The neutrinos from the future... Faster then c?
#3
Posted 2011-September-22, 20:06
According to their measurements, it sounds like the neutrinos were going roughly 299800 km/s compared to roughly 299792 km/s for light.
#4
Posted 2011-September-22, 21:55
#5
Posted 2011-September-22, 21:55
#6
Posted 2011-September-22, 23:31
effect before cause
2 photons occupy the same space and time
the smaller you go the more space there is.
aint the universe full of wonder.
#8
Posted 2011-September-23, 11:48
#9
Posted 2011-September-23, 11:53
Doing the things a particle can...
#10
Posted 2011-September-24, 07:46
#11
Posted 2011-September-24, 08:03
#12
Posted 2011-September-24, 11:53
George Carlin
#13
Posted 2011-September-24, 11:58
gwnn, on 2011-September-24, 11:53, said:
But they're just the 4-dimensional projections of what are really going on. Maybe neutrinos jump through another dimension.
(I'll still take the bet that this is a measurement failure)
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#14
Posted 2011-September-24, 22:04
#15
Posted 2011-September-25, 01:56
barmar, on 2011-September-24, 22:04, said:
Unless you're using the same term to refer to two different things, quantum tunneling isn't a way of traveling faster, it's a way of escaping energy wells (i.e. if a particle is "trapped" in a place requiring more enegy to escape than the particle has it can "tunnel" it's way under the energy hump).
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#16
Posted 2011-September-25, 05:29
BunnyGo, on 2011-September-25, 01:56, said:
I think barmar had wormholes rather than tunelling in mind? At least that was my first thought. But it isn't plausible.
#17
Posted 2011-September-25, 09:31
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#18
Posted 2011-September-25, 10:08
#20
Posted 2011-September-25, 20:18
But it sounds like the scientists were measuring the speed of a stream of particles. Tunneling, if it works like I thought, would perhaps allow a few individual particles to jump ahead of the pack, but the stream as a whole should obey relativity. Unless they can tag individual neutrinos and detect their arrivals, I don't think they'd be able to detect this.
I don't even know how they measure the neutrino speed in the first place. I guess they transmit a very short burst of neutrinos, and then detect when they arrive. But neutrinos are extremely hard to detect, so the burst must have lots of particles in it, and they'll only detect a small number of them arriving. Maybe some of the tests detect the particles that tunnel ahead. But I'd expect them to repeat the test many times and average the results, to filter out quantum effets.