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Einstein Avenged: Neutrinos Bow to Light Speed Laws ("E=MC2, Dammit!")
TechNewsWorld ^ | 06/08/12 | Richard Adhikari

Posted on 06/08/2012 8:33:17 PM PDT by presidio9

Eight months after the multinational Opera research team caused an uproar among physicists with its findings that some neutrinos appeared to travel faster than light, its findings have been officially refuted.

CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, on Friday said that four experiments have found that neutrinos actually travel no faster than the speed of light.

Opera's original measurements can be attributed to a faulty element of its experiment's fiber optic timing system, CERN said.

The findings were announced at the 25th International Conference on Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics in Kyoto, Japan, by CERN research director Sergio Bertolucci.

Life in the Fast Neutrino Lane

Opera's initial findings, announced in September, triggered skepticism among the scientific community because, if validated, they could have meant that Einstein's theory of special relativity was wrong. Special relativity will only hold true when space-time is flat, and if the theory is wrong, it could mean that the curvature of space is hidden somehow.

Another possibility suggested by faster-than-light neutrinos was that special relativity doesn't apply to neutrinos. That would have impacted quantum theory because it's based on the balance between quantum behavior and special relativity.

A neutrino is an electrically neutral elementary subatomic particle with a small mass that usually travels close to the speed of light.

The Opera Experiment

The Opera team shot a high-intensity, high-energy beam of muon neutrinos produced at the CERN SPS accelerator in Geneva at the LNGS underground laboratory at Gran Sasso in Italy, 730 km (454 miles) away and measured the speed at which the neutrinos emitted traveled.

Preparations for the experiment were apparently meticulous. The Opera team worked with experts in metrology, or the science of measurement, from CERN and other institutions to measure the distance between CERN SPS and LNGS with an uncertainty of 20 cm (7.9 inches) over 730 km. Advanced GPS systems, atomic clocks and other sophisticated instruments were used to ensure the scientists could measure the neutrinos' time of flight to within less than 10 nanoseconds of accuracy.

The neutrinos' velocity was determined using high-statistics data collated by the Opera neutrino detector at LNGS from 2009. This detector consists of two identical Super Modules, each being an instrumented target section with a mass of about 625 tons followed by a magnetic muon spectrometer.

It took the neutrinos about three milliseconds to travel the 730 km. This is a measure of the time distribution of protons each time the beam was fired, aggregated and normalized. It's not possible to precisely measure the time of flight of any single neutrino because any proton might produce the neutrino detected by the Opera detector.

E=MC2, Dammit!

Four teams conducted experiments at Gran Sasso in May to check Opera's findings. They are Opera, Borexino, Icarus, and LVD.

Borexino, Icarus, Japan's T2K experiment and the United States' Minos experiment were originally slated to conduct the cross-checks, and it's unclear why the lineup was changed.

"Each experiment necessarily has its own timing system to record the time of its events," Michael Witherell, vice chancellor for research at the University of California Santa Barbara's physics department, told TechNewsWorld.

Opera's discovery of problems with its timing system was announced on Feb. 23, Witherell said. "At that time, CERN said that Opera would have their first neutrino run with the repaired timing system in May. Apparently, all four experiments ran in that May run, and all say transit times were consistent with the speed of light."

Into the Sun

In October,


TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: fordtorino; neutrinos; oldtrinos; stringtheory
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1 posted on 06/08/2012 8:33:22 PM PDT by presidio9
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To: presidio9

They ain’t no Einstein.


2 posted on 06/08/2012 8:37:25 PM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: presidio9

Did Einstein ever explain why, of all the various particles flying around the universe, photons are the fastest?


3 posted on 06/08/2012 8:40:30 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: Lancey Howard

Did he ever consider that the speed of light was not an historical constant?


4 posted on 06/08/2012 8:47:45 PM PDT by doc1019 (Romney will never get my vote!)
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To: Lancey Howard

A photon at rest has no mass. They exist in waves as carriers of light energy.


5 posted on 06/08/2012 8:50:17 PM PDT by presidio9 (Islam is as Islam does.)
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To: doc1019
Is MC2 related to MC Hammer? ( I know, it's E=MC2. Tryin' to make a science joke here.)
6 posted on 06/08/2012 8:52:07 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Being deceived can be cured.)
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To: Lancey Howard
Did Einstein ever explain why, of all the various particles flying around the universe, photons are the fastest?

They are like lapsed Catholics, massless.

7 posted on 06/08/2012 8:52:07 PM PDT by this_ol_patriot
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To: presidio9

Dammit Jim.....it is the stuff of fiction!


8 posted on 06/08/2012 8:52:49 PM PDT by Puckster
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To: Lancey Howard

They’e not just fast. The lose no time at all. No matter how far they travel they arrive in the present of when they left.


9 posted on 06/08/2012 8:55:22 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Being deceived can be cured.)
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To: presidio9

Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. (the observable universe is 46 billion light years wide, started at a single point, and is 13.7 billion years old,,,hmmmm)


10 posted on 06/08/2012 8:57:39 PM PDT by DesertRhino (I was standing with a rifle, waiting for soviet paratroopers, but communists just ran for office.)
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To: MHGinTN

11 posted on 06/08/2012 9:00:34 PM PDT by presidio9 (Islam is as Islam does.)
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To: KevinDavis; annie laurie; Knitting A Conundrum; Viking2002; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Mmogamer; ...
Thanks presidio9.


· List topics · post a topic · subscribe · Google ·

12 posted on 06/08/2012 9:02:45 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: presidio9

That picture was so big I had to shrink my resolution to 75% to see it all! Give an old man a break will ya?


13 posted on 06/08/2012 9:03:56 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Being deceived can be cured.)
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To: MHGinTN
From the photon's point of view, it is created and destroyed in the same instant, basically it doesn't exists from its’ perspective (zero time has passed for it) :^)
14 posted on 06/08/2012 9:06:06 PM PDT by The Cajun (Sarah Palin, Mark Levin......Nuff said.)
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To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
They ain’t no Einstein.

They ain't even Roget. "Einstein Vindicated" would have been better.

15 posted on 06/08/2012 9:08:40 PM PDT by Lady Lucky (God-issued, not govt-issued.)
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To: presidio9
e=mc2 - it isn't just good advice, it's the law.
16 posted on 06/08/2012 9:08:40 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: The Cajun

Hmmm, sounds a lot like virtual particles, from our perspective. I wonder, could it be that dimension Time has different variable expressions we don’t realize yet, from our special place of observation, situated as we are in the present but sensing only past events? we extrapolate real good though ...


17 posted on 06/08/2012 9:11:38 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Being deceived can be cured.)
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To: presidio9

Cut to the chase. Does this mean humans will never get star travel?


18 posted on 06/08/2012 9:28:16 PM PDT by Ronin (Dumb, dependent and Democrat is no way to go through life - Rep. L. Gohmert, Tex)
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To: Ronin

Does going to the sun count?


19 posted on 06/08/2012 9:36:39 PM PDT by Hegewisch Dupa
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To: DesertRhino

Nothing can travel through space faster than light. But the expansion of the universe isn’t an expansion in space, it’s an expansion of space. Space can expand faster than the speed of light. This does not violate the lightspeed limit within space.

In other words, nothing in the universe can travel FTL but the universe itself is expanding FTL.


20 posted on 06/08/2012 9:41:58 PM PDT by samtheman
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