are only above the horizon for a few hours at a time, but Iridium is a full constellation, providing 24/7 coverage. The costs are such that Iridium is used for
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Yes, you did...
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You would never know... (Score:3)
You would never know, reading the original article, that neutrinos were detected from SuperNova 1987A [wikipedia.org] back in, well, 1987.
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Yeah but they were from, like, the next galaxy over.
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Supernovas (and the sun) produce neutrinos with energies around 10^7 electron-Volts. The neutrinos detected by IceCube are around 10^15 electron-Volts. They're as different as radio waves (wavelength > 1 m) and x-rays (wavelength 10^-8 m).
These high-energy neutrinos can't possibly be produced by supernovas, so they must come from something else - like cosmic rays being accelerated in active galactic nuclei (the "AGNs" mentioned in the summary).
Matrix (Score:2)
So... are we living in the matrix [discovermagazine.com] or what?
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that's a load of new age bullshit.
tmost major religions would lead you to believe something along those lines and the article makes wonderful assumptions that the universe the simulation is running in is like this supposedly simulated universe, that they would have had to take shortcuts and those shortcuts would be possible to notice - and notice without them altering noticing them - and taken to that direction why make an assumption that the world outside the room you're not in is running at all when you'r
thats about $2M a neutrino (Score:2)