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Archive for September, 2011

A few conversations….

Friday, September 30th, 2011

It’s not unusual for me to have extensive conversations with strangers. These days I’m spending a lot of time on trains, and have a lot of opportunity to partake of the company of many an interesting person.

In recent days, as well as the usual banter and jokes with the ticket staff, and random quips with fellow table sharers, I’ve managed to get myself embroiled in deep conversations about the design and influence of every day objects (with a marketing guru); the nature of the education in the school system, how it was constructed to prevent free thinking individuals and how the government is unable to redesign it in terms of its historical context (with a regional school coordinator); and the nature of consciousness, how it is affected by lack of sleep, and how everyday reality is shaped by random events and the attitude you have as you make your self present to it (mostly with myself.)

A take on the the faster-than-light neutrinos, and the cracks in our understanding of nature.

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

A recent report in the news indicated excitement about the suggestion that neutrinos had been found at Cern travelling faster than the speed of light. One of possible explanations put forward was that maybe the neutrinos were tunnelling through some extra dimension.

The statement was made in the content of quantum field theory and what is called the Standard Model of Particle Physics. This is an empirical model which condenses our best understanding of nature yet, describing all of the known sub-atomic particles in nature, along with all the known forces which govern their interactions.

However, the Standard Model isn’t exact. It contains 18 free parameters which need to be fine-tuned by experiment in order for the equations to be predictive. Many experiments have been run to measure what these values should be, and the result is that the theory now predicts the results of all the particle physics experiments that we can conduct to the highest precision of any prediction that we have ever made. Even so, we can’t get away from the fact that we had to set these “constants” by hand, and that means that although the theory can describe what we observe, it fails to explain why.

Theoretical physicists continue to invent new models, searching for a mathematical structure which could hope to explain the nature of the free parameters, and try constrain their values. It’s here that ideas like String Theory and Super-Symmetry originated, and the whole idea that the Universe might consist of not just 3 space and 1 time dimension but extra spacial dimensions; 6 or 7, or even 22 in some String theories. These extra dimensions appear as a side-effect of the condition that models must be mathematically consistent, and describe matter that behaves compatibly with existing observations. Therefore if we believe that this new maths in some way describe reality, we must also try and understand how it is that the extra dimensions exist physically.

It’s in this context that the idea that these neutrinos might be extra-dimensional travellers originates from. Arguably, one of the research goals of the experiments taking place at Cern is to try and find ways of probing for a “signal” that these extra-dimensions exist, so that we can prove or disprove the models that predict them. So, if more interesting events emerge you should expect to hear more of these kinds of sound bites in the news.

But, before we get carried away, there already exist gaps in our understanding of neutrinos without any need for extra dimensions. We’ve recently discovered that the three different kinds of neutrino transmute into and out of each each other as they travel through space-time, and have what is described as a “flavour changing symmetry” that wasn’t previously known. We don’t know why that happens, but now that we know it does we’ve had to extend the Standard Model to include it as an ad-hoc extension. This adds another 7 free parameters that also need to be fine-tuned.

This brings the quantity of variables in our “vanilla model” that are needed to explain why the Universe behaves the way it does, to a staggering 25. Each one has to take a very precise number, which if it varied by the smallest amount the entire Universe as we know it would not be possible! That’s a lot of extra dimensions to come to terms with, before we even start to consider the addition of extra spacial ones.

There are also other holes in our knowledge which are revealed when our best theories are used to try and explain the information returned to us from the high precision measuring devices which we have pointed out into the Cosmos. These holes are currently labelled Dark Energy and Dark Matter, and their explanation is occupying some of the brightest minds on the planet. Some of the most advanced particle physics experiments at Cern have been constructed in the hope that they might hope to explain these cosmological quandaries, by testing new theoretical models and also, of course, trying to find the biggest hole of all: a predicted piece of the Standard Model call the Higgs field, and better known in the media as the so called “God” particle.

No-one can really put their hand on their hearts and say that they understand why the symmetries in the Standard Model have to be the way that they are. That’s why so much work has been put into String Theory and Super-Symmetry, which are really just wild stabs at trying to find some mathematical structure which would incorporate all the symmetries that we find in nature, and constraining the free parameters (or at least reducing the quantity of them!) And, let’s not talk about the Higgs! If it turns out not to be found experimentally (and we’ve been looking for it for years), then the whole thing falls flat on its face, and we have to return to the drawing board altogether and have a big re-think. It’s not looking good for the Higgs, so far.

Now, I’m not saying that this is in anyway an explanation for neutrinos potentially travelling faster than light. If that result is confirmed, it will definitely turn things on their heads. But, unlike almost all of the physicists that I know, I don’t think that we’re anywhere close with the current models that we have. At best the Standard Model is a toy model which happens to be tweakable to explain what we see. It’s a very high quality toy, but nevertheless we have no theory that predicts it, and it’s wrong in at least a few different ways that we’ve currently discovered and have no workable fixes for. Super-Symmetry has pretty much been ruled out by recent experimental results, Super-String theory isn’t even testable. No-one has successfully managed to unify general relativity with Quantum Field Theory, and what explanations exist of Dark Energy and Dark Matter are barely tangible and untestable.

We know so much, but yet we know so little. Something’s going to give, despite the multitude of books written by prominent physicists proclaiming to being on the verge of understanding it all. Don’t belief them, they’re deluded!

Watch this space; the cracks are beginning to appear.

On why I believe that faster than light travel is possible.

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

I’ve been uncomfortable with the conclusion that special relativity clearly asserts that it is impossible to “go faster than the speed of light”. Actually, of course, it doesn’t. Most would allow for tachyonic solutions in which there exist states which correspond to particles travelling at super-luminal speeds. The problem is actually the 1/x, x->0 in the maths, which we try and explain as a problem of nature instead of a problem with our mathematical reasoning, and leads us to unresolvable considerations involving infinity.

From first principles if one starts with the notion that everyone should see light as travelling at the same speed, then a simple derivation naturally leads to the Lorentz transformation from which all of special relativity is constructed. Then we go on to see that that length contraction and time dilation must occur; a natural consequence of the transformation equation. And, we have to ask the question “how can a body have infinite mass”? Naturally we give up and say that it can’t and so it can’t happen.

However, isn’t our interpretation of the Lorentz transformation just a description of what it is that a stationary observer would observe? That is, as a body approaches the speed of light relative to the observer, that observer would interpret what they see as the body also carrying an increasing mass that rapidly asymptotes to infinity. But wait a minute, I cannot see anything in that that says that the body actually has infinite mass, it’s just how we interpret what we see. The implication of the fact that the speed of light is seen to travel at a fixed speed in all frames, is that there are observational implications due to us using light to observe things.

This problem with infinity is all an implication of the “approaching 1/0” in the maths; a limit for which we have no meaningful way of manipulating within the algebra. We take the view that the frame is Cartesian (i.e. flat), and then postulate that because no particle can actually attain infinite energy/infinite rest mass, that Lorentz must imply that no particle can travel faster than the speed of light.

I’m not so sure.

Imagine two observers, and set up a constant acceleration between the two. Pick one, that’s you. You watch as the other one’s velocity gradually rises, and approaches the speed of light. Because of the flat-space-time axiom you’ll always be able to see them, if your telescope is powerful enough that is, and you’ll also observe that their mass increases also, so that they appear to be asymptotically approaching the the speed of light but never able to get there. You’ll observe them in conjunction with the singularity in the maths.

Now imagine the other one. Don’t they just define themselves as being stationary? And, it’s you thats getting heavier and so on. It’s all an observational effect. They’re just moseying along in their (very slightly accelerated) rest frame, and all the action is happening to you, not them. It’s an observational effect.

Ok, so one argument to that picture is “Ahha! We’ve got an accelerating frame, and so special relativity doesn’t count any more”. Fine then, let’s evoke general relativity to explain what’s going on. Now we have the problem that it isn’t meaningful to make comparisons between the the two different reference frames any more, as we have the problem of how to “parallel transport” the velocity vectors from one frame to the other in order to make meaningful statements about relative velocity. We can postulate that the space/time is flat, and argue that we don’t have to take that into account – don’t we then just recover the special relativity situation again? Or otherwise we have to let go of the notion that it is possible to even measure relative velocities any more.

I tend to imagine that the universe is larger than what we can observe electromagnetically, and that there are E/M disconnected regions. (If you believe the picture of cosmic inflationary theory you’ll not be able to get away from that fact). I play another thought experiment:

I’m accelerating away from you at a nice comfortable 1g, I have a nice LENR powered motor, so I don’t need to worry about taking any fuel with me, I just extract what I need from the void as I need it. I can keep this up for ever if I need to; I also have chocolate bars, and a few good books! :). Oh, go on then, come along on the trip too!

So, we’re tracking our velocity with respect to the home planet, and I expect that at some point we will begin to approach the speed of light relative to it. However, we’re also tracking our velocity relative to everything else that we can see. There’s nothing special about the Earth as a navigation point with which to take bearings. I have a whole gamut of different velocities to observe, arguably with ranges between zero (for my books and chocolate, and of course you) and the speed of light (for all the photons that we are observing from all directions). Our view is littered with stars and galaxies, gas clouds and other dust.

Now, imagine that we found ourselves suddenly travelling at faster than the speed of light relative to the Earth. Let’s tread carefully, and ignore any questions of how we came to find ourselves in this situation, or how we would be able verify that fact; for now let’s just consider this a thought experiment. We went to sleep, and when we woke up we we found ourselves in this state.

How to analyse this situation? A good initial question to ask might be, can we still see Earth? I strongly suspect not. Standard light cone considerations would tell us immediately that we would be unable to exchange any information electro-magnetically; we cannot do any analysis of velocities by using Lorentz transformation, and so specially relativity is out. However, clearly we are still in the same physical Universe, but we have become what I’m going to call “Lorentz-disconnected”. We are not longer E/M connected with the Earth and in some senses we could be considered to be in a totally separate E/M Universe[1].

Ok, but what about our relations to everything else that we were observing? We’re not going to be travelling faster than the speed of light relative to everything we were tracking before, are we? And what about that asymptote or singularity, that we passed through in the Lorentz transformation? We clearly had to do that smoothly, right?

Here’s what I think happened. As we approached the speed of light, the Earthlings measured us as becoming infinite in mass, and length contracted. As we passed the (relative) speed of light we did literally disappear to them, along with all the observational effects that accompanied that. On the way we began to see other bodies that were out of Earth’s E/M universe, but were coming into ours as we travelled along our geodesic path taking our E/M frame with us. Ultimately we observed the Earth disappear into a singularity, and we observed some new bodies appears from singularities, and we found ourselves here. Safe and sound.

By analog, imagine that you’re a member of the flat Earth society. You’re watching a ship sail away from you and over the ocean. How do you interpret what you see as it approaches, reaches and then disappears through the “event” horizon that’s there because there is actually a curvature at play? Naively you might think that it had disappeared into a singularity and would never come back again.

We’re currently measuring everything that we know about the universe from a single vantage point[2]. We construct a 3D slice of what we think it looks like from this place, and then make the mistake of mistaking that for the whole thing.

You know what? Once we get our acts together and get some space travel going on, and truly get to see things from an intergalactic perspective, I bet you we’ll be really surprises as to how the Universe really looks.

Joe

[1] At this point I’m prone to drifting off and imagining how the inside and the outside of a black hole are connected through the singularity.

[2] More or less; with respect to the size of the Universe our solar system is infinitesimally small!