• The fundamental mass (this is not about the Higgs)

    Updated: 2012-03-31 06:33:09
    At CERN, while we are about to shed light on the fundamental question of the creation of mass after the Big Bang, we are also close to solving another basic mass-related problem. The kilogram is the only base unit of the International System of Units (SI) whose official definition is still based on a material [...]

  • The Darth Vader Theory

    Updated: 2012-03-30 22:09:11
    This week at Caltech there’s a workshop celebrating the 35th anniversary of N=4 Super Yang-Mills theory. George Musser of Scientific American is covering the workshop here. He reports that N=4 Super Yang-Mills is being describe as the “Darth Vader theory”, … Continue reading →

  • 8 TeV Collisions

    Updated: 2012-03-30 17:46:26
    Ladies & Gentlemen, Protons & Neutrons, The Large Hadron Collider’s Accelerator Division has successfully collided, for the first time, two 4 TeV proton beams! Congratulations to all who made this possible. I can promise that everyone is looking forward to what may be discovered! Now enjoy some images courteous of @lhcstatus and @ATLASExperiment.     [...]

  • Ereditato resigns

    Updated: 2012-03-30 16:53:48
    Antonio Ereditato resigns as OPERA spokeperson following the failure of the supeluminal neutrino affair. He will be part of history but through a harsh lesson we all learned. He remembers me another character of history of physics in a similar situation, Prosper-René Blondlot and N ray affair. So, science is a self-correcting process but some [...]

  • Recycling plastic waste into carbon fibers

    Updated: 2012-03-30 16:47:53
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Chilean astronomer publishes first ALMA findings News Picks home Recycling plastic waste into carbon fibers By Physics Today on March 30, 2012 12:47 PM No Comments No TrackBacks New Scientist Amit Naskar and coworkers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee have found a way to convert the polyethylene in used plastic bags and other plastic waste into carbon fibers that can be fine-tuned for specific applications . Published in the journal Advanced Materials their method involves mixing the polyethylene with polyactic acid , a compound derived from cornstarch or sugar cane . Then they heat the mixture and spin it into bundles of

  • Chilean astronomer publishes first ALMA findings

    Updated: 2012-03-30 14:48:24
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Telescope images yield largest-ever portrait of the night sky News Picks home Recycling plastic waste into carbon fibers Chilean astronomer publishes first ALMA findings By Physics Today on March 30, 2012 10:48 AM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC Cinthya Herrera , a doctoral student from Chile , is lead author on the first science paper to be based on observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter Submillimeter Array ALMA telescope . In their paper published last month in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics Herrera and coworkers discuss their investigation into star-forming clusters that result from the merger of a pair of spiral

  • Focus: Quantum Information Not Lost in Translation

    Updated: 2012-03-30 14:00:00
    Researchers propose a way to transfer quantum information between ions and electronic circuits, opening up new options for quantum computation. Published Fri Mar 30, 2012

  • The great vacuum in the sky

    Updated: 2012-03-29 17:05:58
    This is the zone rockets traverse in Thomas Pynchon’s novel Gravity’s Rainbow. I got e-mail from a reader who didn’t understand the concept of the vacuum. The writer didn’t think it possible, and is in good company. Neither Plato, nor Aristotle, nor even Descartes believed that a pure vacuum could exist. A ‘vacuum’ in the [...]

  • Supercomputing the difference between matter and antimatter

    Updated: 2012-03-29 16:32:30
    An international collaboration of scientists has reported a landmark calculation of the decay process of a kaon into two pions, using breakthrough techniques on some of the world's fastest supercomputers.

  • Telescope images yield largest-ever portrait of the night sky

    Updated: 2012-03-29 16:25:58
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Environmental conference addresses global sustainability News Picks home Telescope images yield largest-ever portrait of the night sky By Physics Today on March 29, 2012 12:25 PM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC A colossal picture of the Milky Way galaxy , 10 years in the making , has been created from thousands of individual images captured by two ground-based telescopes developed by the UK . There are about one billion stars in there this is more than has been in any other image produced by surveys , said Nick Cross from the University of Edinburgh . Because of the vastness of the image , Cross and colleagues have produced an online

  • Environmental conference addresses global sustainability

    Updated: 2012-03-29 14:33:53
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Lightning produces neutrons , according to new research News Picks home Telescope images yield largest-ever portrait of the night sky Environmental conference addresses global sustainability By Physics Today on March 29, 2012 10:33 AM No Comments No TrackBacks New York Times This week the Planet Under Pressure conference in London brought together nearly 3000 people to discuss humanity's impact on Earth . Without urgent action , we could face threats to water , food , biodiversity and other critical resources , wrote conference cochairs Lidia Brito and Mark Stafford Smith in a formal declaration issued at the end of the conference

  • Synopsis: Telling Left From Right

    Updated: 2012-03-29 14:00:00
    Large numbers of neurons can, according to a computational model, distinguish the timing of aural cues more finely than individual cells. Published Thu Mar 29, 2012

  • Synopsis: Half In, Half Out

    Updated: 2012-03-29 14:00:00
    ,

  • Synopsis: Cultivating Extra Dimensions

    Updated: 2012-03-29 14:00:00
    Ultracold atoms could be used to simulate physical phenomena beyond three spatial dimensions. Published Thu Mar 29, 2012

  • Synopsis: Still No Signs of Antihelium in Cosmic Rays

    Updated: 2012-03-29 14:00:00
    The dominance of matter over antimatter is further extended with a balloon experiment ruling out the presence of antihelium in cosmic rays at the lowest level to date. Published Thu Mar 29, 2012

  • How fundamental physics research is influenced by violent men

    Updated: 2012-03-29 07:12:00
    : Physics Without Ideology Bite by Bite The search for a theory of everything : satire about bad candidates and gentle fun about good candidates , such as the strand-spaghetti . model 29 March 2012 How fundamental physics research is influenced by violent men Sabine Hossenfelder has a new preprint , on minimum length in nature : http : arxiv.org abs 1203.6191 Read it . What you find is a 70 page overview and not one conclusion that is noteworthy . It only sums up 80 years of research by saying that minimal length is implicit in essentially all of modern physics , but that its existence is still an open . issue How can she make such a weak statement in the field she dedicated her life to To understand this you must know that she is constantly attacked by one of the worst woman-haters around

  • Implications of LHC Results

    Updated: 2012-03-29 02:34:35
    The winter conferences are now come and gone, with any dramatic new LHC results now likely to wait until more data is on hand. First attempt to collide beams at 4 TeV/beam is now scheduled for Friday morning, with stable … Continue reading →

  • Leon Lederman’s impact on science, education, international collaboration earns him national award

    Updated: 2012-03-29 02:26:32
    The National Science Board announced Monday that it chose Leon Lederman as the 2012 recipient of the Vannevar Bush Award. The award is given to people who are lifelong leaders in science and technology and who have made substantial contributions to the welfare of the nation. While the general public might know him best for [...]

  • Moving day for experiment examining whether neutrinos are their own antiparticles

    Updated: 2012-03-28 18:23:23
    The Majorana Demonstrator collaboration began moving their experiment into the Davis Campus on the 4850 Level this week.

  • The Great Debate: Science vs. Religion | Cosmic Variance

    Updated: 2012-03-28 16:56:55
    Took a little work, but the spark of human willpower was ultimately able to overcome the stubborn resistance of technology, and the video from our science/religion debate at Caltech on Sunday is finally up. Michael Shermer and I took on Dinesh D’Souza and Ian Hutchinson. Short version: we won, but judge for yourself if you [...]

  • Lightning produces neutrons, according to new research

    Updated: 2012-03-28 15:36:46
    , Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar New EPA standards will limit greenhouse gas emissions News Picks home Lightning produces neutrons , according to new research By Physics Today on March 28, 2012 11:36 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Arstechnica Russian scientists have found that as many as 5000 low-energy neutrons per cubic meter are produced every second by lightning strikes . The results of their research were published last week in Physical Review Letters Based on research begun in 1985, the new experiment used three detectors sensitive to low-energy neutrons one aboveground , one partially shielded in a building , and one underground . The electrical activity of

  • Not all things are created equally…

    Updated: 2012-03-28 14:35:24
    At the end of my last post, I left you all with the above plot (from this ATLAS conference note) without any real explanations. It’s actually quite a nice result, so I thought I might go through it in a little more detail today. So what does the plot show? Reading the axes, it shows [...]

  • New EPA standards will limit greenhouse gas emissions

    Updated: 2012-03-28 13:58:37
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Ancient stone monolith may have marked changing seasons News Picks home Lightning produces neutrons , according to new research New EPA standards will limit greenhouse gas emissions By Physics Today on March 28, 2012 9:58 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Los Angeles Times On Tuesday the Obama administration released its long-awaited proposal to limit greenhouse gas emissions from power plants , which are the biggest single source of such emissions in the US . Under the new rule , the Environmental Protection Agency would bar new plants from emitting more than 1000 pounds of carbon dioxide per megawatt hour of electricity generated . It

  • Johnson noise and its square root: The video

    Updated: 2012-03-28 07:48:05
    We have uploaded the video of the measurement of the square root of Johnson noise: This will participate to the Google Science Fair 2012. Filed under: Physics Tagged: Johnson-Nyquist noise, Low noise preamplifier, Noise measurement, Stochastic processes

  • Not just B physics!

    Updated: 2012-03-27 23:09:45
    Today, I’m going to be talking about some lesser known LHCb results. In fact, I’m going to discuss physics that some people thought LHCb couldn’t do, given the detector and software design. What am I going to be talking about? Electroweak physics. Yes, you read that right, not the heavy quark physics which LHCb was [...]

  • Ancient stone monolith may have marked changing seasons

    Updated: 2012-03-27 18:30:14
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Avalanche experts help make better ice cream News Picks home Ancient stone monolith may have marked changing seasons By Physics Today on March 27, 2012 2:30 PM No Comments No TrackBacks Space.com A monolith located in Manchester , UK , is thought to have been erected by Neolithic people around 2000 BC as an astronomical tool to mark the changing seasons , writes Clara Moskowitz for Space.com . When Daniel Brown of Nottingham Trent University and colleagues recently surveyed the site , they discovered a high density of packing stones on one side , which indicates that the triangular-shaped stone was intentionally oriented to face a

  • Ramping up

    Updated: 2012-03-27 15:43:34
    At the moment the LHC is making the transition from no beams to stable beams. It’s a complicated process that needs many crosschecks and calibrations so it takes a long time (they have already been working on the transition since mid February.) The energy is increasing from 7TeV to 8TeV, and the beams are being [...]

  • Avalanche experts help make better ice cream

    Updated: 2012-03-27 15:28:35
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Mexico City's new building code tested by earthquake News Picks home Ancient stone monolith may have marked changing seasons Avalanche experts help make better ice cream By Physics Today on March 27, 2012 11:28 AM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC To improve the quality of the Nestlé company's ice cream , its food scientists teamed up with avalanche experts at the Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research in Switzerland to study ice crystal formation . Because the temperature does not remain constant in home freezers , ice cream continuously melts and refreezes , which causes ice crystals to form , merge , and grow . The crystals affect

  • Mexico City's new building code tested by earthquake

    Updated: 2012-03-26 17:15:50
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Study challenges prevailing theory of Moon's origin News Picks home Mexico City's new building code tested by earthquake By Physics Today on March 26, 2012 1:15 PM No Comments No TrackBacks Nature Mexico City , which was devastated in 1985 by a magnitude-8 earthquake that killed 9500 people , has since become a model for earthquake protection in the developing world . In the wake of the quake , the country changed its building regulations and pushed for better design and materials . The design had to take into account the city's unique location it was built over a lake that was gradually filled in by the Aztecs and , later , the

  • Study challenges prevailing theory of Moon's origin

    Updated: 2012-03-26 15:29:13
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Mathematicians model snowflakes using physical laws News Picks home Mexico City's new building code tested by earthquake Study challenges prevailing theory of Moon's origin By Physics Today on March 26, 2012 11:29 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Science The leading theory for the Moon's formation is that Earth and a Mars-sized planet collided some 4.5 billion years ago and produced a disk of magma that orbited Earth and over time coalesced to form the Moon . If so , say researchers , the Moon's chemical composition should reflect that of both Earth and the other planet . However , studies of lunar rocks collected by the Apollo missions in

  • Viewpoint: Mirror, Mirror

    Updated: 2012-03-26 14:00:00
    ,

  • Startup 2012

    Updated: 2012-03-25 22:17:38
    The LHC will start colliding beams again in a few weeks after the traditional winter shutdown. 2012 could be THE year. This is not just idle speculation. Hints of the elusive Higgs boson may have been seen in both multipurpose experiments at the LHC (ATLAS and CMS) as well as the Tevatron full luminosity analysis at [...]

  • Higgs vs Popper: Falsification Falsified.

    Updated: 2012-03-23 21:30:07
    Finding the Higgs boson will have no epistemic value whatsoever.  A provocative statement. However, if you believe that science is defined by falsification, it is a true one.  Can it really be true, or is the flaw in the idea of falsification?  Should we thumb our noses at Karl Popper (1902 – 1994), the philosopher [...]

  • F-theory Phenomenology

    Updated: 2012-03-23 17:22:48
    In the years before the LHC start-up, one heavily promoted claim that “yes, string theory can too make predictions, and here’s what it predicts the LHC will see” was based on a class of models known as “F-theory”. Detailed superpartner … Continue reading →

  • Long Baseline Neutrino Experiment hit before it starts

    Updated: 2012-03-23 16:18:43
    So as many are finding out today the world of High Energy Physics (HEP) in the US is having its future further blurred with the announcement from the Office of Science directors announcement that the Long Baseline Neutrino Experiment (LBNE) that “we cannot support the LBNE project as it is currently configured…(this decision) is a [...]

  • 20 Things You Didn't Know About... Math | DISCOVER Magazine

    Updated: 2012-03-23 15:20:00
    .

  • Focus: Cooling with a Warm Glow

    Updated: 2012-03-23 14:00:00
    Incoherent light from the sun or from an LED could cool a small object, according to two theory papers. Published Fri Mar 23, 2012

  • Mathematicians model snowflakes using physical laws

    Updated: 2012-03-23 14:00:00
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar China to work with Shell to extract shale gas News Picks home Mathematicians model snowflakes using physical laws By Physics Today on March 23, 2012 10:00 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Scientific American A group of researchers in Germany has succeeded in using computer modeling to simulate the faceted pattern of snowflake formation . Using basic conservation laws and thermodynamics , Harald Garcke of the University of Regensburg and colleagues were able to model the way the crystal surface changes over time . They also managed to model , simultaneously , the two main types of snowflake growth : dendritic growth , in which the flakes

  • Johnson noise and its square root

    Updated: 2012-03-23 09:57:32
    Following my recent work on stochastic processes and quantum mechanics (see here and here), after I showed its existence with numerical computation (see here), this time I moved one step forward with an experimental setup. The idea come out from my son Giorgio. He is a teen with a lot of ideas and was of [...]

  • China to work with Shell to extract shale gas

    Updated: 2012-03-23 00:53:59
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar SESAME participants put politics aside to fund synchrotron News Picks home Mathematicians model snowflakes using physical laws China to work with Shell to extract shale gas By Physics Today on March 23, 2012 8:53 AM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC On Tuesday Shell announced that it had signed the first-ever production-sharing contract for shale gas exploration in China with state-owned China National Petroleum Corporation . Shell will apply its advanced technology , operational expertise and global experience in the project to jointly develop the shale gas resources with CNPC , the Anglo-Dutch firm said in a release Several other foreign

  • SESAME participants put politics aside to fund synchrotron

    Updated: 2012-03-22 18:30:38
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar MESSENGER sheds new light on Mercury News Picks home SESAME participants put politics aside to fund synchrotron By Physics Today on March 22, 2012 2:30 PM No Comments No TrackBacks Nature Israel and Iran have put aside their differences to join Jordan and Turkey in providing a combined total of US$20 million for the construction of the Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East SESAME The project , located in Al Balq’a , Jordan , needs an additional 15 million from other partner nations to complete its first four beamlines in 2015. SESAME has managed to succeed despite political upheaval including

  • MESSENGER sheds new light on Mercury

    Updated: 2012-03-22 15:25:05
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar US imposes moderate tariffs on Chinese solar panels News Picks home Messenger spacecraft sheds new light on Mercury By Physics Today on March 22, 2012 11:25 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Physics Today : Data from NASA's Messenger spacecraft have led to a number of new findings regarding Mercury , including possible water-ice , unusual tectonic forces , and a massive core . Paul Rincon reports for the BBC that at the 43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference this week , Nancy Chabot of Johns Hopkins University and colleagues presented evidence of possible water-ice . They based their findings on topographical data near the planets'

  • Digital artist creates new kind of experiment at CERN

    Updated: 2012-03-22 14:58:56
    If attendees at the welcome reception for CERN’s first artist-in-residence learned one thing last night, it was that Julius von Bismarck is not afraid to disrupt others with his art.

  • Synopsis: Greed is Good

    Updated: 2012-03-22 14:00:00
    A network model incorporates the way humans use a sense of orientation to make locally optimal decisions when they navigate city streets. Published Thu Mar 22, 2012

  • Synopsis: Nuclear Clocks

    Updated: 2012-03-22 14:00:00
    An updated proposal for a clock based on the excited states of a nucleus could keep time better than existing clocks that use electronic states. Published Thu Mar 22, 2012

  • Synopsis: The Unbearable Hardness of Physics

    Updated: 2012-03-22 14:00:00
    Researchers have proved that extracting dynamical equations from data is in general a computationally hard problem. Published Thu Mar 22, 2012

  • Synopsis: Send in the Clones

    Updated: 2012-03-22 14:00:00
    Although perfect copies of a quantum state are prohibited, theory shows that recombining all imperfect clones recovers the original quantum state. Published Thu Mar 22, 2012

  • US imposes moderate tariffs on Chinese solar panels

    Updated: 2012-03-21 19:43:42
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Human-made noise pollution can affect plant life News Picks home US imposes moderate tariffs on Chinese solar panels By Physics Today on March 21, 2012 3:43 PM No Comments No TrackBacks New York Times After the US Commerce Department concluded that China gave illegal export subsidies to its solar panel manufacturers , the US decided to impose tariffs of 2.9 4.73 on all solar panels imported from China . Chinese solar panels control about half of the current US market US panels control less than a third . Although the new tariffs may not greatly affect the market , much steeper tariffs could be imposed this May if the Commerce

  • Technological Applications of the Higgs Boson | Cosmic Variance

    Updated: 2012-03-20 17:52:28
    Can you think of any? Here’s what I mean. When we set about justifying basic research in fundamental science, we tend to offer multiple rationales. One (the easy and most obviously legitimate one) is that we’re simply curious about how the world works, and discovery is its own reward. But often we trot out another [...]

  • More physics for your funding

    Updated: 2012-03-20 13:54:22
    The decommissioning of the Tevatron represented the end of an era, but it also is ushering in the next generation of physics by providing valuable equipment to other experiments.

  • Turtles all the way down?

    Updated: 2012-03-20 09:28:46
    I recently got an interesting e-mail about the Big Bang. The writer said she didn’t see how you could make something out of nothing. She collects creation myths and thought that, no matter how you sliced it, it’s always “turtles all the way down.” This is a reference to creation myths where the world is [...]

  • Dissecting the Penguin

    Updated: 2012-03-19 16:54:30
    No animals were harmed in the writing of this blog post. One of the amusing tales in particle physics is the story of how the “penguin diagram” got its name. We won’t go into that here, instead, we’ll make use of some of the tools we’ve developed with Feynman diagrams to understand the physics behind [...]

  • Viewpoint: Charge Hopping in Glassy Magnets

    Updated: 2012-03-19 14:00:00
    In some transition metal oxides, disorder makes  the dielectric constant highly sensitive to an applied magnetic field over a broad range of temperatures. Published Mon Mar 19, 2012

  • Viewpoint: Spins Made to Order in Low Dimensions

    Updated: 2012-03-19 14:00:00
    Coulomb interactions in the presence of spin-orbit coupling can stabilize ferromagnetic order. Published Mon Mar 19, 2012

  • New neutrino measurement finds particles obeying speed limit

    Updated: 2012-03-16 14:32:09
    Scientists on the ICARUS experiment at Gran Sasso, Italy, announced today that they had found no evidence of superluminal neutrinos in a cross-check of earlier analysis from the OPERA experiment, also located at Gran Sasso.

  • Focus: Scenic Route for Sound Allows Extra Control

    Updated: 2012-03-16 14:00:00
    The propagation of sound waves can be dramatically altered by forcing them to follow meandering channels, according to simulations. Published Fri Mar 16, 2012

  • CERN spin-off: More efficient solar panels

    Updated: 2012-03-16 00:35:03
    Retired CERN physicist Cristoforo Benvenuti learned a thing or two about building a better solar panel through his work on particle accelerators. The Geneva International Airport recently ordered 300.

  • Synopsis: Getting Under the Neutron Skin

    Updated: 2012-03-15 14:00:00
    Electron scattering techniques could provide more accurate measures of the distribution of neutrons in heavy nuclei. Published Thu Mar 15, 2012

  • Synopsis: Pinpointing Planck’s Constant with GPS

    Updated: 2012-03-15 14:00:00
    Using the orbiting network of GPS satellites, researchers have placed new limits on how much Planck’s constant varies with respect to relativistic changes. Published Thu Mar 15, 2012

  • Synopsis: Light Takes a Flight Back

    Updated: 2012-03-15 14:00:00
    Weak localization of light is observed in a superdiffusive fractal system. Published Thu Mar 15, 2012

  • Linking gravitational and electrical forces

    Updated: 2012-03-15 11:25:51
    TweetRichard Feynman on pages 24 and 25 of his book “The Character of Physical Laws” describes how both gravitational and electrical forces are linked in terms of a common relationship with respect to the inverse square law. Richard Feynman – Law of Gravitation "The inverse square law appears again in the electrical laws, for instance, [...]

  • Scientists send encoded message through rock via neutrino beam

    Updated: 2012-03-14 21:00:32
    Scientists recently proved possible a way to converse when radio waves won’t do. For the first time, physicists have successfully transmitted a message using neutrinos.

  • Viewpoint: Homing in on the Higgs Boson

    Updated: 2012-03-13 14:00:00
    There are encouraging hints that the Higgs boson may have been observed at the Large Hadron Collider. Published Tue Mar 13, 2012

  • Viewpoint: Charm and Anticharm—Not Quite the Same

    Updated: 2012-03-12 14:00:00
    Differences between the decay properties of charm-carrying mesons and those of their antiparticles may carry clues to the mystery of the missing antimatter in the Universe. Published Mon Mar 12, 2012

  • Scientists continue to see puzzling behavior in top quarks, reaffirm strength of Tevatron experiments

    Updated: 2012-03-09 21:46:17
    The Tevatron may be shut down for good, but – as evidenced by the catalogue of results presented at this week’s Rencontres de Moriond conference – the collider’s experiments still have plenty to say. In some areas, the Fermilab experiments still hold the advantage over those at the higher-powered Large Hadron Collider at CERN.

  • A sM*A*S*Hing CERN visit

    Updated: 2012-03-09 15:34:32
    On March 7, Alan Alda, the actor best known for playing medic Hawkeye Pierce on yesteryear’s TV series M*A*S*H, visited the home of the Large Hadron Collider, CERN.

  • Focus: Nuclei Emit Paired-up Neutrons

    Updated: 2012-03-09 15:00:00
    A neutron-rich nucleus can emit a neutron pair as a single unit as a product of nuclear decay. Published Fri Mar 09, 2012

  • Daya Bay experiment makes key measurement, paves way for future discoveries

    Updated: 2012-03-08 22:32:38
    An international collaboration of physicists working on a neutrino experiment in southern China announced today they have made a difficult measurement scientists have been chasing for more than a decade. The results of the Daya Bay neutrino experiment open an important window into understanding the behavior of neutrinos, and now the race is on to determine the implications. Two American experiments, one proposed and one under construction, seem well positioned to take the next steps.

  • Synopsis: Biological Oscillations Improve Fidelity

    Updated: 2012-03-08 15:00:00
    Calculations show that a time-varying molecular input signal can induce a more predictable biological response than a constant input. Published Thu Mar 08, 2012

  • Synopsis: Watch Those Cavities

    Updated: 2012-03-08 15:00:00
    Radar data confirm that an important mechanism for turbulence in Earth’s auroral plasma can occur naturally. Published Thu Mar 08, 2012

  • Synopsis: Electron Bounce

    Updated: 2012-03-08 15:00:00
    Experiments show that magnetic waves in a plasma may be effective at controlling energetic electrons. Published Thu Mar 08, 2012

  • Synopsis: Molecular Speed Bump

    Updated: 2012-03-08 15:00:00
    Experimenters slow molecules by shining lasers at them. Published Thu Mar 08, 2012

  • Higgs: Tevatron confirms CERN findings

    Updated: 2012-03-07 09:43:52
    In these days, at Moriond (La Thuile indeed, a great ski station) on Italian Alps, a conference is held (see here). Today is the Higgs day and people at Tevatron confirmed the clues found by CERN and announced last December. Higgs particle mass should be around 125 GeV. This has being reverberated on the media [...]

  • Tevatron Higgs Results

    Updated: 2012-03-06 02:14:38
    The combined D0 + CDF Tevatron results on the Higgs are scheduled to be announced Wednesday, but it looks like this web-page may have jumped the gun a bit, listing the new results (based on “up to 10 inverse fb”) … Continue reading →

  • Viewpoint: Spin-Heat Vision

    Updated: 2012-03-05 15:00:00
    Local laser heating is used to image thermally driven spin currents and voltages. Published Mon Mar 05, 2012

  • Viewpoint: New Twist in Chiral Magnets

    Updated: 2012-03-05 15:00:00
    A new state of matter involving twisting magnetic moments has been observed for the first time, possibly opening up novel applications in information technology. Published Mon Mar 05, 2012

  • Why we've got the cosmological constant all wrong

    Updated: 2012-03-05 13:20:01
    (PhysOrg.com) -- Some scientists call the cosmological constant the "worst prediction of physics." And when today’s theories give an estimated value that is about 120 orders of magnitude larger than the measured value, it’s hard to argue with that title. In a new study, a team of physicists has taken a different view of the cosmological constant, Λ, which drives the accelerated expansion of the universe. While the cosmological constant is usually interpreted as a vacuum energy, here the physicists provide evidence to support the possibility that the mysterious force instead emerges from a microscopic quantum theory of gravity, which is currently beyond physicists’ reach.

  • Moriond 2012

    Updated: 2012-03-04 17:46:54
    The LHC will next week enter a Machine Checkout phase for the 2012 run at 4 TeV/beam, with beam commissioning scheduled to start March 14, the physics run April 7. Meanwhile, the LHC experiments have been for months targeting the … Continue reading →

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