Kid Eager
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2010
- Messages
- 7,296
I'll be 30 in December... of 2068.
Oh really.... I just checked and you weren't.
I'll be 30 in December... of 2068.
I'll be 30 in December... of 2068.
Some initial results from the re-runs have been released:
http://news.sciencemag.org/scienceinsider/2011/11/faster-than-light-neutrinos-opera.html
There's still some issues, but it is increasingly looking like a 'oh s***!' moment in experimental physics!![]()
I was just reading about the rerun in "The Scotsman", which highlighted this criticism- which sent me scurrying here to see what you made of it.Well, it looks like they addressed precisely the issue I brought up in this thread - that the pulses were much longer than the claimed time offset, so they should use shorter pulses instead. They did so, but they still see the offset... which suggests that I was probably incorrect about where the error is (and yes, I'd still bet at very high odds that it's an error).
The newspaper article mentioned a group in Japan.At this point some other group needs to try to replicate this. There's another experiment in Gran Sasso, called DAMA, that for years has been producing data that is inconsistent with several other experiments around the world. To this day, no one knows why - most people would probably bet that it's just wrong.
At this point some other group needs to try to replicate this. There's another experiment in Gran Sasso, called DAMA, that for years has been producing data that is inconsistent with several other experiments around the world. To this day, no one knows why - most people would probably bet that it's just wrong.
This is precisely my view on the matter. Until other research groups at other facilities are able to attempt to independently replicate the phenomenon, we can't really draw any conclusions.
So the waiting game continues...
I read somewhere that a similar result was produced by a U.S. laboratory/particle accelerator but that they were unsure about the margins of error or something like that.
Link?
"An American experiment involving Fermilab and a Minnesota mine showed the same thing back in 2007, but the results were within a margin of error that kept anyone from jumping up and down about it." -- http://www.popsci.com/technology/ar...l-help-check-revolutionary-faster-light-claim
If the results are within the margin of error, then they are not statistically significant. Meh.
I guess the experiments trying to replicate the OPERA results will decide who's right.An international team of scientists in Italy studying the same neutrino particles colleagues say appear to have travelled faster than light rejected the startling finding this weekend, saying their tests had shown it must be wrong.
<snip>
In a paper posted Saturday on the same website as the OPERA results, arxiv.org/abs/1110.3763v2, the ICARUS team says their findings "refute a superluminal (faster than light) interpretation of the OPERA result."
The experiments are in and the interpretations are what's in question. The margins of error are such that the neutrino speed is safely under that of light in a vacuum. Of course some of those supposedly high power physicicsts seem pretty ignorant about what is measured when they say they are measuring time.Well, scientists in Italy are saying it ain't so.I guess the experiments trying to replicate the OPERA results will decide who's right.
Well, scientists in Italy are saying it ain't so.I guess the experiments trying to replicate the OPERA results will decide who's right.
I don't know, I was just putting out the information for those with knowledge of the subject. I thought the dueling acronyms were kind of cute.That experiment is just showing that the neutrinos aren't showing any Cohen-Glashow emission, which we already knew wasn't happening from OPERA. So I don't think it adds anything substantial, does it?
Well, scientists in Italy are saying it ain't so.I guess the experiments trying to replicate the OPERA results will decide who's right.
OK, if Neutrinos are superluminal, why is there no Cherenkov radiation?
It's simple .. nobody obeys speed limits in Italy.