Friday, October 21, 2011

Neutrinos Not As Fast As Previously Thought...


When the news, first broke out about neutrinos going faster than the speed of light, I was astonished! It may have led to new discoveries and new ways to harness the little particles. However, the news is now proved wrong, according to an article by Stephen Ornes.
In September, European scientists reported on tiny particles called neutrinos that traveled faster than the speed of light. Physicists, the scientists who study energy in all its forms, have long believed that nothing outpaces light in a race through empty space. Understandably, September’s announcement seemed too amazing to be true.
Skeptical scientists quickly started picking the experiment apart. In recent papers, they claim superluminal neutrinos seem too fast to be true because they probably are too fast to be true. (“Superluminal” means “faster than light.”) According to these scientists, the universal speed limit likely still stands at 670 million miles per hour, the speed of light.
The neutrinos left an underground laboratory in Switzerland and traveled more than 450 miles to an underground laboratory in Italy. Scientists who work on an Italian experiment called OPERA timed the neutrinos as being a smidgen faster than the blaze of light.
As they traveled, the superswift particles should have been losing energy in the form of radiation, say physicists from Boston University. OPERA’s measurements didn’t show the expected energy loss in the neutrino beam. As a result, the experiment’s results seem off, say the Boston duo.
“I would be ecstatic to see some kind of new physics coming from this experiment,” Andrew Cohen, one of the Boston University physicists, told Science News. But the radiation evidence wasn’t there. “It’s just hard to accommodate” the conclusion that the particles outraced light, he says. Cohen worked with his colleague Sheldon Glashow, who won a Nobel Prize in 1979.
A separate team of scientists in Italy conducted a follow-up neutrino experiment to look for the missing radiation, but it didn’t show. Cohen and Glashow’s study doesn’t completely disprove the results, but it does suggest something went awry in the original experiment.
“We’re pretty much convinced that the experiment is wrong,” Glashow told Science News. “But I don’t think anyone has identified the error, if there is an error, as of yet.”
Scientists do have some ideas. A French physicist in Grenoble wonders if some of the neutrinos in the beam started their trip earlier than the scientists think. And a physicist in England, Carlo Contaldi, suggests that the clocks used to time the neutrinos may have been out of sync with each other. Contaldi points out that gravity tugs harder on the Swiss clock than on the one in Italy, and as a result they may have been ticking at different times.
Contaldi told Science News that he’ll be able to check his idea once the OPERA team starts talking more about their work.
“Until further details come out as to how they did the various bits of their experiment,” he said, “it’s not clear how to proceed.”
The case of the superluminal neutrinos shows the progress of science, from an astonishing find to the grueling work of verifying the results. Even if the neutrinos do obey the speed limit, the OPERA results will have given scientists valuable knowledge about the behavior of supersmall, superfast neutrinos.
I wish it wasn't proven wrong, as this discovery could change the world (and I had recently learned about neutrinos at the National Science Olympiad in May!). 

Friday, October 14, 2011

How MP3 Players Work

In honor of Steve Jobs and Apple, I've decided to post about MP3 players, an industry that Apple changed and revolutionized forever with the iPod. Here is the link for the article about how MP3 players work. 


It is a very well written article (I love HowStuffWorks!), that describes the intricacies of the MP3 player. It is quite scary how quickly our world has advanced in such a short period of time. The MP3 file (and player) is the newest of the music industry, and probably most popular, as many platforms accept and use it and it is very compact, compressing a song into about a tenth of the space taken up on a CD-rom. Moreover, the MP3 player is a very impressive piece of hardware, doing many things in a device that weighs about an ounce (or less!). The microprocessor is the brain of the device and performs many tasks. Can you believe that something so advanced is already almost 20 years old? We can only wait to see what innovations will rock the world next (maybe you will help design the next wave of music, you just have to work towards it!). For more information, please click on the links above, or this one.

Well, that's it folks! Come back next week for another dash of Sients.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Meditation

After someone I know suggested it, I have been meditating every morning for the last couple of weeks and the effects have been noticeable. After taking a shower, I sit on my bed and just concentrate on my breathing. My days have been calmer with less anxiety and I have performed and thought better throughout the day. I would definitely recommend trying to do this everyday. This blog is about science, so here is the science behind it! 


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4770779 


http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/200105/the-science-meditation 


http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/stress-management/how-to-get-started-with-meditation.htm 


http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/natural-medicine/alternative/natural-sleep-aids5.htm 


http://health.howstuffworks.com/wellness/natural-medicine/alternative/power-of-meditation-awareness.htm 


 http://curiosity.discovery.com/question/meditation-give-you-patience 


http://curiosity.discovery.com/question/how-can-meditation-help-anxiety 


http://curiosity.discovery.com/question/meditation-techniques-help-relieve-stress 


 EXTRA: http://videos.howstuffworks.com/discovery/30915-the-brain-meditation-and-pain-control-video.htm