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Science

Groundbreaking Technique Yields Important New Details on Silicon, Subatomic Particles and Possible 'Fifth Force' (nist.gov) 81

NIST: Using a groundbreaking new technique at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), an international collaboration led by NIST researchers has revealed previously unrecognized properties of technologically crucial silicon crystals and uncovered new information about an important subatomic particle and a long-theorized fifth force of nature. By aiming subatomic particles known as neutrons at silicon crystals and monitoring the outcome with exquisite sensitivity, the NIST scientists were able to obtain three extraordinary results: the first measurement of a key neutron property in 20 years using a unique method; the highest-precision measurements of the effects of heat-related vibrations in a silicon crystal; and limits on the strength of a possible "fifth force" beyond standard physics theories.

In a regular crystal such as silicon, there are many parallel sheets of atoms, each of which forms a plane. Probing different planes with neutrons reveals different aspects of the crystal. The researchers report their findings in the journal Science. To obtain information about crystalline materials at the atomic scale, scientists typically aim a beam of particles (such as X-rays, electrons or neutrons) at the crystal and detect the beam's angles, intensities and patterns as it passes through or ricochets off planes in the crystal's lattice-like atomic geometry. That information is critically important for characterizing the electronic, mechanical and magnetic properties of microchip components and various novel nanomaterials for next-generation applications including quantum computing. A great deal is known already, but continued progress requires increasingly detailed knowledge.

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Groundbreaking Technique Yields Important New Details on Silicon, Subatomic Particles and Possible 'Fifth Force'

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  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Thursday September 09, 2021 @09:25PM (#61781123)

    1. It's not aliens.
    2. There is no fifth force, and if there is, it's not going to give you anti-gravity or anything cool.
    3. Faster than light travel is impossible.

    • 4. Pluto isn't a planet.

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        That's a matter of definition, not of fact. Whether it's a planet or not depends on what definition you use. Similarly for Vesta and Ceres. And Ganymede. All have at one time fitted the currently used definition, and then at another time they didn't. Whether Pluto is a planet or not will depend on whether the IAU is allowed to rule what the definition is. I see no reason they should be allowed to do so, except in their own journals. But if you want to yield to them the right to define terms in common

        • Pluto was called a planet because it was initially believed to be rather large.

          As it became apparent that it was a shitty little ice ball, it became very clear it didn't even fit contemporary definitions of "planet" at the time it was discovered.
        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          The only "fact" of the matter is whether the definition is appropriately applied. We made the definitions, we can change them, science tends to do this sporadically but it does do it. Take it up with the Intergalactic Definitional Authority.

          • If by we you mean speakers but there is no particular reason anyone has to recognize the decision of any particular body who claims to have changed the definition. First test for a new definition is that it must successfully categorize the existing planets. Anything else only serves to invalidate previously validated work containing the term. What is the point of going to so much effort to insure published work is valid if someone is going to change the meanings of the words after the fact to something whic
            • First test for a new definition is that it must successfully categorize the existing planets.

              Complete nonsense.
              Brain numbingly fucking stupid complete nonsense.

              By that reasoning, mistakes were made when we re-defined gravity to be a consequence of the curvature of spacetime instead of an actual force.

              Anything else only serves to invalidate previously validated work containing the term.

              If the previous validation is known to be invalid, then you fix it.

              What is the point of going to so much effort to insure published work is valid if someone is going to change the meanings of the words after the fact to something which is no longer valid?

              You're right, people should not do anything, because in the future, people might know a bit more than you do.

              For that matter how can anyone cite past work going forward if we've effectively introduced a unit conversion error into the process? The new definition failed this basic test. Rejected.

              Totally. That's why maxwell's equations are bum now. After all, they weren't formulated in minkowski space.

              Pluto wasn't ev

              • we re-defined gravity to be a consequence of the curvature of spacetime instead of an actual force.
                There is no difference in curvature of space-time and being an actual force.

                And I consider Pluto a planet. How you treat him, is up to you. Just do not call your dog Pluto.

                • There is no difference in curvature of space-time and being an actual force.

                  Incorrect. There is, which is why gravity is a pseudo-force.
                  See: coriolis force, centrifugal force. These are not fundamental forces, they are consequences of your inertial motion.
                  You are not being pulled toward the planet, your world-line is simply pointed in that direction. You can point it away from the planet, but if you don't have enough velocity, you're simply going to curve right back toward it.

                  Now if you're trying to argue that the equivalence principle means that "gravity is indistinguishable f

                  • Correction:

                    Now if you're trying to argue that the equivalence principle means that "gravity is indistinguishable from a force in non-relativistic regimes" then, no argument there.

                  • Incorrect. There is, which is why gravity is a pseudo-force.
                    It is not :D

                    Easy to figure if you want to calculate an orbit, e.g. around the moon, with curvation of space time only: good luck.

                    • It is not :D

                      What the fuck?
                      Are you literally arguing with me about Einstein's cornerstone conclusion of General Relativity? That gravity is a fictitious force?

                      Easy to figure if you want to calculate an orbit, e.g. around the moon, with curvation of space time only: good luck.

                      What are you talking about here? I'm pretty sure your English is failing you again.
                      Newtonian gravity is a good enough approximation of what gravity really is for calculation of orbits.
                      However, Newtonian gravity is provably wrong. General Relativity has yet to be proven wrong, in spite of over a century of trying.
                      That means, as far as current scientific knowled

              • "Complete nonsense.
                Brain numbingly fucking stupid complete nonsense."

                Thank you for providing a summary of your comment before I made the mistake of reading the rest.
                • That was a lot of words for "Ya, I know logic was terminally fucking stupid"
                  • Since the previous definition was improperly being applied to everyone who actually has something to contribute to mankind rather than those who consistently self-identify as having numb brains and run around regurgitating the thoughts of others it was invalid; we've redefined 'stupid' to mean 'brilliant, novel, and insightful.'

                    Thank you. I don't mean to pat myself on the back but acknowledging that artificially reducing the planet count by retroactively altering an existing definition rather than defining
      • Fuck any definition of "planet" that is anything else than the literal "body revolving around the sun".

        Pluto can happily be a "microplanet". A subset of "planet". And human made-sattelites (including human-made humans), that revolve around the sun (and not e.g. around Earth) are planets too.

        Calling it "not a planet" is a key sign of the growing amount of batshit pseudo-scientists in the ranks of science. The exact kind that is bred by our "bulemic rote memorization" educational system, where nobody cares if

      • 5. Scientific arguments do not work well with a majority of people
    • I wonder if you can elaborate on #2? You seem to be an expert
    • Reaching the speed of light by conventional in-space methods is not possible based on our current model of physics. Don't deny more than what the facts and theories account for.
  • Use the 5th Force Luke!
  • Just to be clear... (Score:5, Informative)

    by BitterOak ( 537666 ) on Thursday September 09, 2021 @09:57PM (#61781175)
    If you read the summary carefully, or the article, you'll see that this experiment put new limits on a possible fifth force. In other words, they didn't see evidence of a fifth force, but rather the opposite. Their experiment put new constraints on how a fifth force might be found, making it yet more unlikely there is a fifth force.
    • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Thursday September 09, 2021 @11:09PM (#61781265)

      Actually, they are only talking about a specific speculated type of fifth force called the Yukawa force, there may be other types of forces yet undiscovered that we have no idea of even how to put constraints on.

      • If they're completely undiscovered, at this point, it hints that they don't exist. Much like dark matter, really, it explains some theoretical observations but conflicts with so many that that it would have to be extraordinary not to have been detected and probably does not exist.

        • Meh, and about a century ago, physisists thought there are only a couple open questions to settle and then they're done. And before that, it was theorized that the atom is the elementary unit of matter. If it's undiscovered, it means just that. Either the theory behind it is nonsense, or we need to look closer. Everything else is speculation for the coffee table.

          • A profound new unsisght, like discovering a fifth force, would open very large new fields. It needn't even mean the previous theory was nonsense, merely that it needs refinement. Atoms as a fundamental particle is still a potent theory and used extensively in chemistry and physics. It's merely incomplete.

        • by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Friday September 10, 2021 @10:41AM (#61782251)

          So you really have read nothing at all about dark matter it seems. Dark matter definitely exists, we observed its effects as long ago as 1933, and its gravitational effects are now seen in at least eleven different classes of evidence, here is a very easy to find and read summary [wikipedia.org]. Your reference to "theoretical observations" is bizarre. Observations are actual things, not theories.

          It is as observable as anything else that must be detected through how its gravitational effects act on other things like light and visible matter. Black holes for example (more on this in a second). We see it bending light, creating lenses, many physical systems in the Universe are now known that do not have enough detectable matter to hold them together (like... every galaxy in the Universe), and all attempts to explain it away with ad hoc modifications of existing theories (MOND, etc.) fail to explain away dark matter (in addition to being kludges) since they only apply to one or two of the many categories of evidence and still require invisible matter for the rest.

          One of the remaining candidates for dark matter BTW are are black holes. Only black holes in a particular range of masses (10^17 to 10^21 grams) can be responsible and we don't have any accepted explanation yet of a process that could form so many in this specific size range. But super-symmetry theorists have models that do this, so perhaps this is where super-symmetry gets experimental confirmation.

          • Yes, I have read it. We've observed gravitational effects, and our assumptions about the gravitational expansion of the universe, the the Hubble constant, and the surprisingly low expansion velocities at the furthest edges of the universe are complex conclusions based on conclusions about the luminosity of objects billions of years old, extrapolated from what can be measured more nearby. It's based on an astonishing stack of theoretical rather than measured conclusions about the amount of matter in the univ

          • by Lordfly ( 590616 )

            From your literal linked wikipedia article:

            "Many experiments to directly detect and study dark matter particles are being actively undertaken, but none have yet succeeded."

  • bad reporting (Score:2, Informative)

    by awwshit ( 6214476 )

    Bad reporting is not a fifth force.

  • I'm guessing this and other advancements is what will give us our next leg up in computing density.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Since NIST appears to exist as a front for domestic NSA spying, is this "finding" a cover story for another backdoor the NSA will be building into all silicon chip production?
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      "Since NIST appears to exist as a front for domestic NSA spying" How so or are you just running off at the fingers?

  • regardless that someone tells me he is my father.

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] Bounce a graviton particle beam off the main deflector dish!
  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Friday September 10, 2021 @01:48AM (#61781447)

    Not finding it. The experiment sets limits on a possible fifth force, it's more accurate to say we are that much closer to completely ruling it out

    • No, article conclusively proves there is a fifth force, that of misleading bullshit headlines. Never underestimate their reach, production rate or power!

  • by getuid() ( 1305889 ) on Friday September 10, 2021 @03:50AM (#61781583)

    ...is probably this one. [arxiv.org].

    • Also please somebody correcy me if I'm wrong, but this has nothing to do with a 5-th force except for the usual "we looked more carefully than anyone else and still haven't found it" a.k.a. "we narrowed down the range in which it might exist.

      Not to diminish the rest if their experimental success, it's probably pretty impressive (not my house discipline, but it's published in Science, so it must be cool :-) Besides: measuring charge distribution of neutrons admittedly does sound like "waterboarding and other

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Comparing apples and oranges doesn't make you insightful.

        • The german word for "orange" is "Apfelsine", which literally translates to "Chinese apple" in an archaic form of the language.

          So, yes, depending on the purpose, comparing apples and oranges is a valid move.

          And I don't give a rat's anus about being "insightful". If you have something constructive to contribute, I'm all ears.

  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Friday September 10, 2021 @06:20AM (#61781707)

    Never has it been more obvious, that the /. editor did not even actually read what he quoted there.

    ... and limits on the strength of a possible "fifth force" beyond standard physics theories.

    But the headline states "possible fifth force".

    NO. It means that even with their extraordinary sensitivity, they could not detect a fifth force. Which means there now is a very vey low upper limit to the strength of any such force, if it exists. Which means any fifth force now became much more unlikely! The exact opposite of what the headline suggests.

    Putting limits on things is a standard method in research. You narrow it down and thereby exclude a lot of theories.
    Same thing happened with the Higgs boson's mass and the various string and quantum gravity theories. (The now know mass excludes *all* string theories, by the way. Making them decidedly pseudo-science, like aether theory. But go tell that to its deciples...)

  • I read TFS thrice. And all it says is that something was discovered. And partially how.

    But not what, specifically, was discovered!

    And everyone, including me, was too distracted by msmash getting that "fifth force" thing completely wrong.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      All msmash did was repeat what NIST said. How did he get anything wrong or are you just one of his secret admirers?

  • They discovered The Schwartz?

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