homehome Home chatchat Notifications


CERN to re-do the neutrino speed test

In the aftermath of September’s highly controversial announcement, that a particle with a speed larger than that of the light was recorded, CERN has announced that it has been re-running the experiment, in order to test the validity of the first. Now of course, when you claim you have a neutrino going faster than the […]

Mihai Andrei
October 31, 2011 @ 10:52 am

share Share

In the aftermath of September’s highly controversial announcement, that a particle with a speed larger than that of the light was recorded, CERN has announced that it has been re-running the experiment, in order to test the validity of the first.

Now of course, when you claim you have a neutrino going faster than the speed of light, you have to back it up with the heaviest of arguments. If correct, this theory would make Einstein’s theory obsolete, and render much of our modern physics useless. Either way, there have been some serious questions raised about the experiment itself, and the conditions of the particle accelerator. Critics asked whether CERN properly accounted for Earth’s rotation, or queried the statistical analysis of the results, or if there is simply some system error.

It’s this last type of questions that CERN wants solved as soon as possible, in order to continue working without additional pressure and uncertainty floating above their heads. As theoretical physicist Matt Strasser notes in this blog post, CERN’s original experiment wasn’t designed with highly accurate time correlations in mind. OPERA’s main research program is observing neutrino oscillations, and puts a premium on generating large numbers of neutrinos.

“Apparently the concerns raised by the community have been strong enough to prompt OPERA to request that the CERN neutrino beam operators … send them short pulses.”

share Share

The Magnetic North Pole Has Shifted Again. Here’s Why It Matters

The magnetic North pole is now closer to Siberia than it is to Canada, and scientists aren't sure why.

Mars Dust Storms Can Engulf Entire Planet, Shutting Down Rovers and Endangering Astronauts — Now We Know Why

Warm days may ignite the Red Planet’s huge dust storms.

Scientists Built a Radioactive Diamond Battery That Could Last Longer Than Human Civilization

A tiny diamond battery could power devices for thousands of years.

The Universe’s Expansion Rate Is Breaking Physics and JWST’s New Data Makes It Worse

New data confirms a puzzling rift in the universe's expansion rate.

The explosive secret behind the squirting cucumber is finally out

Scientists finally decode the secret mechanism that has been driving the peculiar seed dispersion action of squirting cucumber.

Mysterious eerie blue lights erupt during avalanche — and no one is sure why

Could this be triboluminescence at scale?

In 1911, Einstein wrote a letter to Marie Curie, telling her to ignore the haters

The gist of it is simple: "ignore the trolls".

Scientists Turn a Quantum Computer Into a Time Crystal That Never Stops

Quantum computing meets the timeless oscillation of time crystals in a breakthrough experiment.

China Buids the World’s Most Powerful Hypergravity Facility. It Can Simulate Gravity 1,900 Times Stronger Than Earth's

Chinese scientists now have access to the world's most powerful hypergravity facility.

Scientists Reveal What a Single Photon Really Looks Like for the First Time

The shape of a photon Is finally revealed by physicists.