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Science

New Paper Claims Neutrino Is Likely a Faster-Than-Light Particle 142

HughPickens.com writes Phys.org reports that in a new paper accepted by the journal Astroparticle Physics, Robert Ehrlich, a recently retired physicist from George Mason University, claims that the neutrino is very likely a tachyon or faster-than-light particle. Ehrlich's new claim of faster-than-light neutrinos is based on a much more sensitive method than measuring their speed, namely by finding their mass. The result relies on tachyons having an imaginary mass, or a negative mass squared. Imaginary mass particles have the weird property that they speed up as they lose energy – the value of their imaginary mass being defined by the rate at which this occurs. According to Ehrlich, the magnitude of the neutrino's imaginary mass is 0.33 electronvolts, or 2/3 of a millionth that of an electron. He deduces this value by showing that six different observations from cosmic rays, cosmology, and particle physics all yield this same value within their margin of error. One check on Ehrlich's claim could come from the experiment known as KATRIN, which should start taking data in 2015. In this experiment the mass of the neutrino could be revealed by looking at the shape of the spectrum in the beta decay of tritium, the heaviest isotope of hydrogen.

But be careful. There have been many such claims, the last being in 2011 when the "OPERA" experiment measured the speed of neutrinos and claimed they travelled a tiny amount faster than light. When their speed was measured again the original result was found to be in error – the result of a loose cable no less. "Before you try designing a "tachyon telephone" to send messages back in time to your earlier self it might be prudent to see if Ehrlich's claim is corroborated by others."
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New Paper Claims Neutrino Is Likely a Faster-Than-Light Particle

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yay!

  • by TrollstonButterbeans ( 2914995 ) on Saturday December 27, 2014 @09:48AM (#48679479)
    Since they travel back in time, you have to test the result before you do the experiment.

    If your test was successful, you see little reason to do the experiment, which causes the test result to not have happened -- which can make your co-workers quite angry with you. The frustrating nature of this type of work requires extreme dedication.
  • arXiv.org link (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 27, 2014 @09:52AM (#48679495)
    • Fuck, an AC doing something useful. Thank you mysterious person who is not logged in for some incomprehensible reason.

      I suspected that there was an ARXIV somewhere at the root of things, which Pickens hadn't taken the effort to track down. Downloading it to read (because, like, everybody on Slashdot reads the fucking article as closely as possible ot the source, before making stupid, pointless and uninformed comments about it, like wanking onto the biscuit in the middle of the room. (Not sure how that woul

    • Ohhhh, accepted for publication. That is a significant step up, though I haven't yet had time to check out the reviewer's policies at that journal.
  • If it brakes causality, doesn't that disprove it right there?

    • Re:um... (Score:4, Informative)

      by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Saturday December 27, 2014 @10:53AM (#48679675)

      Two things:

      1) Causality isn't necessarily a law of nature, so much as "the way our senses are wired to see things".

      2) It is unlikely that tachyons have brakes. Cars have brakes, even bicycles have brakes. But probably not tachyons.

  • by koan ( 80826 )

    A telephone to send messages back in time... but sending information back wouldn't change the time we are in now, it would simply cause a split, an alternate time line to occur, and nothing would change at the time we are in now.

    Example: Sending information back to stop the assassination of Kennedy wouldn't change that fact in our time, its already occurred.
    It would create a new time line, one of which we are unaware.

    If multiple Universe, and multiple time lines exist, would changing a time line we could ha

    • but sending information back wouldn't change the time we are in now, it would simply cause a split, an alternate time line to occur, and nothing would change at the time we are in now.

      Did God tell you this? Are you time traveler? How could you possibly know that?

      • by koan ( 80826 )

        None of the above, but to me it makes more sense than an entire Universe changing everything in existence due to data sent back in time.

        Think of everything that would have to change, it makes more since it would split off to another time line rather than interfere with the current one sending the data.

        We can't change "our" past, but we might be able to change "a" past, and would that really matter to us?

        • by koan ( 80826 )

          since/sense of course.

        • That's one idea, sure, but whenever we start talking about modern physics I really distrust "it makes more sense". There's plenty in modern physics that doesn't actually make sense that I can see.

  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Saturday December 27, 2014 @11:58AM (#48679995) Homepage
    The primary difficulty here is going to be the same data that was really tought to reconcile with in the OPERA experiment, namely the data from SN 1987A.

    In that supernova (the first observed in 1987 hence the name), the supernova was close enough that we were actually able to detect the neutrinos from it. The neutrinos arrived about three hours before the light from the supernova. But that's not evidence for faster than light neutrinos, since one actually expects this to happen. In the standard way of viewing things, the neutrinos move very very close to the speed of light, but during a core-collapse supernova like SN 1987A, the neutrinos are produced in the core at the beginning of the process. They then flee the star without interacting with the matter, whereas the light produced in the core is slowed down by all the matter in the way, so the neutrinos get a few hours head start.

    The problem for FTL neutrinos is that if the neutrions were even a tiny bit faster than the speed of light they should have arrived much much earlier. This is strong evidence against FTL neutrinos. In the paper in question, he mentions SN 1987A in the context of testing his hypothesis in an alternate way using a supernova and the exact distribution of the neutrinos from one but doesn't discuss anywhere I can see the more basic issue of the neutrinos arriving at close to the same time as the light.

    • by radtea ( 464814 )

      The primary difficulty here is going to be the same data that was really tought to reconcile with in the OPERA experiment, namely the data from SN 1987A.

      I had the same thought, but it turns out not to be the case. Given the model he's working with, the neutrinos will be as much above the speed of light as they would have been below it if they had the same real mass (0.3 eV or something like that.)

      For ~10 MeV neutrinos this gives gamma absurdly close to unity, and it's as impossible to distinguish neutrinos traveling just over c from ones traveling at c from ones traveling just under c.

      The paper actually mentions SN1987A and talks a bit about the time resolu

      • Reading it more carefully, it looks like you are correct. Thanks for pointing this out. So SN 1987A data is not by itself a good reason to doubt this.
    • Without doing much actual math, based on the energy of the neutrinos detected from SN1987A (~20 MeV or so) and the mass he measures and the distance to SN1987A (168,000 ly), you're looking at superluminal neutrinos arriving on the order of a second fast.
  • Why do I suspect this is horse crap?
  • Dark Matter? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by crow ( 16139 ) on Saturday December 27, 2014 @02:11PM (#48680539) Homepage Journal

    Could tachyons be where the dark matter mass comes from?

    • Possible, but there's no reason to particularly locate that hypothesis. In this conext, the specific particle which may be a tachyon is the electron neutrino. We already know that standard estimates of neutrino mass make it extremely unlikely that the standard three types of neutrinos are anywhere near enough mass to be more than about 5% of dark matter, and that's likely a vast overestimate. As to there being some other particles that are dark matter that happen to be tachyons- possible, but why even ident
    • Dark matter, as observed, seems to hang around galaxies. This suggests that it travels fairly slowly, and can't normally easily escape a galactic gravitational well, suggesting that it isn't tachyons.

  • What the OPERA collaboration claimed was that they had an anomaly in their data, which led to a possible interpretation of nneutrinos travelling faster-than-light. Since they found that a very extrordinary claim, they knew they needed extrordinary evidence, and after a few months of searching within, they opened up to the scientific community to help find their mistake, if any. They were very scientific about the whole thing, and didn't at any point claim "hey look here, we found neutrinos to go faster tha

  • I'm waiting for the next episode of The Big Bang Theory to hear what Dr.Copper thinks of this paper before I take sides. He's the man...

  • REDUCTION OF OXYGEN CONTENT TO BELOW TWO PARTS PER MILLION WITHIN FIFTY KILOMETER RADIUS OF SOURCE AFTER DIATOM BLOOM MANIFESTS AEMRUDYCO PEZQEASKL MINOR POLLUTANTS PRESENT IN DEITRICH POLYXTROPE 174A ONE
    SEVEN FOUR A COMBINES IN LATTITINE CHAIN WITH HERBICIDES SPRINGFIELD AD45 AD FOUR FIVE OR DU PONT ANALAGAN 58 FIVE EIGHT EMITTING FROM REPEATED AGRICULTURAL USE AMAZON BASIN OTHER SITES OTHER LONG CHAIN MOLECULAR SYNERGISTS POSSIBLE IN TROPICAL ENVIRONS OXYGEN COLUMN SUBJECT TO
    CONVECTIVE SPREADING RATE ALZS

  • For those interested in time travel, the inaugural meeting of the International Time Travel Association will be held at the Perimeter
    Institute last Tuesday at 20:00.

    • I was so excited I showed up twenty minutes early, but then waited around for half an hour and left disappointed after it seemed no speakers would show. My friends tell me they actually got the rolling at 20:25. Damn, they should be more respectful of other people's time.....

  • What is more likely to happen is that either a) no FTL particle, ever or b) the standard model will have to be amended. What makes some people think going back in time (and violating causality) is possible, is the elegance of the mathematics that fits what we know about physics. Would not be the first time that when more becomes known, the mathematics loses significantly in elegance. Just look at the mess of the current mathematical modeling (not: "foundation"!) quantum physics has.

  • I can already see some CTO at a high frequency trading data center putting together a proposal to use this information to reduce latency in trade orders from New Jersey to the exchange. Not sure they can do a little relativity backglip and get orders in before the information they're based on exists but they might get closer to zero than the guy with the shorter fiber optic cables down the road...
  • I know. Sorry, I read the paper.

    I'm not a physicist, either. Maybe someone can clear these questions up for me.

    The paper cites neutrinoless double beta decay as one of its six observations, but from my understanding this phenomena has not yet been observed, and experiments that have claimed to observe it have not been "disputed", but unambiguously discredited.

    Also - from my understanding - previous theoretical work stipulated that the FTL component would only be found in internal reference frames via
  • One of the strange things about a tachyon is that it can be traveling in one direction for some real inertial reference frame, and be traveling in another direction for some other inertial reference frame. For yet another reference frame intermediate between those two, the tachyon is traveling at infinite speed, yet has zero dynamic mass and a finite momentum of +/- i mc, where i is the square root of -1, m is the imaginary rest mass of the tachyon, and c is the speed of light.

    The direction of the momentum

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