Particle Physics Planet


January 27, 2012

Jaques Distler - Musings

G2 and Spin(8) Triality

Oscar Chacaltana, Yuji Tachikawa and I are deep in the weeds of nilpotent orbits. One of the things we had to study were the nilpotent orbits of š”¤ 2, and how they sit in š”°š”¬(8). Understanding the answer involves an explicit description of Spin(8) triality, which I thought was kinda cute. Few people will care about the nilpotent orbits, but the bit about triality and G 2 might be of some independent interest. So here it is.

Spin(8) has a triality symmetry (an outer autmomorphism of the Lie algebra), which permutes the three 8-dimensional irreducible representations: 8 v, 8 s, and 8 c. š”¤ 2āŠ‚š”°š”¬(8) is the invariant subalgebra. (I’ll conveniently pass back and forth between the complex form of the Lie algebra and the compact real form of the group, as both are of interest to us.) What I want to do is describe that triality symmetry very explicitly and, thereby, the realization of š”¤ 2. Note that Spin(8) contains an (SU(2) 4)/ℤ 2 subgroup, under which the adjoint decomposes as 28=(3,1,1,1)+(1,3,1,1)+(1,1,3,1)+(1,1,1,3)+(2,2,2,2)

Under this decomposition, the action of triality is easy to describe: pick one of the š”°š”©(2) subalgebras to hold fixed, and consider all permutations of the other three (supplemented by the obvious action on the (2,2,2,2)).

That’s triality. Looked at this way, it seems absurdly simple. The above description gives a perfectly concrete action of triality, as permutations of the generators. And we can push a little harder, and really understand š”¤ 2, this way.

The subalgebra, invariant under the S 3 permutations, is š”¤ 2āŠ‚š”°š”¬(8), under which

28=14+7āŠ—V

where V is the 2-dimensional irreducible representation of S 3. In terms of our previous decomposition,

G 2⊃(SU(2)ƗSU(2) D)/ℤ 2

where the first SU(2) is the one you kept fixed, and SU(2) D is the diagonal SU(2) of the three which are permuted by triality. Under this embedding,

14 =(3,1)+(1,3)+(2,4) 7 =(1,3)+(2,2)

An explicit basis of antisymmetric 8Ɨ8 matrices which give this š”¤ 2 subalgebra is as follows. First, we embed š”°š”©(2) 4, by taking the 8Ɨ8 matrix to be block-diagonal, with 4Ɨ4 blocks containing š”°š”©(2) 2, as

H L =σ 2āŠ—šŸ™ X L =12(σ 3+iσ 1)āŠ—Ļƒ 2 Y L =12(σ 3āˆ’iσ 1)āŠ—Ļƒ 2=X L † ,H R =šŸ™āŠ—Ļƒ 2 X R =12σ 2āŠ—(σ 3+iσ 1) X R =12σ 2āŠ—(σ 3āˆ’iσ 1)=X R †

where we’ve chosen the normalization conventions

[X,Y] =H [H,X] =2X [H,Y] =āˆ’2Y

We pick one of these (the š”°š”©(2) L in the upper left-hand block) to hold fixed, and embed our second š”°š”©(2) diagonally in the other three:

H 1 =12(šŸ™+σ 3)āŠ—Ļƒ 2āŠ—1 X 1 =14(šŸ™+σ 3)āŠ—(σ 3+iσ 1)āŠ—Ļƒ 2 Y 1 =X 1 † H 2 =12(šŸ™āˆ’Ļƒ 3)āŠ—Ļƒ 2āŠ—šŸ™+šŸ™āŠ—šŸ™āŠ—Ļƒ 2 X 2 =14(šŸ™āˆ’Ļƒ 3)āŠ—(σ 3+iσ 1)āŠ—Ļƒ 2+121āŠ—Ļƒ 2āŠ—(σ 3+iσ 1) Y 2 =X 2 †

The highest weight of the (2,4) is

S 1,3=14σ 2āŠ—(σ 3+iσ 1)āŠ—(σ 3+iσ 1)

The remaining ones, e.g., S āˆ’1,3=[Y 1,S 1,3], are obtained by acting with the lowering operators, Y 1,2. With this choice of Cartan, the simple roots of š”¤ 2 correspond to X 2 (short root) and S 1,āˆ’3 (long root).

<semantics><annotation-xml encoding="SVG1.1"> Layer 1 <foreignObject font-size="16" height="20" width="20" y="0.125" x="3.164062" id="svg_45629_8"> <semantics> X 2 <annotation encoding="application/x-tex">X_2</annotation> </semantics> </foreignObject> <foreignObject font-size="16" height="22" width="36" y="0" x="59.039062" id="svg_45629_9"> <semantics> S 1 , āˆ’ 3 <annotation encoding="application/x-tex">S_{1,-3}</annotation> </semantics> </foreignObject> </annotation-xml></semantics>

This 8-dimensional representation of G 2, as it’s reducible, is not the most convenient one for studying the representation theory of G 2. But it’s tailor-made for our purpose, which is understanding the embedding in Spin(8). With an explicit embedding in hand, we can manufacture a distinguished triple, (H,X,Y) for each nilpotent orbit of š”¤ 2, and see how it sits in š”°š”¬(8). But that, probably, holds little interest for the general reader, so I’ll end here.

by distler (distler@golem.ph.utexas.edu) at January 27, 2012 08:12 PM

Peter Coles - In the Dark

Foxtrot for Orchestra

Sitting in the office at the end of a long week, and looking forward to going to an interesting-sounding concert at St David’s Hall later on. I may get the chance to review it over the weekend, but in the meantime I thought I’d put up this version of one of the pieces I’m going to hear later. I think it’s great but I’ve never heard it live…


by telescoper at January 27, 2012 05:34 PM

The Great Beyond - Nature blog

Europe prepares to admit that biodiesel is worse than fossil fuels

The European Commission is reportedly close to admitting that imports of biodiesel made from crops such as palm oil, soybean and rapeseed cause more greenhouse gas pollution than fossil diesel.

According to the website EurActiv, which tracks European political news, numbers in a leaked Commission impact assessment suggest these biofuels’ effect on climate could be as bad as oil from Canadian tar sands.

Once officially recognized, this inconvenient truth would set politicians at loggerheads with a biodiesel industry that their own renewable fuel directives helped to create.

Scientists and non-governmental organizations have repeatedly pointed out that Europe underestimates biofuel carbon emissions. Calculations don’t take account of the fact that when biodiesel crops are planted on agricultural land, forests and wetlands elsewhere are cleared in order to produce the food crops that the biodiesel edged out.

The effect of this ā€˜indirect land use change’ (ILUC) is tricky to calculate, but scientists now think it wipes out any carbon emissions savings made by avoiding fossil fuels, as reports from the commission’s Joint Research Center in Ispra, Italy, and at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington DC, have pointed out.

The chart below, from an October 2011 article in Nature Climate Change, illustrates this: ā€˜direct’ emissions come from the EU’s 2009 Renewable Energy Directive, and the added ā€˜ILUC’ emissions from an IFPRI draft report. (The orange and grey dashed lines show the threshold for a 50% and 35% emissions saving compared with fossil fuels – at the moment, biofuels have to certifiably deliver a 35% saving under EU law, but this is set to increase by 2018).

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[Source: Nature Climate Change 1, 389–390 (2011)

According to the EurActiv story, the European Commission will officially accept such assessments when it makes legislative proposals on biofuels and ILUC in the spring. When the Commission reviewed its fuel directive recently, it proposed classifying oil from tar sands in Canada as producing 107 grams of CO2-equivalent gases (CO2eq) per megajoule of energy – worse than crude oil’s 87.5g CO2eq/MJ. Leaked figures suggest that biodiesel from palm oil, soybean and rapeseed will be classified close to tar-sands oil, at 105, 103 and 95g CO2eq/MJ respectively.

That’s not to mention the other ethical and environmental harms of biofuels, such as displacement of indigenous peoples, and destruction of the rainforest, as pointed out by the London-based Nuffield Council on Bioethics last April.

Now what? ā€œPoliticians are trying to find an impossible compromise of maintaining the biodiesel industry that they created, while taking account of indirect emissions,ā€ says Robbie Blake, a spokesperson for Friends of the Earth. According to Nature Climate Change, one middle-ground solution might be not to penalise biodiesel, but to reward producers for practices that mitigate ILUC (by using biofuel by-products as animal feed, or by encouraging better-integrated farming systems).

ENDSEurope reported on 26 JanuaryĀ that the issue, which has created a rift between the EU’s energy and climate departments, has gone up to the office of Commission president JosĆ© Manuel Barroso.

by Richard Van Noorden at January 27, 2012 05:15 PM

Chad Orzel - Uncertain Principles

It's a Real Book!

I was going to write something about the politics of scientific publishing, but instead, I want to focus on what's really important in modern publishing:

sm_both_books.jpg

That's right, I got a couple of early copies of How to Teach Relativity to Your Dog in the mail this morning. It's a real book, with pages and everything... You can see it above, next to How to Teach Physics to Your Dog, and various clutter on my desk, for scale.

There's not much else to say, other than "Woo-hoo!" They're printing lots more, of course, and it will be available wherever books are sold starting Feb. 28th.

Read the comments on this post...

January 27, 2012 04:54 PM

Phil Plait - Bad Astronomy

Siriusly twinkling

If you live nearly anywhere on Earth — those of you north of 73° you’re out of luck, but I’m guessing there aren’t many of you! — and look to the southeast shortly after sunset, you’ll see the figure of Orion. Follow the three belt stars to the east, and you’ll see a bright star: Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky. If it’s near the horizon, you may see it twinkling madly: flickering, dancing, perhaps even changing color.

This gave astronomer David Lynch an idea: take a time exposure of Sirius with a camera and telephoto, and purposely wiggle the mount. He tried it on January 4, 2012, and the result he got is actually quite lovely:

Isn’t that cool? As the vibrating camera caused the star to trail around, the changing colors got recorded along the track. The changing brightness of Sirius can be seen as well, as parts of the loop-de-loop fade and intensify.

The reason stars twinkle is because of our atmosphere: little blobs of air are constantly in motion. These air parcels act like lenses, and as light passes through them, the path of the ray gets bent a little bit. That’s what causes the dancing motion, the actual twinkling. Different colors get bent by different amounts (which is why prisms break up white light into separate colors).

While it’s beautiful to our eyes, twinkling is a major pain to astronomers. It blurs our images! That’s why we launch telescopes into space, or design fancy optics for ground-based telescopes to remove it. Twinkling is free, but correcting it sure ain’t.

Lynch has several websites loaded with interesting pictures he’s taken of nature, including Thule Scientific, Color and Light in Nature, and San Andreas Fault.

Image credit: David Lynch (used by permssion). Tip o’ the Snell’s Law to Earth Science Picture of the Day.


by Phil Plait at January 27, 2012 04:19 PM

The Great Beyond - Nature blog

Kepler uncovers planetary menagerie

Planets

Today NASA’s Kepler mission announced the discovery of 26 new planets (above, green). The new worlds, comparable to the giant planets of our solar system (blue), nearly double the number of planets previously discovered by the probe (red), but it’s probably only a small taste of what’s to come.

Kepler looks at 150,000 distant stars and searches for tiny changes in brightness as a planet passes by. So far, the probe has turned up 2,300 planet candidates. Confirming a planet is far more difficult, but Kepler has managed to verify the new worlds announced today by measuring slight changes in their orbits due to the gravitational influence of other, nearby planets. NASA has also released a very cool video showing the different systems in action (below).

Kepler’s ultimate goal is to discover another earth orbiting a distant star. That goal is still some years off, but it’s already contributing quite a lot towards our understanding of exoplanetary systems. An abundance of mid-sized planets has forced astronomers to rethink their theories of planetary formation, and the mission’s precise measurements of star brightness has shown that some stars are far more turbulent than are sun.

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Credit: NASA Ames/D. Fabrycky, UC Santa Cruz/J. Steffen, Fermilab Center for Particle Astrophysics

by Geoffrey Brumfiel at January 27, 2012 04:07 PM

Quantum Diaries

Everytime a Belle Rings, A Hadron Gets Its Wings

Fun post for everyone today. In response to last week’s post on describing KEK Laboratory’s discovery of additional exotic hadrons, I got an absolutely terrific question from a QD reader:

Surprisingly, the answer to ā€œHow does an electron-positron collider produce quarks if neither particle contains any?ā€ all begins with the inconspicuous photon.

No Firefox, I Swear ā€œHadronizationā€ is a Real Word.

As far as the history of quantum physics is concerned, the discovery that all light is fundamentally composed of very small particles called photons is a pretty big deal. The discovery allows us to have a very real and tangible description of how light and electrons actually interact, i.e., through the absorption or emission of photon by electrons.

Figure 1: Feynman diagrams demonstrating how electrons (denoted by e-) can accelerate (change direction of motion) by (a) absorbing or (b) emitting a photon (denoted by the Greek letter gamma: γ).

The usefulness of recognizing light as being made up many, many photons is kicked up a few notches with the discovery of anti-particles during the 1930s, and in particular the anti-electron, or positron as it is popularly called. In summary, a particle’s anti-particle partner is an identical copy of the particle but all of its charges (like electric, weak, & color!) are the opposite. Consequentially, since positrons (e+) are so similar to electrons (e-) their interactions with light are described just as easily.

Figure 2: Feynman diagrams demonstrating how positrons (e+) can accelerate (change direction of motion) by (a) absorbing or (b) emitting a photon (γ). Note: positrons are moving from left to right; the arrow’s direction simply implies that the positron is an anti-particle.

Then came Quantum Electrodynamics, a.k.a. QED, which gives us the rules for flipping, twisting, and combining these diagrams in order to describe all kinds of other real, physical phenomena. Instead of electrons interacting with photons (or positrons with photons), what if we wanted to describe electrons interacting with positrons? Well, one way is if an electron exchanges a photon with a positron.

Figure 3: A Feynman diagram demonstrating the exchange of a photon (γ) between an electrons (e-)  and a positron (e+). Both the electron and positron are traveling from the left to the right. Additionally, not explicitly distinguishing between whether the electron is emitting or absorbing is intentional.

And now for the grand process that is the basis of all particle colliders throughout the entire brief* history of the Universe. According to electrodynamics, there is another way electrons and positrons can both interact with a photon. Namely, an electron and positron can annihilate into a photon and the photon can then pair-produce into a new electron and positron pair!

Figure 4: A Feynman diagram demonstrating  an annihilation of an electrons (e-)  and a positron (e+) into a photon (γ) that then produces an e+e- pair. Note: All particles depicted travel from left to right.

However, electrons and positrons is not the only particle-anti-particle pair that can annihilate into photons, and hence be pair-produced by photons. You also have muons, which are identical to electrons in every way except that it is 200 times heavier than the electron. Given enough energy, a photon can pair-produce a muon and anti-muon just as easily as it can an electron and positron.

Figure 5: A Feynman diagram demonstrating  an annihilation of an electrons (e-)  and a positron (e+) into a photon (γ) that then produces a muon (μ-) and anti-muon(μ+) pair.

But there is no reason why we need to limit ourselves only to particles that have no color charge, i.e., not charged under the Strong nuclear force. Take a bottom-type quark for example. A bottom quark has an electric charge of -1/3 elementary units; a weak (isospin) charge of -1/2; and its color charge can be red, blue, or green. The anti-bottom quark therefore has an electric charge of +1/3 elementary units; a weak (isospin) charge of +1/2; and its color charge can be anti-red, anti-blue, or anti-green. Since the two have non-zero electric charges, it can be pair-produced by a photon, too.

Figure 6: A Feynman diagram demonstrating  an annihilation of an electrons (e-)  and a positron (e+) into a photon (γ) that then produces a bottom quark (b) and anti-bottom quark (b) pair.

On top of that, since the Strong nuclear force is, well, really strong, either the bottom quark or the anti-bottom quark can very easily emit or absorb a gluon!

Figure 7: A Feynman diagram demonstrating  an annihilation of an electrons (e-)  and a positron (e+) into a photon (γ) that produces a bottom quark (b) and anti-bottom quark (b) pair, which then radiate gluons (blue).

In electrodynamics, photons (γ) are emitted or absorbed whenever an electrically charged particle changes it direction of motion. And since the gluon in chromodynamics plays the same role as the photon in electrodynamics, a gluon is emitted or absorbed wheneverĀ  a ā€œcolorfullyā€ charged particle changes its direction of motion. We can absolutely take this analogy a step further: gluons are able to pair-produce, just like photons.

Figure 8: A Feynman diagram demonstrating  an annihilation of an electrons (e-)  and a positron (e+) into a photon (γ) that produces a bottom quark (b) and anti-bottom quark (b) pair. These quarks then radiate gluons (blue), which finally pair-produce into quarks.

At the end of the day, however, we have to include the effects of the Weak nuclear force. This is because electrons and quarks have what are called ā€œweak (isospin) chargesā€. Firstly, there is the massive Z boson (Z), which acts and behaves much like the photon; that is to say, an electron and positron can annihilate into a Z boson. Secondly, there is the slightly lighter but still very massive W boson (W), which can be radiated from quarks much like gluons, just to a lesser extent. Phenomenally, both Weak bosons can decay into quarks and form semi-stable, multi-quark systems called hadrons. The formation of hadrons is, unsurprisingly, called hadronization. Two such examples are the the Ļ€ meson (pronounced: pie mez-on)Ā  or the J/ψ meson (pronounced: jay-sigh mezon). (See this other QD article for more about hadrons.)

Figure 9: A Feynman diagram demonstratingĀ  an annihilation of an electrons (e-)Ā  and a positron (e+) into a photon (γ) or a Z boson (Z) that produces a bottom quark (b) and anti-bottom quark (b) pair. These quarks then radiate gluons (blue) and a W boson (W), both of which finally pair-produce into semi-stable multi-quark systems known as hadrons (J/ψ and Ļ€).

Ā 

In summary, when electrons and positrons annihilate, they will produce a photon or a Z boson. In either case, the resultant particle is allowed to decay into quarks, which can radiate additional gluons and W bosons. The gluons and W boson will then form hadrons. My friend Geoffry, that is how how you can produce quarks and hadrons from electron-positron colliders.

Ā 

Now go! Discuss and ask questions.

Ā 

Happy Colliding

- richard (@bravelittlemuon)

Ā 

* The Universe’s age is measured to be about 13.69 billion years. The mean life of a proton is longer than 2.1 x 1029 years, which is more than 15,000,000,000,000,000,000 times the age of the Universe. Yeah, I know it sounds absurd but it is true.

by Richard Ruiz at January 27, 2012 03:21 PM

ZapperZ - Physics and Physicists

Sustainable Energy: Fact or Fiction
Hey, if you are in the Chicagoland area, this might be something you want to attend, considering that this is certainly an important and relevant topic nowadays. It is a talk on sustainable energy by Argonne's George Crabtree.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT)
McCormick Tribune Campus Center
McCloska Auditorium
3201 South State Street


Let me know if you are attending it. I'd appreciate a report.


Zz.


by ZapperZ (noreply@blogger.com) at January 27, 2012 03:12 PM

Peter Coles - In the Dark

Galaxies from the Past

If you were wondering where I got yesterday’s piece from, the answer is that I fired up my old laptop and found it among a lot of old papers there. And by ā€œold laptopā€, I mean really old laptop: I bought it in 1995! Anyway, since I haven’t got time to write anything today here is another piece I wrote a long time ago but have only recently unearthed. This one is about Galaxies. It’s a lot longer than yesterday’s effort, but like that one I can’t remember what it was for. Still, some of you might find it interesting. The piece ends with a reference to galaxies observed as they were in the distant past, rather like the article itself!

–0–

A galaxy is a collection of stars, held together by their mutual gravitational attraction and orbiting around their common centre.Ā  Galaxies range in size from dwarf systems of perhaps a few million stars, to giants containing up to a thousand billion. The Sun and all the stars visible in the night sky to the naked eye belong to one such galaxy, our own Galaxy the Milky Way. Although principally recognized through the light given off by their component stars, galaxies also contain other material such as clouds of gas and dust, and significant quantities of dark matter whose nature is not yet understood.

Only stars inside our Galaxy can be resolved with the naked eye; these stars have been studied and catalogued since antiquity. Ancient astronomersĀ  also knew of the existence of a diffuse band of light crossing the sky they could not resolve into individual stars; we now call this the Milky Way. The word galaxy is derived from the Greek galaktos, meaning ā€œmilkā€. The existence of galaxies other than our own is a much more recent discovery. While even relatively nearby stars appear as point sources of light, the light from other galaxies appears as cloudy and diffuse much like small fragments of the Milky Way. The generic term for a such sources is nebula, the latin word for ā€œmistā€.

A Persian astronomer, al-Sufi, in the 10th century AD described such a faint patch of light in the constellation Andromeda which is now known to be another galaxy, but it was only in the 18th Century that a systematic catalogue ofĀ  nebulae was compiled, by the French astronomer Charles Messier. Not all the objects he found were other galaxies – some were clouds of dust and gas inside our own – but the Messier catalogue contained 32 objects that we now know to be galaxies, including al-Sufi’s object, which was number 31 in his list. The Andromeda nebula is known to this day as M31. With the increasing power of astronomical telescopes, the list of known nebulae grew to thousands even before the use of astronomical photography became widespread. William and Caroline Herschel and, later, their son John played a leading role in identifying and cataloguing such objects in the early 19th century.

While the existence of large numbers of these nebulae was well established by the start of the 20th Century, their nature remained controversial. Since their distances could not be directly measured, it was possible that they could be inside our own galaxy. Many astronomers believed that the spiral structure seen in some of them, for example M31, suggested that they represented the formative stages of planetary systems like our own Solar System inside the Milky Way. Others argued that the nebulae were very much more distant than that, and were ā€œisland universesā€ on a much larger scale. This debate was only resolved in the 1920s, when Edwin Hubble was able to measure the distances to some nebulae using variable stars called Cepheids. He found them to be far too distant to be inside the Milky Way. This discovery established galaxies as the basic building-blocks of the Universe and gave rise to the field of extragalactic astronomy. Astronomers now estimate that there are as many galaxies in our observable Universe as there are individual stars in our own galaxy, i.e. around a hundred billion.

Galaxies come in a rich variety of shapes and sizes, but there are three basic types: Galaxies come in three basic types: spiral (or disk), elliptical and irregular. Hubble proposed a morphological classification, or taxonomy, for galaxies in which he envisaged the three basic types (spiral, elliptical and irregular) as forming a sequence which in the past was often assumed to represent various evolutionary stages of a galaxy . Although it is now not thought the interpretation as an evolutionary sequence is correct, Hubble’s nomenclature is still commonly used.

Spiral galaxies account for more than half the galaxies observedĀ  in our neighbourhood.Ā  These contain a bright central nucleus surrounded by a flattened disk that sometimes contains beautiful spiral arms. Hubble divided these galaxies into classes labelled as normal (S) or barred (SB) depending on whether the prominent spiral arms emerge directly the nucleus, or originate at the ends of a luminous bar projecting symmetrically through it . Spirals often contain copious amounts of dust, and the spiral arms containing many young stars givin them a noticeably blue colour.Ā  The normal and barred spirals S and SB are further subdivided into a, b or c depending on how tightly the spiral arms are wound up.

The elliptical galaxies (E), which account for only around 10% of observed bright galaxies, are elliptical in shape and have no discernible spiral structure. They are usually red in colour, have very little dust and show no signs of active star formation. The further classification of elliptical galaxies into En depends on the degree of elongation of the galaxy: E0 is nearly spherical; E7 is cigar-shaped. Ellipticals tend to occur in regions of space where there are many other galaxies, giving rise to the idea that they might originally have been spiral galaxies but have lost their spiral structure through mergers or interactions with other galaxies.

The shapes and colours of elliptical galaxies resemble the corresponding properties of spiral nuclei. Elliptical galaxies cover a broad range in mass, from a few hundred thousand to a thousand billion times the mass of the Sun. Spiral galaxies seem to have a smaller spread in mass, typically weighing in at about a hundred billion times the mass of the Sun.

Lenticular, or S0 galaxies, were added later by Hubble to bridge the gap between normal spirals and ellipticals. Around 20% of galaxies we see have this morphology. They are more elongated than elliptical galaxies but have neither bars nor spiral structure.

Irregular galaxies have no apparent structure. They are relatively rare, and are often faint and small so are consequently very hard to see. Their irregularity may stem from the fact that they are have such small masses that the material within them is relatively loosely bound and may have been disturbed by the environment in which they sit.

The classification of galaxies proposed by Hubble applies to ā€œnormalā€ galaxies whose light output is dominated by radiation their constituent population of stars. Stars predominantly emit visible light, which occupies a relatively narrow part of the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. Spiral galaxies also contain dust which is heated by starlight and radiates in the infra-red. Active galaxies are characterized by the prodigious amounts of energy they emit in regions of the spectrum normal galaxies cannot reach, particularly in radio and X-rays. Much of the energy broadcast by active galaxies is associated with the relatively small nucleus of the galaxy, so the term Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) is often used to describe these regions. Sometimes the central nucleus is accompanied by a jet of material being ejected at high velocity into the surrounding intergalactic medium. The different types of active galaxy include Seyfert galaxies, radio galaxies, BL Lac objects, and quasars.

Seyfert galaxies are usually spiral galaxies with no radio emission and no evidence of jets. They do, however, emit radiation over a continuous range of frequencies from infra-red to X-rays. Splitting their optical light up into its characteristic spectrum reveals the presence of strong and variable emission lines. Ā One can see such lines in ordinary stellar spectra and consequently in the spectra of normal galaxies, but they are much more prominent in active galaxies. Radio galaxies, on the other hand, are more commonly elliptical galaxies. These objects are extremely dramatic in their appearance, frequently having two lobes ofĀ  radio-emitting material extending far away from the central compact nucleus. There is also sometimes the appearance of a jet of material, extending from the core into the radio lobes. It appears that material is ejected from the nucleus along the jet, eventually being slowedĀ  down by its interaction with the intergalactic medium and forming the radio lobes. The central parts of radio galaxies seem to have properties similar to those of Seyfert galaxies.

BL Lac objects have spectra with no emission lines, but they emit strongly in all wavebands from radio to X-ray frequencies. Their main characteristic, however, is their extremely strong and rapid variability. It is thought that a possible explanation for these objects is that the observer is seeing a jet of material travelling head-on at close to the velocity of light.

The first quasars to be found were detected by their strong radio emission, but they were found to be so small that, like stars but unlike other galaxies, they could not be resolved with optical telescopes. For this reason they became known as quasi-stellar radio sources, or quasars for short. Later on, other such objects were found which did not emit radio waves at all, so the name was changed to quasi-stellar object or QSO, but the name quasar has in any case stuck. It seems that only one in about two hundred quasars is actually radio-loud, but the quasars are still the most powerful of all the active galaxy types.

These different kinds of objects were discovered at different times by different people and were originally thought to be entirely different phenomena. Now, however, there is a unified model in which these structures are all interpreted as having basically similar structure but a different orientation to the observer’s line-of-sight. The engine which powers the activity is thought to be a supermassive black hole, with a mass up to about 100 million solar masses. This seems very large, but is actually just a small fraction of the mass of the host galaxy, which may be a thousand times larger. Material surrounding the black hole is attracted towards it and undergoes a process of accretion, gradually spiralling in and being swallowed. As it spirals in, it forms an accretion disk around the black hole. This disk can be very hot, producing the X-ray radiation frequently seen in AGN, but its presence prevents radiation being transmitted through it. Radiation tends therefore to be beamed out of the poles of the nucleus and does not appear from the equatorial regions which are obscured by the disk. When the beamed radiation interacts with material inside the host galaxy or in the surrounding medium, it forms jets or radio lobes. Depending on the thickness of the disk, the size of the `host’ galaxy ,the amount of gas and dust surrounding the nucleus and the orientation at which the whole system is viewed one can, at least qualitatively, account for the variety of properties listed above.

It is not known what fraction of normal galaxies undergoes activity at some stage in their careers. Although active galaxies are relatively uncommon in our neighbourhood, this may simply be because the active phase lasts for a very short time compared to the total life of a galaxy. For example, if activity only lasts only one-thousandth of the total lifetime, we would expect only to see one in a thousand galaxies at any one time displaying the symptoms. It is perfectly possible, therefore, that the kind of extreme activity displayed by these galaxies is merely a phase through which all galaxies pass. If so, this would suggest that all galaxies should possess a massive black hole at their centre, which is no longer powering an accretion disk because there is insufficient gas left in the surrounding regions. Recent studies using the ultra-high resolution available on the Hubble Space Telescope suggest that most normal galaxies may indeed have black holes in their centres.

A somewhat milder form of activity is displayed by starburst galaxies which, as their name suggests are galaxies undergoing a vigorous period of star formation. Such activity is not thought to involve an active galactic nucleus, but is probably triggered by a tidal interaction between two galaxies moving closely past each other.

The stars in a galaxy exert gravitational forces on each other. This not only holds the galaxy together, it also causes the stars to move. The internal dynamical properties of galaxies are extremely important because they allow astronomers to work out how much matter is there.

In spiral galaxies, the component stars orbit roughly in a plane about the central nucleus. It is this bulk rotation that is responsible for the flattened shape of these systems. Much the same state of affairs applies in the Solar System, with all the planets moving in roughly circular orbits about the Sun. In the case of a disk galaxy that lies edge-on to the observer, stars on one side will be approaching while those on the other will be receding. These motions cause a Doppler shift in the light from different parts of the disk: one side will have a spectrum that is shifted towards blue colours, while the other side will be shifted to the red. One can therefore use spectroscopic methods to plot a graph showing how the rotation speed of materialĀ  varies with distance from the centre of rotation. Such a curve is called a rotation curve. Ā These curves show that the matter in spiral galaxies has a roughly constant velocity out to tens of thousands of light years from the centre. This is surprising because the planets of the Solar System have orbital speeds that fall off quite rapidly with distance from the Sun. Most of the mass of the Solar System lies in the Sun, which is near the centre of motion. Most of the light produced in a galaxy is likewise produced in the central regions. If all the mass in a galaxy were where the stars are, i.e. in the middle, the rotation speed should fall off the further out from the centre one looked. The simplest interpretation of this strange behaviour is that galaxies contain a large amount of material that does not produce starlight and which is not as concentrated in the centre of the galaxy as the stars. To make this work requires galaxies to be embedded in a diffuse halo of dark matter that is about ten times as large as the luminous part of the disk and containing perhaps ten times as much matter.

Dynamical studies of elliptical galaxies are more complicated because the stellar motions within them are not those of simple rotation. Nevertheless, these objects too reveal evidence for dark matter in similar quantity to that in spiral galaxies.

It is thought that less than 10 per cent of the total mass of a galaxy is in visible stars, but the form of the mysterious dark matter is not at all understood. The best candidate at the moment is some form of exotic particle left over from the Big Bang, usually called a WIMP (Weakly Interacting Massive Particle), although no such particle has yet been directly detected.

Galaxies are the basic building blocks of the Universe. They are not, however, the largest structures one can see. They tend not to be isolated, but cluster together. The distribution of nebulae on the sky was thought to be non-uniform even in the days of the Herschels, but it is only in the 20th century that it has become possible to map their three-dimensional positions in a systematic fashion.

The technique used to explore the large-scale distribution of galaxies is based on the discovery of the expanding universe usually attributed to Edwin Hubble, who builtĀ  on earlier work by Vesto Slipher. Slipher had discovered that lines in the optical spectra of galaxies were systematically shifted towards the longer wavelength, red end of the electromagnetic spectrum. Hubble extended this study by looking at these redshifts in tandem with the distances he had estimated for the galaxies. He found, to his surprise, that the redshift of a galaxy came out to be proportional to its distance. Contrary to popular belief, Hubble never really interpreted this himself as the result of cosmic expansion but the empirical correlation between redshift and distance now known as Hubble’s Law is the cornerstone of the big-bang cosmology. It is now accepted that the redshift of the galaxies arises from their motion away from the observer, similar to the Doppler shift that causes a change of pitch in a receding police siren. While the accurate determination of extragalactic distances remains difficult, measuring redshifts is rather straightforward. Hubble’s law has been used to chart the pattern traced out by millions of individual galaxies from their spectral shifts.

The general term used to describe a physicalĀ  aggregation of many galaxies is a cluster of galaxies, or galaxy cluster. Clusters can be systems of greatly varying size and richness. Our galaxy, the Milky Way,Ā  is a member of the Local Group of galaxies which is a rather small cluster of galaxies of which the only other large member is the Andromeda galaxy (M31). On the other extreme, there are the so-called rich clusters of galaxies, also known as Abell clusters, which contain many hundreds or even thousands of galaxies in a region just few million light years across: prominent nearby examples of such entities are the Virgo and Coma clusters. In between these two extremes, galaxies appear to be distributed in systems of varying density.

Individual galaxy clusters are not the largest structures in the Universe. The distribution of galaxies on scales larger than around 30 million light years also reveals a wealth of complexity. Galaxies are not simply distributed in blobs, like the Abell clusters, but often lie in extended linear structures called filaments, such as the Perseus-Pisces chain, or flattened sheet-like structures like the Great Wall. The latter object is roughly two-dimensional concentration of galaxies, discovered in 1988 by astronomers from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. This structure is at least 200 million light years by 600 million light years in size, but is less than 20 million light years thick. It contains many thousands of galaxies and has a mass of at least 1016 solar masses.Ā  The interconnecting network of filaments and sheets is aptly called the ā€œcosmic webā€, with rich clusters appearing where the parts of the web join together.

Rich clusters are clustered into enormous loosely-bound agglomerations called superclusters, containing anything from around ten rich clusters to more than 50. The most prominent known supercluster is called the Shapley concentration, while the most nearby is the Local Supercluster, a flattened structure in the plane of which the Local Group is moving. Superclustering is known to exist on scales up to 300 million light years, and superclusters may contain as much as 1017 solar masses of material or more.

These overdense structures are complemented by vast underdense regions known as voids, many of which appear to be roughly spherical.Ā  These regions containing very many fewer galaxies than average, or even no galaxies at all. Voids with density less than 10% of the average density on scales of up to 200 million light years have been found in large-scale redshift surveys.

The existence of galaxies, clusters of galaxies and the overall complexity of large-scale structure in the Universe around us must be contrasted with the extreme simplicity of the very early Universe. Observations of the cosmic microwave background, relic radiation left over from the early stages of the Big Bang, suggest that the initial state of the Universe was almost featureless, with variations in density from place to place of less than one part in a hundred thousand.

The process that is thought to have transformed these smooth beginnings into the clumpiness we see today is called gravitational instability. If the universe were initially exactly smooth, it would have remained so as it expanded and cooled. But if there were small initial variations in density, these would become amplified. A small patch of the Universe that was more dense than average would exert a slightly greater gravitational pull on its surroundings than an average patch. This would cause material to flow in, making it even denser. This, in turn, would make it pull even more than average. This starts a runaway process by which small initial ripples can turn into dense clumps.

This basic idea has been around since it was first suggested by Sir James Jeans more than a hundred years ago, but it is only in the last ten years or so that a convincing picture has been put together explaining how it works in the expanding Universe. According the modern theories, most of the matter in the Universe is in the form of exotic particles left over from the primordial fireball phase that was the Big Bang. These particles are thought to be very slow-moving and are consequently called Cold Dark Matter (CDM). These particles cluster together via the process of gravitational instability, first forming small objects with the mass of a very small dwarf galaxy (around one hundred thousand solar masses). These small seed objects then progressively merge into larger objects in a hierarchical fashion, eventually forming galaxy-sized and cluster-sized dark matter clumps. These form gravitational wells into which gaseous matter falls and becomes trapped. StarsĀ  form as gas clouds cool and fragment in the dark matter clumps. All this happens within a continuous sequence of interaction, disruption and merging. The whole process is extremely complicated, but extensive computer simulations show that the structure produced is very similar to the cosmic web revealed by observations, at least in the essential details.

Further support for these theoretical ideas is provided by observations of galaxies so distant that it has taken their light a large fraction of the age of the Universe to reach us. Looking at such objects allows astronomers to see galaxies in the process of formation.


by telescoper at January 27, 2012 02:42 PM

Phil Plait - Bad Astronomy

Weekly Space Roundup for January 26, 2012

Yesterday was the weekly live video Space Roundup, run by Fraser Cain from Universe Today. This week we had Pamela Gay, Alan Boyle, Nicole Gugliucci, and Ian O’Neill. We talked about the solar storm, black holes, arsenic life, Newt Gingrich, Phobos-Grunt, and answered some questions from the listeners. Here’s the video:

We do these every week on Google+ at 18:00 UTC on Thursday. Come join us!

by Phil Plait at January 27, 2012 02:05 PM

Matt Strassler - Of Particular Significance

Exotic Decays of the Higgs: A High Priority for 2012

2012 may well turn out to be The Year of The Higgs.Ā  Right now we have very little knowledge about this particle, but that may change dramatically over the year.Ā As I described in my previous post, we’re coming toward the end of Phase 1 of the Higgs search (where the ATLAS and CMS experiments at theĀ Large Hadron ColliderĀ [LHC]Ā search for the simplest possible form of the Higgs particle, the Standard Model Higgs, or SM Higgs for short.) And we’re also starting up Phase 2 of the Higgs search. As discussed in my Cosmic Variance guest post, and in more detail in my most recent post, if a particle resembling the SM Higgs is found, Phase 2 involves checking its details and determining as well as possible whether it is or isn’t precisely what is predicted by the Standard Model. If no such particle is found, Phase 2 involves searching widely for the many other types of Higgs particles that nature might or might not possess. Fortunately, despite these apparently divergent aims, the two possible branches of Phase 2 involve asking some of the same experimental questions (see Figure 3 of the most recent post), and so we can start on Phase 2 before even finishing Phase 1. And that is happening now.

One of the things that has to be done in Phase 2 is to search for decays of the Higgs particle that are not among the decays predicted to occur in the Standard Model. Ā ["Decay" = "aĀ disintegrationĀ of one particle into two or more".Ā Click here for an introduction.]Ā Ā Such ā€œexoticā€ decays are thought of as particularly plausible, because a lightweight Higgs (below about 150 GeV/c2 or so) is a very sensitive creature. It is very easy for new particles and/or forces to alter the Higgs’ properties, perhaps causing changes in how (or how often) it is produced, and to what (and with what probability) it may decay. Ā As shown in a large number of papers, written by Ā quite a variety of particle physics theorists, there are many, many types of possible exotic decays, and they can arise for many reasons. Ā If you’re curious what kind of exotic decays might occur, I gave a few examples in my now somewhat out-of-date analysis of what the summer’s Higgs searches imply. The basic logic of how unusual Higgs decays might arise is still correct in the cases described, but there are many, many more possibilities too. I’ll have to write a long article about the options in the coming month or so.

Another thing I could recommend, especially to graduate students and to those laypersons who are willing to sit through a certain amount of technical mumbo-jumbo enclosed within a largely non-technical discussion, is the first 8 (or even 20.5) minutes of a lecture I gave in 2010 to graduate students who were not Large Hadron Collider [LHC] experts.Ā  (If it loads too slowly you can download it from this page; it is my June 18th lecture.)

You might ask,ā€œbut if there were new particles and forces that could affect Higgs production or its decays, wouldn’t we have seen signs of them already at other experiments or at least at the LHC itself?ā€ The answer is ā€œno!ā€ Because a lightweight Higgs is so sensitive, the new particles and forces required to alter it may easily be so weakly interacting with ordinary matter, or so heavy, that they can evade detection at all previous experiments and so far at the LHC. The first place they will be discovered is in the properties of the Higgs particle. And so it is very important to measure how the Higgs particle behaves as carefully and precisely as possible!

There are three good reasons why one of the most important strategies to be used in Phase 2 will be to check whether the Higgs has exotic decays — perhaps common, or perhaps rare.

  • If we don’t find an SM-like Higgs in Phase 1, it might well be that although there is a Higgs there with SM or near-SM production rates, its decays are not those expected in the Standard Model, but are somehow ā€œexotic.ā€
  • Conversely, if we do find an SM-like Higgs in Phase 1, we know now that it can only lie above 600 GeV/c2 (but this is disfavored) or in the 115-127 GeV/c2 range, in which case (being lightweight) it may very easily have rare or even common exotic decays.
  • And if current hints of an SM-like Higgs at 125 GeV/c2 turn out to be the real thing, we still only know from current data that it roughly looks like an SM-Higgs. If it decays as expected only, say, 85% of the time, and decays exotically, say, 15% of the time, we wouldn’t know that yet. Our data sets are still far too small, and the hints far too uncertain, to be able to rule that out.

At the very least, then, we should be prepared to look for exotic Higgs decays that are perhaps common, or perhaps somewhat rare. These searches might very well be the first to reveal a breakdown of the Standard Model! So we should be preparing for them, and designing them to be as powerful as possible.

ā€œBut slow down,ā€ you might say. ā€œWe’re not even sure yet that the Higgs particle is there at all; we’re still arguing over whether what’s been seen near 125 GeV/c2 is a mirage. In 2012 that mirage may take solid form, but even if it does, there will be just barely enough data for confidence in its reality. At such an early stage, how could we ever hope to detect something that the Higgs particle does only rarely?ā€

Ah. We need to remember that the Phase 1 searches for the SM Higgs particle themselves rely on things that a Higgs particle does only very rarely. The most important search strategies for the Higgs in 2011 and 2012 will be to look for its decays to two photons and its decays to ā€œfour leptonsā€ (shorthand for two lepton/anti-lepton pairs.) If the Higgs has a mass of 125 GeV/c2, it decays to two photons only 0.2% of the time. It decays to four leptons only 0.01% of the time. Even its decay to a lepton, anti-lepton, neutrino and anti-neutrino, which is also somewhat useful, is only a few percent effect. All of the decays of the SM Higgs that we can hope to actually measure are rare. The common ones, such as the decay to a bottom quark/anti-quark pair or to a tau lepton/anti-lepton pair, are almost completely drowned in huge backgrounds. Ā (More accurately, there are in fact clever ways to measure decays to Ā bottom quarks or toĀ taus, but only by using rare production processes, so these are rare too, Ā for a different reason.)

It’s well worth going through these numbers a bit more carefully. If indeed there is an SM-like Higgs at 125 GeV/c2, produced at the rates expected in the Standard Model, then the number of Higgs bosons produced so far at ATLAS and CMS (separately!) is

the probability of making a Higgs in a 7 TeV proton-proton collision:

  • 0.000,000,000,16

timesĀ the number of proton-proton collisions in 2011 at ATLAS or CMS:

  • 570,000,000,000,000

equals the number of Higgs particles produced at ATLAS and at CMS

  • 90,000

Let me say that again. Ā If nature sports a SM-like Higgs particle with a mass of Ā 125 GeV/c2, the number produced so far at ATLAS and CMS is already approaching one hundred thousand in each experiment.

Most of these Higgs particles were not noticed; they disappeared under huge backgrounds, as the planet Venus disappears in bright sunlight. Ā  A few thousand or so decayed (via two W particles) to a lepton, an anti-lepton, a neutrino and an antineutrino; those can be detected, but the backgrounds are large and the measurement is hard. The number of Higgs particles that decay to two photons is something like a few hundred in each experiment, though not all are detected. The number that decay to four leptons is a handful, and some are lost. It’s the last two very rare processes that give the most striking information in the search for the SM Higgs.

But maybe this new Higgs particle is not a Standard Model Higgs particle after all, but just looks similar at first glance. Maybe a few dozen, or a few hundred, or a few thousand of the 90,000 Higgs bosons produced in 2011 decayed in an unexpected way, or in one of several unexpected ways. And maybe one of those types of decays gives an experimental signature that we can discover rather easily, giving a signal that stands out above background. All the experimenters might need to do … is look. Maybe they don’t even need more data; just searching through the 2011 data might be enough. All the focus last year was on pushing Phase 1 of the Higgs search as far as possible. But Phase 2 can start with this year’s questions about last year’s data. Ā It could even lead to a striking discovery before we get far into 2012. Ā [I hope some of the experimenters at ATLAS and CMS are reading this.]

Of course we should also get as much information about the Higgs as possible from the new 2012 data, starting in March or April, which with some good fortune might bring 3 to 4 times as many collisions as in 2011. These may occur at a slightly higher energy per collision (8 TeV versus 7 last year) which would give slightly higher Higgs production rates. If there are some exotic decays happening, we obviously want the LHC experiments to collect as many of them as possible in order to maximize the chances that they can be identified when the data is analyzed. But this is where the trouble starts.

The trigger. Remember the trigger?

Read about the trigger here. You can’t deeply understand the Large Hadron Collider and how science is done there if you don’t understand the trigger. It all starts from there.

The trigger involves the real-time trashing of 99.9999% of the data that the LHC is collecting. Ā As quickly as the data comes in, all but 1 in a million collisions is discarded irretrievably. Ā There’s no choice. Ā Let’s go through these numbers too.

Last year, 20,000,000 times a second, two bunches of about 100,000,000,000 protons crossed through each other at the center of CMS and at the center of ATLAS; and in each bunch crossing the number of proton-proton collisions which occurred simultaneously was between an average of 5 or so (at the beginning of the year) and an average of 15 (at the end of the year.)

As an aside, note that this means that every time a potentially interesting proton-proton collision occurred at ATLAS or CMS in 2011, the detector was measuring the debris from not just this possibly interesting collision but from as many as 20 othersĀ that happened all at the same time. Almost always those other collisions were very boring — just glancing blows that make small sprays of particles — but they do clutter up the detector with uninteresting particles that have to be removed later, to the extent possible, in the data analysis stage. These multiple proton-proton collisions in the same bunch crossing are called ā€œpile-upā€. Ā [In addition, there are also particles, of rather low energy, still running around from collisions that occurred during previous bunch-crossings, and they're actually even worse, I'm told.] Ā Pile-up makes measurements harder — not so much harder that one should avoid pile-up at the expense of fewer collisions, but one has to actively deal with it. The effect of pile-up is a little like electronic static on a video screen (or ā€œsnowā€ on an old-style TV) making it harder to see the image; you can still see it, but some of your ability to see detail is lost, and you may want to use special image processing techniques to clean it up.

Given this amount of pile-up, the total number of collisions toward the end of 2011 was about 300,000,000 per second, of which it is possible to store a few hundred per second, for a total of a few billion (1,000,000,000) collisions stored in 2011 for data analysis. The rest of the half a million billion collisions (570,000,000,000,000) may as well never have happened; they’re gone, forever. Ā All of these numbers apply for ATLAS and CMS separately.

This year, the LHC is going to collect more data — probably not by having more frequent bunch crossings (the only other practical option would be 40,000,000 crossings per second), but probably by arranging for an average of 30 – 40 proton-proton collisions in each bunch crossing. In other words, the pile-up may double. On top of that, the energy per collision may be slightly higher, meaning the probability of any particular interesting-looking proton-proton collision will be higher. That’s good because the things you want to discover happen more often; but it’s still a problem for the trigger, because the rate for interesting-looking-but-actually-boring stuff goes up too… and since that stuff is so vastly more common, it’s what determines how aggressive the trigger’s decisions have to be.

So both the higher energy and the higher pileup will cause new challenges for the trigger. That means that the trigger will have to throw out collisions in 2012 that it would have kept in 2011. (Stated more accurately, the trigger is constantly being adjusted for changing conditions: the more interesting-looking collisions there are, and the more ā€œnoiseā€ there is from pile-up, the tighter are the criteria that a collision has to satisfy for the trigger system to decide to keep it.)

Now, for some types of searches for new phenomena, this does not matter much. But the Higgs is a lightweight particle, so its decays typically produce a rather small amount of energy and momentum in particles moving perpendicular to the beam. And that isn’t very distinctive. [Specifically, if you add up the ``scalar transverse momentum'' (take each particle, measure the amount of its momentum perpendicular to the beam --- just the magnitude, not the direction --- and add the numbers up) for all the particles that are produced in a Higgs event, you will get only about 100 -- 200 GeV or so. Unfortunately, a proton-proton collision can in many other ways generate that much transverse momentum --- not easily... the probability is in the 1/20,000-1/200,000 range... but that's far too often. Remember only 1/1,000,000 events can be stored, and not all of them can be aimed at studying the Higgs -- the LHC needs to look for other new phenomena too, and make precise measurements of known particles, like the top quark.)]

What this means is that collisions that make a Higgs particle tend to sit in a dangerous place — right about where the trigger’s long knives do their slicing. Ā So if you don’t think about the trigger carefully… ouch!

Even in 2011, the trigger threw quite a few of those 90,000 Ā or so Higgs particles away. Ā That was ok for Phase 1, the search for the SM Higgs. Ā The SM Higgs can be produced in several ways, and then can decay in several ways. Ā But not all combinations of production and decay have any hope of being discovered; for some combinations, backgrounds are far too large. Over the years there have been many studies that tell us which combinations are promising, and for each of them, there are logical pathways built into the current trigger strategies at ATLAS and CMS that allow for them to be studied.

But what about exotic decays? There are perhaps two dozen possibilities that we have to consider, maybe more. The theoretical studies of how to discover them have in some cases never been performed, and in other cases were performed in a context that is slightly but importantly different from the context of 2012. [One of the most important common differences is that many studies were done to examine what would happen if the Higgs were not found in Phase 1 because the probability of a certain exotic decay is near 100%. In this case the exotic decay would be common, but the Higgs mass would be unknown. But in fact we find ourselves in a different situation, with a Higgs that may be in the process of being found in Phase 1, with a mass that (if it is there) is known to be close to 125 GeV/c2, and for which any exotic decay (given that the decays expected in the SM must be common, to make the discovery of this SM-like Higgs possible) must be rare --- at most, say, 10-15% of all Higgs decays, and perhaps much, much smaller! Knowing the Higgs' mass makes the search easier, but the smaller maximum probability for the decay makes it harder; together they certainly make the search different, different enough that the previous studies may not apply.] Ā So we find ourselves in the unfortunate position of not yet knowing precisely how to look for large classes of exotic decays.

But we certainly want to know this information in advance! Otherwise, how can we be sure how best to adjust the trigger strategies? How can we try to collect the right fraction of the data starting in March 2012, if we don’t know what strategies we’re going to want to use at the time of the data analyses, some of which won’t be done until 2013?!

I personally believe that we need to act quickly — that a number of theory studies of how to detect exotic Higgs decays are needed, now. [I hope some of my theorist colleagues are reading this.]

Certain things have to be done faster than others. The most urgent (which is what I have been working on for the past month, in consultation with some members of CMS and separately with some members of ATLAS — the two detectors have trigger systems which are different in crucial ways, and the strategies they will use may end up being quite different) is to understand which types of exotic decays are most likely to cause a problem for the trigger systems, such that collisions that make a Higgs with this type of decay would often be discarded under present trigger strategies. Conversely, for these problematic cases, it is urgent to understand what types of tricks can be used to make sure that more of these collisions pass the trigger. The good news is that the number of dangerous cases isn’t quite as large as I initially feared, and in the cases that worry me, it appears tentatively that there might be some tricks that can be played. But the jury is still out.

Moreover, adjusting the trigger is very complicated and controversial, because any time you choose to play some tricks that allow the trigger to keep a class of events that you were going to throw away, you have to choose to throw away other events that you were planning to keep. It’s close to a zero-sum game. So this is not something to be done lightly; you have to find the right compromise, and long arguments ensue within the experimental collaborations as to how best to do that.

Fortunately, even if in 2012 ATLAS and CMS don’t trigger on Higgs exotic decays as well as they possibly could, there is a safety net, a fall-back position. As various people often remind me, the production of a Higgs from a collision of a quark and anti-quark that makes a Higgs along with a W or Z particle (see the third row of Figure 2 of my article on Higgs production) offers a guarantee: no matter how the Higgs decays, the ~22% of the time that the W decays to a lepton or a neutrino, and the ~25% of the time that the Z decays to a neutrino/anti/neutrino or to a lepton/anti-lepton pair, offer up something that the trigger system can easily recognize — a lepton and/or anti-lepton, or ā€œmissing energyā€ (actually ā€œmissing transverse momentumā€, or, more intuitively, a sign that something you can detect must be recoiling against something you have failed to detect — the neutrinos in this case.) But unfortunately the production of a Higgs in association with a W or Z is only about 5% of Higgs production (for an SM Higgs of 125 GeV; it’s a bit less for a heavier one and a bit more for a lighter one.) So if we have to rely on the safety net, only about 1% (and probably somewhat less when all is said and done) of Higgs bosons produced at the LHC will be triggered in this way. That means that although we’d have something like 400,000 Higgs bosons produced at each experiment in 2012, and perhaps as many as 40,000 or so decaying exotically, we’d only have 400 exotic decays stored permanently for later data analysis. Clearly, anything we can do to increase that 400 toward 4000 Ā is worth doing! Ā Especially since the fraction of exotic decays might be much smaller than 10%, making that 400 in the safety net more like 40 or 4. Ā So yes, there’s a fall-back position, but we shouldn’t fall back until we’re beaten. And my own studies suggest we’re nowhere near beaten yet — though the time constraints of getting ready for the start of the 2012 data-taking mean we do have to work very fast.

[It is a pleasure to thank especially Oliver Buchmueller, Alex Tapper, Yuri Gershtein, Eva Halkiadakis,Ā Andy Haas, Kyle Cranmer, Elliot Lipeles, Henry Lubatti, Dan Ventura, Guido Ciapetti, BarbaraĀ Mele,Ā Stefano Giagu, KathrynĀ Zurek,Ā Scott Thomas, David Shih, Ā Jared Evans, Yevgeny Kats, Neal Weiner, Nima Arkani-Hamed, Josh Ruderman, Tomer Volansky, Itay Yavin, and others for many useful discussions on this and closely related topics.]


Filed under: Higgs, LHC Background Info, Particle Physics Tagged: atlas, background, cms, decay, detectors, ExoticDecays, Higgs, particle physics

by Matt Strassler at January 27, 2012 01:52 PM

ZapperZ - Physics and Physicists

What Is The Scientific Method?
An Physics World blog entry linked to an audio discussion of what is meant by the "Scientific Method". You can click on the BBC link to hear the whole discussion on what it is, what it isn't, or the many variations to it.

As physicists, and scientists in general, I don't see many of us sit down and discuss this. I think we just do it and it comes as second nature because it is what we have been doing all along. It is also difficult to define because there is no one single way of doing things. In the end, Mother Nature gets to decide what's what.

But because of that, I think it is rather amusing that most of the discussion on what a scientific method is being done primarily by non-scientists. Or to put it bluntly, by philosophers. I suppose that is part of what they do. But I can't help thinking of the Feynman's quote:

Philosophy of science is about as useful to scientists as ornithology is to birds.

One could say that a discussion of the scientific method is about as useful to scientists as ornithology is to birds. But regardless of that, I find it a bit weary that people who are discussing what it is are mainly non-scientists, which are people who have not gone through, or practice such method that they are trying to analyze. We all know that there is a clear difference between studying about something versus actually doing it. You could read and study about riding a bicycle till you're old, but that doesn't mean that you can gain the skill or have a feel on riding a bicycle. One actually has to get on a bicycle, practice many, many times, fall a few times, before one gains the ability to ride one. Reading or studying about something is different than actually doing it.

So how do people who have never done scientific research have the ability to discuss what the scientific method is or is not?

Zz.


by ZapperZ (noreply@blogger.com) at January 27, 2012 11:31 AM

Quantum Diaries

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by KEK at January 27, 2012 11:17 AM

John Baez - Azimuth

How to Cut Carbon Emissions and Save Money

McKinsey & Company is a management consulting firm. In 2010 they released this ā€˜carbon abatement cost curve’ for the whole world:

Click it to see a nice big version. So, they’re claiming:

• By 2030 we can cut CO2 emissions about 15 gigatonnes per year while saving lots of money.

• By 2030 can cut CO2 emissions by up to 37 gigatonnes per year before the total cost—that is, cost minus savings—becomes positive.

The graph is cute. The vertical axis of the graph says how many euros per tonne it would cost to cut CO2 emissions by 2030 using various measures. The horizontal axis says how many gigatonnes per year we could reduce CO2 emissions using these measures.

So, we get lots of blue rectangles. If a rectangle is below the horizontal axis, its area says how many euros per year we’d save by implementing that measure. If it’s above the axis, its area says how much that measure would cost.

I believe the total blue area below the axis equals the total blue area above the axis. So if we do all these things, the total cost is zero.

37 gigatonnes of CO2 is roughly 10 gigatonnes of carbon: remember, there’s a crucial factor of 3\frac{2}{3} here. In 2004, Pacala and Socolow argued that the world needs to find ways to cut carbon emissions by about 7 gigatonnes/year by 2054 to keep emissions flat until this time. By now we’d need 9 gigatonnes/year.

If so, it seems the measures shown here could keep carbon emissions flat worldwide at no net cost!

But as usual, there are at least a few problems.

Problem 1

Is McKinsey’s analysis correct? I don’t know. Here’s their report, along with some others:

• McKinsey & Company, Impact of the financial crisis on carbon economics: Version 2.1 of the global greenhouse gas abatement cost curve, 2010.

For more details it’s good to read version 2.0:

• McKinsey & Company, Pathways to a low carbon economy: Version 2 of the global greenhouse gas abatement cost curve, 2009.

They’re free if you fill out some forms. But it’s not easy to check these things. Does anyone know papers that try to check McKinsey’s work? I find it’s more fun to study a problem like this after you see two sides of the same story.

Problem 2

I said ā€˜no net cost’. But if you need to spend a lot of money, the fact that I’m saving a lot doesn’t compensate you. So there’s the nontrivial problem of taking money that’s saved on some measures and making sure it gets spent on others. Here’s where ā€˜big government’ might be required—which makes some people decide global warming is just a political conspiracy, nyeh-heh-heh.

Is there another way to make the money transfer happen, without top-down authority?

We could still get the job about half-done at a huge savings, of course. McKinsey says we could cut CO2 emissions by 15 gigatonnes per year doing things that only save money. That’s about 4 gigatonnes of carbon per year! We could at least do that.

Problem 3

Keeping carbon emissions flat is not enough. Carbon dioxide, once put in the atmosphere, stays there a long time—though individual molecules come and go. As the saying goes, carbon is forever. (Click that link for more precise information.)

So, even Pacala and Socolow say keeping carbon emissions flat is a mere stopgap before we actually reduce carbon emissions, starting in 2054. But some more recent papers seem to suggest Pacala and Socolow were being overly optimistic.

Of course it depends on how much global warming you’re willing to tolerate! It also depends on lots of other things.

Anyway, this paper claims that if we cut global greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2050 (as compared to what they were in 1990), there’s a 12–45% probability that the world will get at least 2 °C warmer than its temperature before the industrial revolution:

• Malte Meinshausen et al, Greenhouse-gas emission targets for limiting global warming to 2 °C, Nature 458 (2009), 1158–1163.

Abstract: More than 100 countries have adopted a global warming limit of 2 °C or below (relative to pre-industrial levels) as a guiding principle for mitigation efforts to reduce climate change risks, impacts and damages. However, the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions corresponding to a specified maximum warming are poorly known owing to uncertainties in the carbon cycle and the climate response. Here we provide a comprehensive probabilistic analysis aimed at quantifying GHG emission budgets for the 2000–50 period that would limit warming throughout the twenty-first century to below 2 °C, based on a combination of published distributions of climate system properties and observational constraints. We show that, for the chosen class of emission scenarios, both cumulative emissions up to 2050 and emission levels in 2050 are robust indicators of the probability that twenty-first century warming will not exceed 2 °C relative to pre-industrial temperatures.

Limiting cumulative CO2 emissions over 2000–50 to 1,000 Gt CO2 yields a 25% probability of warming exceeding 2 °C—and a limit of 1,440 Gt CO2 yields a 50% probability—given a representative estimate of the distribution of climate system properties. As known 2000–06 CO2 emissions were 234 Gt CO2, less than half the proven economically recoverable oil, gas and coal reserves can still be emitted up to 2050 to achieve such a goal. Recent G8 Communiques envisage halved global GHG emissions by 2050, for which we estimate a 12–45% probability of exceeding 2 °C—assuming 1990 as emission base year and a range of published climate sensitivity distributions. Emissions levels in 2020 are a less robust indicator, but for the scenarios considered, the probability of exceeding 2 °C rises to 53–87% if global GHG emissions are still more than 25% above 2000 levels in 2020.

This paper says we’re basically doomed to suffer unless we revamp society:

• Ted Trainer, Can renewables etc. solve the greenhouse problem? The negative case, Energy Policy 38 (2010), 4107–4114.

Abstract: Virtually all current discussion of climate change and energy problems proceeds on the assumption that technical solutions are possible within basically affluent-consumer societies. There is however a substantial case that this assumption is mistaken. This case derives from a consideration of the scale of the tasks and of the limits of non-carbon energy sources, focusing especially on the need for redundant capacity in winter. The first line of argument is to do with the extremely high capital cost of the supply system that would be required, and the second is to do with the problems set by the intermittency of renewable sources. It is concluded that the general climate change and energy problem cannot be solved without large scale reductions in rates of economic production and consumption, and therefore without transition to fundamentally different social structures and systems.

It’s worth reading because it uses actual numbers, not just hand-waving. But it seeks much more than keeping carbon emissions flat until 2050; that’s one reason for the dire conclusions.

It’s worth noting this rebuttal, which says that everything about Trainer’s paper is fine except a premature dismissal of nuclear power:

• Barry Brook, Could nuclear fission energy, etc., solve the greenhouse problem? The affirmative case, Energy Policy, available online 16 December 2011.

To get your hands on Brook’s paper you either need a subscription or you need to email him. You can do that starting from his blog article about the paper… which is definitely worth reading:

• Barry Brook, Could nuclear fission energy, etc., solve the greenhouse problem? The affirmative case, BraveNewClimate, 14 January 2012.

According to Brook, we can keep global warming from getting too bad if we get really serious about nuclear power.

Of course, these three papers are just a few of many. I’m still trying to sift through the information and figure out what’s really going on. It’s hard. It may be impossible. But McKinsey’s list of ways to cut carbon emissions and save money points to some things we start doing right now.


by John Baez at January 27, 2012 05:53 AM

Emily Lakdawalla - The Planetary Society Blog

Guest Post: Jason Davis: Solar flares from Skylab
Early on January 23, 2012, our Sun tossed out a powerful, M-class solar flare. M-class eruptions aren't as violent as their X-class siblings, but the accompanying ejection of excited protons was powerful enough to light up our planet's polar regions with dazzling auroral displays. The flare was captured in glorious high-resolution imagery by NASA's orbiting Solar Dynamics Observatory spacecraft. Watching the resultant video of the phenomenon ....

January 27, 2012 05:43 AM

arXiv blog

... And Scrabble Proved PSPACE-Complete

Following news that Pac-Man is NP-Hard, theorists determine the computational complexity of Scrabble.

Having been invented in the US in the mid-20th century, Scrabble is now available in dozens of languages and sells in numbers measured in hundreds of millions. That makes it one of the most popular games in the world. Ā 

That has naturally piqued the interest of game theorists. "Since Scrabble is such a successful game, it becomes a natural question to determine the computational complexity of finding an optimal play," say Michael Lampis at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden and a few pals. 

The same question has been successfully asked of many board games, such as chess, Go and Othello, which tend to beĀ PSPACE or EXPTIME-complete. But Scrabble is trickier because players do not know the order in which the tiles will be drawn meaning that chance plays a greater role.

The question that Lampis and co attempt to answer is this: given a Scrabble position how hard is it to determine the best playing strategy?Ā 

They point out that inĀ any given round, a Scrabble player is confronted with two tasks: deciding which word to form and deciding where to place it on the board. These tasks are related because the words that can be formed depend on the position of letters on the board.Ā 

But which of these task is it that makes Scrabble hard? What Lampis and co show is that both are hard and give a proofs of each to back up their claim. That's impressive because it allow us to 'see' why Scrabble is hard.Ā 

"We establish that during the course of a game, Scrabble players need to perform not one, but two computationally hard tasks, which is probably the reason why Scrabble is so much fun to play," they write.

That's not to say computational complexity theorists are done and dusted with Scrabble. Their next task is to discover whether there is a polynomial-time algorithm to determine the move that would maximize the score achieved in this round.

Now that would be handy!Ā 

Ref:Ā arxiv.org/abs/1201.5298: Scrabble is PSPACE-Complete




January 27, 2012 05:10 AM

Emily Lakdawalla - The Planetary Society Blog

Today's 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Offers a Free, Online Astronomy Class!
By Mat Kaplan The marvelous 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast has begun its fourth year of daily offerings from contributors around the world. The Planetary Society will originate at least 12 podcasts in 2012, each on the last Thursday of the month (except for August, when we'll be heard on the fourth Thursday). Our first effort of the year is featured today! I talk with our own Bruce Betts about his soon to begin online astronomy course ....

January 27, 2012 04:06 AM

January 26, 2012

Christian P. Robert - xi'an's og

GPUs in computational statistics

The workshop in Warwick yesterday went on very quickly! The room was packed. The three first talks were by myself, Christophe and Pierre, so less about GPUs and more about simulation techniques which could benefit from or even require implementation on GPUS. (I did manage to have complete slides this time… More seriously, Christophe’s talk set me thinking on the issue of estimating the likelihood function in ways different (?) from the one used in ABC.) The second half was more novel for me, in that the three talks went into the computing and computer aspects of GPUS, with Chris Holmes doing sparse [Lasso-like] regression on a scale otherwise [i.e. w/o GPUs] impossible, Chris [fourth Chris in the list of speakers!] Barnes explaining ABC for molecular biology and design (a point I plan to discuss on a later post), with even more details about the architecture and programming of GPUs, and Michael Stumpf delivering a grand finale, with essentially three talks into one: network analysis (incl. terrific movie bits incorporated within the beamer slides!), GPUs vs. CPUs and older alternatives, and random generators on GPU, commenting on a recent paper by Salmon et al. (SC, 2011) and showing that true gains in efficiency from using GPUs involved a heavy involvement into the hardware structure… A very exciting day followed by Stilton cheese degustation and haggis (if not poems) to celebrate Burns’ night!

Some hae meat and canna eat,
And some wad eat that want it;
But we hae meat, and we can eat,
And sae let the Lord be thankit.


Filed under: pictures, Statistics, Travel Tagged: Coventry, CPU, GPU, haggis, random number generator, Robert Burns, Stilton, University of Warwick

by xi'an at January 26, 2012 11:12 PM

Emily Lakdawalla - The Planetary Society Blog

Parallel planetary processes create semantic headaches
So here's a semantic problem I ran into today. Consider this photo, a radar image of the Congo river from Envisat.Click to enlarge >Synthetic aperture radar view of the Congo riverThis wide-swath radar image is a mosaic of two images centred over the Congo River, one of the largest rivers in the world flowing 4,374 kilometres (2,718 miles) from Zambia to the Atlantic Ocean. It was taken on December 23, 2002 from Envisat and is a synthetic ....

January 26, 2012 10:55 PM

The Great Beyond - Nature blog

US physicists call for underground neutrino facility

When the US National Science Board nixed plans for an underground lab in 2010, multiple potential experiments were left homeless, and the US physics community was in a kerfuffle. Now, 40 leading theoretical physicists, including three Nobel Prize winners, have written to the US Department of Energy (DOE)Ā urging it build an underground facility to study subatomic neutrinos that would compensate to some degree for the lab’s absence.

ā€œWe … are writing this letter to note the pressing scientific need for having a large underground detector, linked to a long baseline intense neutrino beam,ā€ say the signatories, who include Nobelists Steven Weinberg of the University of Texas at Austin, Sheldon Glashow of Boston University in Massachusetts and Frank Wilczek of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

Their letter, dated 19 January, is a boost for the Long Baseline Neutrino Experiment (LBNE), an estimated US$1.3-billion complex with detectors housed in the Homestake mine in South Dakota and, 1,300 kilometres away, at Fermilab in Batavia, Illinois, where particle accelerators would generate beams of neutrinos and antineutrinos (see graphic).Ā The letterĀ argues that an underground facility is needed to search for matter–antimatter asymmetry using neutrinos and for proton decay, a process that, if seen, would confirm the theoretical unification of the forces of nature at scales beyond that which could be probed by the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, Europe’s particle-physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland.

The letter is a welcome boost at a difficult time for LBNE, which faces a Go/No-Go decision from DOE later this year, probably between May and September. Ā Budget constraints have recently forced the collaboration to choose between two detection technologies: a liquid-argon detector, in which neutrinos would be detected as they interact with argon nuclei, and a Cerenkov detector, in which neutrinos would be seen as they pass through water. It had previously been hoped that both might be built. Whereas an external review committee convened by DOE favoured liquid argon, a later committeeĀ comprising many members of the collaboration settled on the Cerenkov option. ā€œWe thought it was less expensive and less risky,ā€ says LBNE co-spokesman Robert Svoboda of the University of California, Davis. But project manager James Strait of Fermilab went with the liquid argon. That leaves about 70 people who had been working on the water–Cerenkov option at a loose end. Svoboda says that he’s encouraging them to take three months to make a decision about how to proceed — presumably by either leaving the experiment or switching to the liquid-argon effort. He expects that the majority will decide that they will be able to do the physics they want to do in liquid argon and stay. In their letter to the DOE, the theoretical physicists say that either technology should be able to fulfill the physics goals, with liquid argon being slightly more sensitive to proton decay.

Pran Nath, a physicist at Northeastern University in Boston who co-signed the letter, says that the signatories worked on it for several months following the decision not to build the underground lab, experiments in which were strongly endorsed in a 2011 report from the US National Academy of Sciences. Nath says that the theorists’ hope is that once an underground facility is up and running, it might be able to house other experiments as well.

In addition, the closure of the Tevatron, Fermilab’s particle collider, in 2011, means that the United States risks being left without a large-scale particle-physics experiment, and young experimentalists will have to go to Europe to work on the Large Hadron Collider. ā€œA country as large as the US needs a large experiment to be at the forefront of physics,ā€ says Nath.

Image: LBNE/Symmetry Magazine

by Eugenie Samuel Reich at January 26, 2012 09:30 PM

The Great Beyond - Nature blog

Answer found for cancer drug failure

A recently approved cancer drug that was hailed as a miracle worker for some patients with advanced melanoma has mysteriously failed in early clinical trials against colon cancers. But work published today in Nature clarifies how colon cancers dodge the drug, called vemurafenib, and what can be done to overcome this resistance.

Vemurafenib (once known as PLX4032) was approved last year for the treatment of advanced melanomas that bear a mutation in a protein called BRAFĀ  (see ā€˜Melanoma drug gets speedy approval’). Its dramatic — although admittedly short-lived (see ā€˜The roots of resistanceā€˜) — success against melanoma raised hopes that the drug could be used against other cancers that harbor the same mutation (see ā€˜Rare victory in fight against melanoma’ and ā€˜Melanoma drugs slow disease, boost hopes for combination therapy’) . But colon cancers with BRAF mutations proved surprisingly wily, and early trials were disappointing. ā€œNo one would have expected that five years ago,ā€ says oncologist Keith Flaherty of Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts. ā€œMelanoma was historically the intractable one, not colon cancer.ā€

Cancer researcher RenƩ Bernards of the Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam and his colleagues decided to tackle this question using a large genetic screen based on RNA-interference, a technique that can be used to systematically reduce the expression of individual genes.

They found that colon cells with the BRAF mutation became sensitive to vemurafenib when expression of another cancer-associated protein, EGFR, was knocked down. In fact, treatment with vemurafenib activated EGFR in colon tumours, but not in melanoma, where EGFR is expressed only at low levels.

This finding is cause for renewed optimism: there are EGFR-inhibiting drugs already approved for the treatment of cancer. Bernards and his colleagues found that coupling these drugs with vemurafenib shut down the EGFR escape route, suggesting that the 8–10% of colon cancers that carry the BRAF mutation may be once again in the cross hairs. ā€œThis observation is so readily translatable, this could be done tomorrow,ā€ says Flaherty, who was not involved with the study but has spearheaded trails of vemurafenib. The drug is also being tested against lung and thyroid cancers with the BRAF mutation.

by Heidi Ledford at January 26, 2012 09:28 PM

Clifford V. Johnson - Asymptotia

Reports on the Night
Well, it seemed to go well. I rambled too long and unstructuredly in my off-the-cuff speech (and long thank-you list) at the beginning, but nobody seemed to mind so much since the films were the main focus, and people loved the program. I only got two shots of the activities worth sharing since I was occupied with being host and so forth... but there were so many reporters there, and so I expect there'll be more showing up all over the place. There were about 140 people in attendance, I was told, which is nice to hear. People seemed to really love the whole idea of the competition and showcase, and really to understand what I am trying to do with this whole program, so that's heartening. I hope this also translates into lots of interest next year, with even more filmmakers joining in and making films (and faculty being supportive and helping out as matchmakers and so forth).(This is all assuming I find a sponsor to fund the thing.) Oh! I opened envelopes Oscar-style and gave out the awards. Here are the results: 1st place (and $2500): Time (Kevin Le, Edward Saavedra) 2nd place (and $1500): It's All in You (Maria Raykova, Andy Su, Jabril Mack, Mara Guevarra, Kayla Carlisle - a freshman team!) 3rd place (and $500): Superluminal Neutrinos in 5 Minutes (Josh Heineman, Nate Fulmer, Michael Powell) Honourable Mention (and $500): Dance with Newton's Laws (Linda Jules, Anna Zaferiou) Honourable Mention (and $500): Yaddda, Yadda, Yada (Kimberly Laux, Simon Wilches Castro, Scott MacDonald, Anna Drubich, Laura Cechanowicz) (Filmmaker's roles and the synopses can be found here.) Then there was a surprise extra prize from Richard Weinberg (Professor in the Division of Animation and Digital Arts). He came up and gave a limited edition print [...]

by Clifford at January 26, 2012 07:47 PM

Phil Plait - Bad Astronomy

This is a galaxy

I have nothing to add to this, except to say it’s great, and I saw it because Brian Cox mentioned it on Twitter.

Oh yeah: one more thing; watch it in HD and full screen. Coooool.

by Phil Plait at January 26, 2012 07:23 PM

ZapperZ - Physics and Physicists

X-Ray Laser From Atoms
Another stunning accomplishment. We now have a first documented evidence of the generation of x-rays from atoms, with the help of x-rays generated from an accelerator.

The new atomic x-ray laser won't replace the LCLS and other accelerator-based systems. In fact, to make the atomic laser work, researchers blasted neon atoms with x-rays from the LCLS itself. Still, the results mark a conceptual triumph, fulfilling a 45-year-old prediction that such an atomic x-ray laser is possible. "Nobody had done this before, and everybody knew that somebody had to go out and do this," says Philip Bucksbaum, director of SLAC's PULSE Institute for Ultrafast Energy Science in Menlo Park, California, who was not involved in the work. "So this is great."
It'll be interesting to see if they can turn this into a useful device, at least before an x-ray FEL catches up on producing similar quality x-ray beams.

Zz.


by ZapperZ (noreply@blogger.com) at January 26, 2012 07:08 PM

Symmetrybreaking - Fermilab/SLAC

Fermilab plans for a future of discovery
The only laboratory in the United States dedicated entirely to particle physics recently released its plan for the next two decades.

by Kathryn Grim at January 26, 2012 04:58 PM

Peter Coles - In the Dark

A Potted Prehistory of Cosmology

A few years ago I was asked to provide a short description of the history of cosmology, from the dawn of civilisation up to the establishment of the Big Bang model, in less than 1200 words. This is what I came up with. Who and what have I left out that you would have included?

–0–

Ā Is the Universe infinite? What is it made of? Has it been around forever?Ā  Will it all come to an end? Since prehistoric times, humans have sought to build some kind of conceptual framework for answering questions such as these. The first such theories were myths. But however naĆÆve or meaningless they may seem to us now, these speculations demonstrate the importance that we as a species have always attached to thinking about life, the Universe and everything.

Cosmology began to emerge as a recognisable scientific discipline with the Greeks, notably Thales (625-547 BC) and Anaximander (610-540 BC). The word itself is derived from the Greek ā€œcosmosā€, meaning the world as an ordered system or whole. In Greek, the opposite of ā€œcosmosā€ is ā€œchaosā€. The Pythagoreans of the 6th century BC regarded numbers and geometry as the basis of all natural things. The advent of mathematical reasoning, and the idea that one can learn about the physical world using logic and reason marked the beginning of the scientific era. Plato (427-348 BC) expounded a complete account of the creation of the Universe, in which a divine Demiurge creates, in the physical world, imperfect representations of the structures of pure being that exist only in the world of ideas. The physical world is subject to change, whereas the world of ideas is eternal and immutable. Aristotle (384-322 BC), a pupil of Plato, built on these ideas to present a picture of the world in which the distant stars and planets execute perfect circular motions, circles being a manifestation of ā€œdivineā€ geometry. Aristotle’s Universe is a sphere centred on the Earth. The part of this sphere that extends as far as the Moon is the domain of change, the imperfect reality of Plato, but beyond this the heavenly bodies execute their idealised circular motions. This view of the Universe was to dominate western European thought throughout the Middle Ages, but its perfect circular motions did not match the growing quantities of astronomical data being gathered by the Greeks from the astronomical archives made by the Babylonians and Egyptians. Although Aristotle had emphasised the possibility of learning about the Universe by observation as well as pure thought, it was not until Ptolemy’s Almagest, compiled in the 2nd Century AD, that a complete mathematical model for the Universe was assembled that agreed with all the data available.

Much of the knowledge acquired by the Greeks was lost to Christian culture during the dark ages, but it survived in the Islamic world. As a result, cosmological thinking during the Middle Ages of Europe was rather backward. Thomas Aquinas (1225-74) seized on Aristotle’s ideas, which were available in Latin translation at the time while the Almagest was not, to forge a synthesis of pagan cosmology with Christian theology which was to dominated Western thought until the 16th and 17th centuries.

The dismantling of the Aristotelian world view is usually credited to Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543).Ā  Ptolemy’s AlmagestĀ  was a complete theory, but it involved applying a different mathematical formula for the motion of each planet and therefore did not really represent an overall unifying system. In a sense, it described the phenomena of heavenly motion but did not explain them. Copernicus wanted to derive a single universal theory that treated everything on the same footing. He achieved this only partially, but did succeed in displacing the Earth from the centre of the scheme of things. It was not until Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) that a completely successful demolition of the Aristotelian system was achieved. Driven by the need to explain the highly accurate observations of planetary motion made by Tycho Brahe (1546-1601), Kepler replaced Aristotle’s divine circular orbits with more mundane ellipses.

The next great development on the road to modern cosmological thinking was the arrival on the scene of Isaac Newton (1642-1727). Newton was able to show, in his monumental Principia (1687), that the elliptical motions devised by Kepler were the natural outcome of a universal law of gravitation. Newton therefore re-established a kind of Platonic level on reality, the idealised world of universal laws of motion. The Universe, in Newton’s picture, behaves as a giant machine, enacting the regular motions demanded by the divine Creator and both time and space are absolute manifestations of an internal and omnipresent God.

Newton’s ideas dominated scientific thinking until the beginning of the 20th century, but by the 19th century the cosmic machine had developed imperfections. The mechanistic world-view had emerged alongside the first stirrings of technology. During the subsequent Industrial Revolution scientists had become preoccupied with the theory of engines and heat. These laws of thermodynamics had shown that no engine could work perfectly forever without running down. In this time there arose a widespread belief in the ā€œHeat Death of the Universeā€, the idea that the cosmos as a whole would eventually fizzle out just as a bouncing ball gradually dissipates its energy and comes to rest.

Another spanner was thrown into the works of Newton’s cosmic engine by Heinrich Olbers (1758-1840), who formulated in 1826 a paradox that still bears his name, although it was discussed by many before him, including Kepler. Olbers’ Paradox emerges from considering why the night sky is dark. In an infinite and unchanging Universe, every line of sight from an observer should hit a star, in much the same way as a line of sight through an infinite forest will eventually hit a tree. The consequence of this is that the night sky should be as bright as a typical star. The observed darkness at night is sufficient to prove the Universe cannot both infinite and eternal.

Whether the Universe is infinite or not, the part of it accessible to rational explanation has steadily increased. For Aristotle, the Moon’s orbit (a mere 400,000 km) marked a fundamental barrier, to Copernicus and Kepler the limit was the edge of the Solar System (billions of kilometres away). In the 18th and 19th centuries, it was being suggested that the Milky Way (a structure now known to be at least a billion times larger than the Solar System) to be was the entire Universe. Now it is known, thanks largely to Edwin Hubble (1889-1953), that the Milky Way is only one among hundreds of billions of similar galaxies.

The modern era of cosmology began in the early years of the 20th century, with a complete re-write of the laws of Nature. Albert Einstein (1879-1955) introduced the principle of relativity in 1905 and thus demolished Newton’s conception of space and time. Later, his general theory of relativity, also supplanted Newton’s law of universal gravitation. The first great works on relativistic cosmology by Alexander Friedmann (1888-1925), George LemaĆ®tre (1894-1966) and Wilhem de Sitter (1872-1934) formulated a new and complex language for the mathematical description of the Universe.

But while these conceptual developments paved the way, the final steps towards the modern era were taken by observers, not theorists. In 1929, Edwin Hubble, who had only recently shown that the Universe contained many galaxies like the Milky way, published the observations that led to the realisation that our Universe is expanding. That left the field open for two rival theories, one (ā€œThe Steady Stateā€, with no beginning and no end)Ā  in which matter is continuously created to fill in the gaps caused by the cosmic expansion and the other in which the whole shebang was created, in one go, in a primordial fireball we now call the Big Bang.

Eventually, in 1965, Arno Penzias and RobertĀ  Wilson discovered the cosmic microwave background radiation, proof (or as near to proof as you’re likely to see) that our Universe began in aĀ  Big Bang…


by telescoper at January 26, 2012 04:48 PM

Physicsworld blog

Will the scientific paper always be the gold standard for sharing new results?


By James Dacey

hands smll.jpg

A new report released earlier this week concluded that physical scientists use and access information in very different ways depending on the precise field they work in. Based on interviews and focus groups with a range of physical scientists, Collaborative Yet Independent reports that researchers have started to use online tools such as social networking sites in relation to their work. It found, however, that when it comes to disseminating new scientific results, publication in a traditional scientific journal remains the ā€œgold standardā€ for researchers.

We want to know whether you think this will remain the case looking to the future of science. In this week’s Facebook poll we are asking the question:

Do you believe that researchers will always view the scientific paper as the gold standard for sharing new results?

Yes
No, it will be replaced by other forms of communication

To cast your vote, please visit our Facebook page. And, as always, please feel free to explain your response by posting a comment on the poll.

In last week’s poll you may have clocked that we addressed the timely issue of timekeeping. It was the topic of the hour because last Thursday delegates were debating whether or not we should scrap the ā€œleap secondā€, at a meeting of the International Telecommunication Union in Geneva. This is a second that is added to or taken away from Co-ordinated Universal Time (UTC) every few years to take account of the slight speeding up or slowing down in the rotation of the Earth.

Since the first leap second was inserted in 1972, people have deliberated whether this is the most effective way of dealing with time. Some have suggested swapping the leap second in favour of the addition of a larger chunk of time after a longer period – such as a leap hour roughly every millennium. Others have suggested abandoning astronomical time altogether, replacing it with an Earth-based reference such as an atomic clock. To do so would decouple time from the Earth’s rotation, allowing traditional night hours to gradually become day hours, and over millions of years the seasons would shift from their traditional months.

We asked for your opinion on this issue and 72% of respondents believe that we should define time using an atomic clock. The remaining 28% would prefer to maintain our connection with the heavens by keeping astronomical time.

One commenter, Robert Minchin, believes that we should keep the leap second to save a stitch in time. ā€œGetting rid of them would simply be storing up problems for the future, when a larger leap-something will need to be introduced before the night becomes the day,ā€ he wrote. Another respondent, who goes by the name of Strum Cat, feels strongly that we should ditch astronomical time. He wrote: ā€œAre you kidding? Defining time by the rotation of Earth is fine for getting to work on time, but useless for precise science.ā€

It appears, however, that the debate is set to continue for some time yet. Last Thursday – after our poll went live – officials at the ITU announced that they have sent the issue back to a panel of experts for further assessment. They say a revised proposal will be introduced no earlier than 2015.

Thank you for all of your votes and comments, and we look forward to hearing from you again in this week’s poll.

by James Dacey at January 26, 2012 03:18 PM

Quantum Diaries

Famelab: your chance to be on stage

For a few years now, Famelab has grown into an international competition for young scientists aged 18-35 eager to share their passion.

Here is an unusual contest: participants are asked to communicate their work or interest in a 3-minute speech delivered to a general audience. In return, they get training from professionals (science communicators and media people), get invited to a Masterclass and can even make it to the finals at the Cheltenham Science Festival in the United Kingdom. The contestants are judged by professional scientists on their content, clarity and charisma. The goal is to detect the new voices for science and to find communicators able to captivate their audience.

It started in 2005 at the Cheltenham Science Festival. In 2007, the British Council adopted this competition as one of its flagship science engagement projects first in South East Europe for a pilot project, then expanding in 2010 to include 14 countries from Europe, Asia and Africa. Check out if there is a competition near you. You can also get help to host your own event.

On February 4, CERN will be hosting the Swiss semi-finals, with the finals to be held in Zurich on March 30. Anybody working or studying in Switzerland can participate. You can register up to the day of the event itself. Every one is also invited to attend the competition, which will start at 15:00 in CERN Globe of Innovation.

Don’t miss Tom Whyntie’s winning performance at the 2009 finals. Tom is a Ph.D student working on the CMS experiment at CERN. This is the most convincing speech you might ever heard about the importance of nothing.

Pauline Gagnon

To be alerted of new postings, follow me on Twitter: @GagnonPauline or sign-up on this mailing list to receive and e-mail notification.


The Globe of Innovation, CERN expositions and visitors center

by CERN at January 26, 2012 02:55 PM

Quantum Diaries

Famelab: une chance de briller sur scĆØne

Depuis quelques annƩes dƩjƠ, Famelab est devenu une compƩtition internationale pour les jeunes de 18 Ơ 35 ans intƩressƩ-e-s Ơ partager leur passion pour les sciences.

Cette compétition est assez inhabituelle: les participant-e-s ont trois minutes pour décrire leur recherche ou un sujet qui les intéresse devant une audience tout-public. En retour, ils et elles  reçoivent une formation donnée par des professionnel-le-s en communication et sont invité-es à participer à une « Masterclass ». Les finalistes iront au Cheltenham Science Festival au Royaume-Uni. Le jury est composé de scientifiques et gens des médias.

Les participant-e-s seront jugƩs sur leur clartƩ, le contenu et leur charisme. Le but est de repƩrer ceux et celles qui sauront captiver leur auditoire et qui pourraient devenir les nouvelles voix de la science.

L’idĆ©e est nĆ©e au Festival des Sciences de Cheltenham en 2005 et grĆ¢ce Ć  l’implication du British Council, l’évĆ©nement a vite Ć©voluĆ© d’un premier projet pilote dans le sud ouest de l’Europe pour atteindre 14 pays d’Europe, d’Asie et d’Afrique. VĆ©rifiez pour voir si une compĆ©tition se tient prĆØs de chez vous. Vous pouvez mĆŖme obtenir de l’aide pour lancer votre propre compĆ©tition.

Le 4 fĆ©vrier, le CERN accueillera les demi-finales suisses. La finale aura lieu Ć  Zurich le 30 mars. Toute personne travaillant ou Ć©tudiant en Suisse peut participer. On peut s’inscrire jusqu’au 4 fĆ©vrier. Le public est aussi invitĆ© Ć  assister Ć  la compĆ©tition dĆØs 15:00 au Globe de l’Innovation du CERN.

Ne manquez pas la performance du grand gagnant de 2009, Tom Whyntie. Tom est Ć©tudiant au doctorat et fait sa recherche au CERN sur l’expĆ©rience CMS. Vous ne trouverez pas discours plus convaincant sur l’importance de rien.

Pauline Gagnon

Pour ĆŖtre averti-e lors de la parution de nouveaux blogs, suivez-moi sur Twitter: @GagnonPauline ou par e-mail en ajoutant votre nom Ć  cette liste de distribution


Le Globe de l’Innovation du CERN, centre d’expositions et de visites

Ā 

by CERN (Francais) at January 26, 2012 02:50 PM

Chad Orzel - Uncertain Principles

Physicsworld blog

What is the scientific method?

bacon statue.jpg

By Hamish Johnston

Anyone who has trained as a scientist has learned about the "scientific method" – but the concept remains ill-defined and its origins are a topic of debate among philosophers and historians.

In this week's instalment of In Our Time on BBC Radio 4, Melvyn Bragg and his cabal of intellectuals discuss the role of the English polymath Francis Bacon (1561–1626) in the development of the method. Through writings such as Novum Organum Scientiarum, Bacon (right) championed the use of inductive reasoning in science. Indeed, Bacon had a very important influence on a future generation of scientists who founded the Royal Society in 1660.

Another character associated with the development of the scientific method is Isaac Newton. According to historian Simon Shaffer of Cambridge University, Newton first developed his rules of scientific enquiry to study a very non-scientific subject: the Bible's Book of Revelation. Newton then further developed his ideas by applying them to what we would think of as science.

Rounding off Bragg's panel are the philosophers John Worrall of the London School of Economics and Michela Massimi of University College London. The quartet go on to discuss how Charles Darwin's 1859 On the Origin of Species was first received by Victorian scientists. Not very well it seems – Darwin's arguments seemed to fly in the face of the scientific method because the processes of evolution could not be observed in laboratory experiments.

The team also looks at how the overthrow of Newtonian physics in the early 20th century by relativity and quantum mechanics led to a rethinking of the scientific method. Leading the way was philosopher Karl Popper with his idea of falsifiability and Thomas Kuhn with his theory of paradigm shifts.

You can listen to the programme here.

by Hamish Johnston at January 26, 2012 01:47 PM

Quantum Diaries

Anatomy of an aurora

This week the Earth has seen some increased magnetic activity in the upper atmosphere, and that means we got to see aurore! Across Northern Europe and the Northern USA people looked to the skies to see the northern lights. An aurora is one of the most beautiful sights in the natural world, and a phenomenon that actually tells us a lot about the Earth and how it interacts with its environment.

Those who followed me on Twitter (@aidanatcern) may have already seen some of the wonderful images of aurorae. There are dedicated webcams that capture the night sky, and you can see some sample images at the Aurora Webcam archive.

Aurora over Alaska (wikimedia)

Aurora over Alaska (wikimedia)

When charged particles accelerate or decelerate, they emit electromagnetic radiation, and it is this radiation that we see in the aurora. The color of the light depends on the wavelength of the radiation, and the intensity of the light depends on how much radiation is emitted. That means that there is always an aurora above us, but if the energy of the radiation is too low, or the intensity is too weak, we won’t see anything. Once we know how to interpret the light we can learn something about the radiation that is emitted. Usually we see a variety of colors in an aurora and each color corresponds to a different wavelength, so if we can see a region of the sky that is all one color, we know that the wavelength (and hence the energy, ignoring the effects of aberration) must be the same. That means we can ā€œmapā€ the sky and find contours of wavelength.

Since the particles are accelerating, there must be something that causes the acceleration. The Earth’s core is made of (among other materials) molten iron. The rotation of the Earth means that this core is also rotating, and a rotating fluid magnetic medium creates a magnetic dipole, giving the Earth magnetic North and South poles. These poles are aligned near the geographic North and South poles of the Earth, but not exactly. (In fact, magnetic North and South keep moving and from time to time they even swap places. The exact mechanism behind this is not yet fully understood, but geological records show it happens every few hundred thousand years. Simulations suggest that the rotating magnetic fluid is a chaotic system, so the reversals occur at stochastic, or random, intervals of time.)

The sun produces a stream of charged particles, known as the solar wind, and they create their own electromagnetic field. The two fields, from the Earth and the sun, interact and they force the charged particles along curved paths. As they particles move along these paths they accelerate and decelerate, and that is what produces the aurorae. The most recent increase in magnetic activity can be traced back to a huge coronal mass ejection that arrived from the sun. This video shows the arrival of the flare:

The effect looks impressive, but don’t be scared, solar winds like this are perfectly harmless. Far bigger winds have hit the Earth in the past few billions years and life has continued to flourish in spite of them. Life has adapted to the Earth’s magnetic field and this field protects us from the high energy particles.

It turns out that while looking up at the night sky is a beautiful and moving experience in itself, it is also important to particle physicists. Some of the most important discoveries in the last century came from a different phenomena, cosmic rays. Cosmic rays are very high energy particles (usually protons) that travel huge interstellar distances and rain down on the Earth in much the same way that the solar wind does. They interact with the upper atmosphere to create cascades of particles, and usually the muons are the only detectable particles that reach sea level. Interactions of these cosmic rays gave rise to the discovery of the muon (ā€œWho ordered that?!ā€), the pion and the kaon, the lightest forms of mesonic matter. It was around this time that large scale accelerators were developed, and we found hundreds of new mesons and baryons. Cosmic rays gave us a very small glimpse into a rich ā€œzooā€ of particles that has occupied physicists ever since.

Eventually, when we have exhausted our ability to accelerate particles to higher energies we might need to rely on cosmic rays again. There are proposals to develop ground based detectors to study the interactions of extremely high energy particles from outer space. Those particles have the potential to reach energy regimes we can only dream of at the moment. (Incidentally, this is one of the ways that we know for sure that the LHC cannot destroy the world. The universe creates much more energetic particles than we could ever hope to create in our accelerators, and since the universe seems to be in one piece we can conclude that the LHC is safe on Earth!)

An aurora from above (Expedition 28 on board the International Space Station)

An aurora from above (Expedition 28 on board the International Space Station)

If you’re fortunate enough to see an aurora then take a few moments to think about the huge forces at work, the vast distances involved, and how the colors tell us so much about how the Earth and solar wind behave. It really is one of the most beautiful phenomena in the universe.

by Aidan Randle-Conde at January 26, 2012 12:18 PM

CERN Bulletin

Safety Training: places available in February

There are places available in the forthcoming Safety courses. For updates and registrations, please refer to the Safety Training Catalogue.

FEBRUARY 2012
(alphabetical order)

Conduite de Plates-Formes Elevatrices Mobiles de Personnel (PEMP) / Cherry-picker driving :
09-FEB-12 au 10-FEB-12, 08.00 – 17.30, in French (with possibility to have handouts in English)

Magnetic Fields :
03-FEB-12, 9.30 – 12.00, in French

Self-rescue mask :
02-FEB-12, 8.30 – 10.00, in French
02-FEB-12, 10.30 – 12.00, in English
07-FEB-12, 8.30 – 10.00, in French
07-FEB-12, 10.30 – 12.00, in English
14-FEB-12, 8.30 – 10.00, in French
14-FEB-12, 10.30 – 12.00, in English
16-FEB-12, 8.30 – 10.00, in French
16-FEB-12, 10.30 – 12.00, in English
21-FEB-12, 8.30 – 10.00, in French
21-FEB-12, 10.30 – 12.00, in English
28-FEB-12, 8.30 – 10.00, in French
28-FEB-12, 10.30 – 12.00, in English

Radiological Protection :
03-FEB-12, 13.30 – 17.30, in English
07-FEB-12, 08.30 – 12.30, in English
07-FEB-12, 13.30 – 17.30, in French
10-FEB-12, 13.30 – 17.30, in English
24-FEB-12, 08.30 – 12.30, in English
24-FEB-12, 13.30 – 17.30, in French
28-FEB-12, 13.30 – 17.30, in English

Risques liƩs aux interventions en espace confinƩ / Confined spaces :
10-FEB-12, 09.00 – 17.30, in French

January 26, 2012 11:01 AM

arXiv blog

Pac-Man Proved NP-Hard By Computational Complexity Theory

The classic '80s arcade game turns out to be equivalent to the travelling salesman problem, according a new analysis of the computational complexity of video games

In the last few years, a few dedicated mathematicians have begun to study the computational complexity of video games. Their goal is to determine the inherent difficulty of the games and how they might be related to each other and other problems.

Today, Giovanni Viglietta at the University if Pisa in Italy reveals a body of Herculean work in this area in which he classifies a large number of games from the 1980s and 90s including Pac-Man, Doom, Tron and many others.

Viglietta's work involves several steps. The first is to determine the class of computational complexity to which the game belongs. Next, he works out whether knowing how to solve the game also allows you to solve many other problems in the same class, a property that complexity theorists call 'hardness'. Finally, he determines whether the game is complete, meaning that it is one of the 'hardest' in its class.Ā 

His approach is relatively straightforward. He first works through a number of proofs showing that any video game with specific game-playing properties falls into a certain complexity class.Ā 

He then classifies the games according to game-playing properties they have.Ā 

For instance, one type of game involves a player moving through a Ā landscape visiting a number of locations. He calls this 'location traversal' and an example would be a game in which certain items are strewn around a landscape and the goal is to collect them all.Ā 

Some location traversal games allow each location to be visited only once. So-called single use path games might include downhill races.Ā 

He then uses graph theory to prove that any game exhibiting both location traversal and single-use paths is NP-hard, that's the same class of complexity as the travelling salesman problem.Ā 

It turns out that Pac-Man falls into this category (the proof involves distributing power pills around the maze in a way that enforces single use paths).

He shows how games fall into other complexity categories too. For example, games that feature pressure pads to open and close doors are PSPACE-hard if each door is controlled by two pressure plates. Doom falls into this category.

And so on.

The resulting list is impressive. Here are a few of his results:

Boulder Dash (First Star Software, 1984) is NP-hard.

Deflektor (Vortex Software, 1987) is in L.

Prince of Persia (BrĆøderbund, 1989) is PSPACE-complete.

Tron (Bally Midway, 1982) is NP-hard.

For the full list and reasoning, see the paper below.

That's clearly been a labour of love for Viglietta, given the title of his paper: "Gaming Is A Hard Job, But Someone Has To Do It!"

Interestingly, he says this kind of analysis is unnecessary for modern games. "Most recent commercial games incorporate Turing-equivalent scripting languages that easily allow the design of undecidable puzzles as part of the gameplay," he says.

In a way, that makes these older games all the more charming still.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1201.4995Ā :Gaming Is A Hard Job, But Someone Has To Do It!



January 26, 2012 10:33 AM

Peter Coles - In the Dark

Sonnet No. 60

Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore,
So do our minutes hasten to their end;
Each changing place with that which goes before,
In sequent toil all forwards do contend.
Nativity, once in the main of light,
Crawls to maturity, wherewith being crown’d,
Crooked eclipses ā€˜gainst his glory fight,
And Time that gave doth now his gift confound.
Time doth transfix the flourish set on youth
And delves the parallels in beauty’s brow,
Feeds on the rarities of nature’s truth,
And nothing stands but for his scythe to mow:
And yet to times in hope my verse shall stand,
Praising thy worth, despite his cruel hand.

Sonnet No. 60, by William Shakespeare (1564-1616)


by telescoper at January 26, 2012 09:25 AM

John Baez - Azimuth

Ban Elsevier

Please take the pledge not to do business with Elsevier. 404 scientists have done it so far:

• The cost of knowledge.

You can separately say you

1) won’t publish with them,
2) won’t referee for them, and/or
3) won’t do editorial work for them.

At least do number 2): how often can you do something good by doing less work? When a huge corporation relies so heavily on nasty monopolistic practices and unpaid volunteer labor, they leave themselves open to this.

This pledge website is the brainchild of Tim Gowers, a Fields medalist and prominent math blogger:

• Tim Gowers, Elsevier: my part in its downfall and http://thecostofknowledge.com.

In case you’re not familiar with the Elsevier problem, here’s something excerpted from my website. This does not yet mention Elsevier’s recent support of the Research Works Act, which would try to roll back the US government’s requirement that taxpayer-funded medical research be made freely available online. Nor does it mention the fake medical journals created by Elsevier, where what looked like peer-reviewed papers were secretly advertisements paid for by drug companies! Nor does it mention the Chaos, Solitons and Fractals fiasco. Indeed, it’s hard keeping up with Elsevier’s dirty deeds!

The problem and the solutions

The problem of highly priced science journals is well-known. A wave of mergers in the publishing business has created giant firms with the power to extract ever higher journal prices from university libraries. As a result, libraries are continually being forced to cough up more money or cut their journal subscriptions. It’s really become a crisis.

Luckily, there are also two counter-trends at work. In mathematics and physics, more and more papers are available from a free electronic database called the arXiv, and journals are beginning to let papers stay on this database even after they are published. In the life sciences, PubMed Central plays a similar role.

There are also a growing number of free journals. Many of these are peer-reviewed, and most are run by academics instead of large corporations.

The situation is worst in biology and medicine: the extremely profitable spinoffs of research in these subjects has made it easy for journals to charge outrageous prices and limit the free nature of discourse. A non-profit organization called the Public Library of Science was formed to fight this, and circulated an open letter calling on publishers to adopt reasonable policies. 30,000 scientists signed this and pledged to:

publish in, edit or review for, and personally subscribe to only those scholarly and scientific journals that have agreed to grant unrestricted free distribution rights to any and all original research reports that they have published, through PubMed Central and similar online public resources, within 6 months of their initial publication date.

Unsurprisingly, the response from publishers was chilly. As a result, the Public Library of Science started its own free journals in biology and medicine, with the help of a 9 million dollar grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

A number of other organizations are also pushing for free access to scholarly journals, such as Create Change, the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, and the Budapest Open Access Initiative, funded by George Soros.

Editorial boards are beginning to wise up, too. On August 10, 2006, all the editors of the math journal Topology resigned to protest the outrageous prices of the publisher, Reed Elsevier. In August of this year, the editorial board of the Springer journal K-Theory followed suit. The Ecole Normale Superieure has also stopped having Elsevier publish the journal Annales Scientifiques de l’École Normale SupĆ©rieure.

So, we may just win this war! But only if we all do our part.

What we can do

What can we do to keep academic discourse freely available to all? Here are some things:

1. Don’t publish in overpriced journals.

2. Don’t do free work for overpriced journals (like refereeing and editing).

3. Put your articles on the arXiv or a similar site before publishing them.

4. Only publish in journals that let you keep your articles on the arXiv or a similar site.

5. Support free journals by publishing in them, refereeing for them, editing them… even starting your own!

6. Help make sure free journals and the arXiv stay free.

7. Help start a system of independent ā€˜referee boardsā€˜ for arXiv papers. These can referee papers and help hiring, tenure and promotion committees to assess the worth of papers, eliminating the last remaining reasons for the existence of traditional for-profit journals.

The nice thing is that most of these are easy to do! Only items 5 through 7 require serious work. As for item 4, a lot of math and physics journals not only let you keep your article on the arXiv, but let you submit it by telling them its arXiv number! In math it’s easy to find these journals, because there’s a public list of them.

Of course, you should read the copyright agreement that you’ll be forced to sign before submitting to a journal or publishing a book. Check to see if you can keep your work on the arXiv, on your own website, etcetera. You can pretty much assume that any rights you don’t explicitly keep, your publisher will get. Eric Weisstein didn’t do this, and look what happened to him: he got sued and spent over a year in legal hell!

Luckily it’s not hard to read these copyright agreements: you can get them off the web. An extensive list is available from Sherpa, an organization devoted to free electronic archives.

If you think maybe you want to start your own journal, or move an existing journal to a cheaper publisher, read Joan Birman’s article about this. Go to the Create Change website and learn what other people are doing. Also check out SPARC—the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition. They can help. And try the Budapest Open Access Initiative—they give out grants.

You can also support the Public Library of Science or join the Open Archives Initiative.

Also: if you like mathematics, tell your librarian about Mathematical Sciences Publishers, a nonprofit organization run by mathematicians for the purpose of publishing low-cost, high-quality math journals.

Which journals are overpriced?

In 1997 Robion Kirby urged mathematicians not to submit papers to, nor edit for, nor referee for overpriced journals. I think this suggestion is great, and it applies not just to mathematics but all disciplines. There is really no good reason for us to donate our work to profit-making corporations who sell it back to us at exorbitant prices! Indeed in climate science this has a terrible effect: crackpot bloggers distribute their misinformation free of charge, while lots of important serious climate science papers are hidden, available only to people who work at institutions with expensive subscriptions.

But how can you tell if a journal is overpriced? In mathematics, Up-to-date information on the rise of journal prices is available from the American Mathematical Society. They even include an Excel spreadsheet that lets you do your own calculations with this data! Some of this information is nicely summarized on a webpage by Ulf Rehmann. Using these tools you can make up your own mind which journals are too expensive to be worth supporting with your free volunteer labor.

What about other subjects? I don’t know. Maybe you do?

When I first learned how bad the situation was, I started by boycotting all journals published by Reed Elsevier. This juggernaut was formed by merger of Reed Publishing and Elsevier Scientific Press in 1993. In August 2001 it bought Harcourt Press—which in turn owned Academic Press, which ran a journal I helped edit, Advances in Mathematics. I don’t work for that journal anymore! The reason is that Reed Elsevier is a particularly bad culprit when it comes to charging high prices. You can see this from the above lists of journal prices, and you can also see it in the business news. In 2002, Forbes magazine wrote:

If you are not a scientist or a lawyer, you might never guess which company is one of the world’s biggest in online revenue. Ebay will haul in only $1 billion this year. Amazon has $3.5 billion in revenue but is still, famously, losing money. Outperforming them both is Reed Elsevier, the London-based publishing company. Of its $8 billion in likely sales this year, $1.5 billion will come from online delivery of data, and its operating margin on the internet is a fabulous 22%.

Credit this accomplishment to two things. One is that Reed primarily sells not advertising or entertainment but the dry data used by lawyers, doctors, nurses, scientists and teachers. The other is its newfound marketing hustle: Its CEO since 1999 has been Crispin Davis, formerly a soap salesman.

But Davis will have to keep hustling to stay out of trouble. Reed Elsevier has fat margins and high prices in a business based on information—a commodity, and one that is cheaper than ever in the internet era. New technologies and increasingly universal access to free information make it vulnerable to attack from below. Today pirated music downloaded from the web ravages corporate profits in the music industry. Tomorrow could be the publishing industry’s turn.

Some customers accuse Reed Elsevier of price gouging. Daniel DeVito, a patent lawyer with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, is a fan of Reed’s legal-search service, but he himself does free science searches on the Google site before paying for something like Reed’s ScienceDirect—and often finds what he’s looking for at no cost. Reed can ill afford to rest.

Why should we slave away unpaid to keep Crispin Davis and his ilk rolling in dough? There’s really no good reason.

Sneaky tricks

To fight against the free journals and the arXiv, publishing companies are playing sneaky tricks like these:

• Proprietary Preprint Archives. Examples included ChemWeb and something they called "The Mathematics Preprint Server". The latter was especially devious, because mathematicians used to call the arXiv "the mathematics preprint server".

However, the Mathematics Preprint Server didn’t fool many smart people, so lots of the papers they got were crap, like a supposed proof of Goldbach’s conjecture, and a claim that the rotation of a galactic supercluster is due to a "topological defect" in spacetime. Eventually Elsevier gave up and stopped accepting new papers on their preprint server. Now it’s a laughable shadow of its former self. Similarly, ChemWeb was sold off.

• Web Spamming. More recently, publishers have tried a new trick: ā€œweb spammingā€, also known as ā€œsearch engine spammingā€ or ā€œcloakingā€. The company gives search engine crawlers access to full-text articles — but when you try to read these articles, you get a "doorway page" demanding a subscription or payment. Sometimes you’ll even be taken to a page that has nothing to do with the paper you thought you were about to see!

Culprits include Springer, Reed Elsevier, and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers. The last one seems to have quit — but check out their powerpoint presentation on this subject, courtesy of Carl Willis.

If you see pages like this, report them to Google or your favorite search engine.

• Journal Bundling. Worse still is the strategy of "bundling" subscriptions into huge all-or-nothing packages, so libraries can’t save money by ceasing to subscribe to a single journal. It’s a clever trap, especially because these bundled subscriptions look like a good deal at first. The cost becomes apparent only later. Now universities libraries are being bankrupted as the prices of these bundles keep soaring. The library of my own university, U.C. Riverside, barely has money for any books anymore!

Luckily, people are catching on. In 2003, Cornell University bravely dropped their subscription to 930 Elsevier journals. Four North Carolina universities have joined the revolt, and the University of California has also been battling Elsevier. For other actions universities have taken, read Peter Suber’s list.

• Legal bullying. Large corporations like to scare people by means of threats of legal action backed up by deep pockets. A classic example is the lawsuit launched by Gordon and Breach against the American Physical Society for publishing lists of journal prices. Luckily they lost this suit.

• Hiring a Dr. Evil lookalike as their PR consultant.

Click either of the pictures for an explanation.


by John Baez at January 26, 2012 05:17 AM

The n-Category Cafe

Banning Elsevier

Please take the pledge not to do business with Elsevier. 402 scientists have done it so far:

You can separately say you 1) won’t publish with them, 2) won’t referee for them, and/or 3) won’t do editorial work. At least do number 2): activism is rarely so little work, but when a huge corporation relies so heavily on nasty monopolistic practices and unpaid volunteer labor, they leave themselves open to this.

This pledge website got started thanks to Tim Gowers:

For more, see:

… and the many links therein!

by john (baez@math.ucr.edu) at January 26, 2012 04:33 AM

Emily Lakdawalla - The Planetary Society Blog

Stephen Hawking's Curios – UPDATE
by Charlene Anderson The Cosmos Award for Public Presentation of Science – at least the blown-glass Saturn trophy given to Stephen Hawking by The Planetary Society – continues to appear around the Internet. The BBC has now posted a great image from the Science Museum in London's exhibit of curios from Dr. Hawking's office. That's our Saturn on the table to the right. We were surprised and honored to see the Cosmos Award selected to help ....

January 26, 2012 12:33 AM

The Great Beyond - Nature blog

ā€˜Newt Skywalker’ aims for the Moon and Mars

In a campaign stop today along Florida’s Space Coast, Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich unveiled his vision for US goals in space: by 2020, he says, he wants a permanent base on the Moon. By then, he also wants constant near-Earth-orbit commercial activity supporting science, tourism and manufacturing — and he also wants a propulsion system in place by then that would allow a manned trip to Mars by 2030. He even suggests that he would devote 10% of NASA’s budget to support entrepreneurial prizes of the kind that spurred Lindbergh’s flight across the Atlantic.

The campaign stop in Cocoa came as Gingrich looked ahead to the 31 January primary election in Florida, a crucial state that could propel either Gingrich or his chief rival, Mitt Romney, to the Republican nomination.

Romney has made fun of Gingrich’s tendency to romanticize space — ā€˜Newt Skywalker’ is one of Gingrich’s self-acknowledged nicknames. But Gingrich is unabashed in his enthusiasm. ā€œI have a deep passion about this because I’m old enough that I used to read Missiles and Rockets magazine,ā€ he told supporters.Ā  Yet even as he exhorted NASA to reach higher, he denigrated a bureaucratic culture that he says spends more time studying things than doing things. ā€œIt’s tragic to see what’s happened to our space programme over the last 30 years,ā€ he says. ā€œI’m sick of being told we have to be timid.ā€

How would Gingrich change NASA’s culture? He had several prescriptions. In addition to supporting tax-free prizes, he says that NASA should be attempting ā€œfive or eightā€ launches a day. NASA and the military should be working to make their rockets interchangeable, and extra space on rocket flights should not be wasted. Finally, he says that NASA should just be doing more things, and taking more risks: ā€œ1% of the studies and 10 times as many experimentsā€. Overall, it sounds a lot like the earlier NASA culture of ā€œfaster, better, cheaperā€ under former administrator Dan Goldin. ā€œWe want to become lean and aggressive,ā€ Gingrich says.

Image credit: Gage Skidmore

Ā 

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by Eric Hand at January 26, 2012 12:00 AM

January 25, 2012

Christian P. Robert - xi'an's og

ABC [PhD] course

As mentioned in the latest post on ABC, I am giving a short doctoral course on ABC methods and convergence at CREST next week. I have now made a preliminary collection of my slides (plus a few from Jean-Michel Marin’s), available on slideshare (as ABC in Roma, because I am also giving the course in Roma, next month, with an R lab on top of it!):

and I did manage to go over the book by GouriƩroux and Monfort on indirect inference over the weekend. I still need to beef up the slides before the course starts next Thursday! (The core version of the slides is actually from the course I gave in Wharton more than a year ago.)


Filed under: Books, R, Statistics, Travel, University life Tagged: ABC, CREST, graduate course, indirect inference, Malakoff, model choice, Paris, PhD, R, Roma, summary statistics

by xi'an at January 25, 2012 11:12 PM

Chad Orzel - Uncertain Principles

A Toy Model of the Arrow of Time

The toy model of statistical entropy that I talked about the other day is the sort of thing that, were I a good computational physicist, I would've banged out very quickly. I'm not a good computational physicist, but by cargo-culting my way through some of the VPython examples, I managed to get something that mostly works:

entropy_screenshot.jpg

The graph at the bottom of that window is the entropy versus "time" for a lattice of 20 sites with a 25% hopping probability (either left or right). The window with the colored balls at the upper left is a graphical representation-- red dots are "occupied" sites, white "unoccupied." The VPython code to do this is here: entropytestN2.py, from which you can see that I'm not much of a computational physicist, let alone a programmer (there are some really kludgey initialization steps that exist because it kept throwing strange errors when I did simpler things that should've worked, and I didn't have the patience to figure out the underlying problem).

It is, as I expected, kind of fun to play around with. I think there might be some bias built in that ends up pushing things to the right, but I'm not sure whether that's real or just my inability to recognize randomness. As expected, for small numbers of sites, you see frequent fluctuations down to zero, and as you increase the number of sites, significant decreases in entropy become much rarer.

I haven't attempted to do anything quantitative with this, because I don't know how to write data out from VPython into a form that any of my other analysis programs might use. If I think of a good way to do it, I might try to quantify this a little more, but for now, I'm happy just to have a working toy.

Read the comments on this post...

January 25, 2012 09:22 PM

Clifford V. Johnson - Asymptotia

CelebritySC is on the Story!
So I learned about a blog called CelebritySC recently, when they got in touch to ask me about the science film competition, and whether they could attend the showcase and cover it as press. (They also asked me some background about it, and posted an interview here.) They've been doing update posts on the whole thing in the days leading up to the event, and I just saw that they're even making guesses about which films will win prizes! From Anya Lehr's piece, I'd guess she's been chatting with the filmmakers to [...]

by Clifford at January 25, 2012 08:38 PM

Emily Lakdawalla - The Planetary Society Blog

Geek craft: GRAIL twins Ebb and Flow in plastic canvas
Those of you who follow me on Twitter know that after beginning with Dawn last week, I've kept my fingers busy, stitching more spacecraft from plastic canvas. I now have prototypes for GRAIL, New Horizons, and MESSENGER (though I'm not completely happy with how the last one turned out, and am starting over with a modified design).Click to enlarge >SpaceCraftEbb, Flow, New Horizons, MESSENGER, and Dawn, all to the same scale (about 1:50).Enough ....

January 25, 2012 07:10 PM

Jester - Resonaances

SUSY and Higgs: romance or drama?
At the beginning of 2012, particle physicists are in such a confusing state of mind: Higgs has been practically discovered but we're not allowed to celebrate yet. It's like when your football team is on top of the league, playing in the last round against a relegated team and winning 2:0 after the first half; nothing is decided yet, anything may happen, but... come on... So, to stay sane, most of us act as if the 125 GeV Higgs were a fact and work out the consequences.

In that vein, this post is about a complicated relationship between the 125 GeV Higgs and supersymmetry. There is this lore that SUSY predicts the Higgs mass below 130 GeV, and you might have heard people saying that the recent almost-discovery of the Higgs is an incredible success of supersymmetry. Well, strictly speaking, the number 130 GeV is taken out of my ass. Instead, with some degree of rigor, one can make the following 3 statements:
  1. Minimal SUSY without fine-tuning predicts the Higgs mass close to the Z boson mass, that is about 90 GeV.
  2. Minimal SUSY ignoring fine-tuning predicts the Higgs boson lighter than 160 GeV.
  3. Non-minimal SUSY in general makes no predictions about the Higgs mass.
The last point is pretty obvious: once you agree to extend the minimal supersymmetric model (MSSM) then options become infinite. Even straightforward extensions of the MSSM, such as the NMSSM with one additional singlet field in the Higgs sector, allow one to cover the entire Higgs mass range up to almost a TeV. (You might be confused if you heard that the NMSSM predicts the Higgs mass below 140 GeV. That however is the case when the Higgs self-coupling is required to stay perturbative all the way up to the GUT scale, a strong and not particularly motivated assumption.)

The statement #1 on my list boils down to the fact that in the MSSM the quartic term in the Higgs potential (which fixes the Higgs mass, given its vacuum expectation value) is not a free parameter. Instead, supersymmetry ties the quartic coupling to the electroweak gauge couplings.
Up to 1-loop precision the Higgs mass is given by the formula:
(for vanishing A-terms, a large tanβ, and universal stop masses, and setting yt=1). In the first approximation one gets the famous bound m_Higgs ≤ m_Z. Thus, if the MSSM were for real, the Higgs should have been seen at LEP.

Only when supersymmetry is badly broken, that is when the top mass is much smaller than the mass of its scalar partner the stop, the one-loop logarithmic term can be large enough to raise the Higgs mass considerably above the Z boson mass. In particular, for the 125 GeV Higgs the tree-level and loop contributions must be, amusingly, almost exactly equal. The price for making the stop mass large goes under the name of fine-tuning. Since vacuum equations in the MSSM generically marry the SUSY scale to the weak scale, m_stop ~ m_Z , as soon m_stop >> m_top one needs to carefully tune the parameters of the theory so as to cancel various excessive contributions to the Z boson mass. This goes against the original motivation for supersymmetry which was precisely to exorcise fine-tuning.

This brings us the statement #2 on my list. When the fine-tuning issue is ignored, the scenario known as split supersymmetry (SS), the Higgs mass in the MSSM can be much larger than the Z boson mass. In the plot on the right, you can see that the Higgs mass can reach 160 GeV for squark masses at the GUT scale. From the same plot, one finds that the 125 GeV mass correspond to roughly 10 TeV squark masses (you should look at the middle solid line). Thus, the almost-discovery of the 125 GeV Higgs at the LHC clearly points to Somewhat Split Supersymmetry (SSS) ;-)

All in all, the story of Higgs and SUSY is getting less like a Hollywood romance and more like a Ken Loach movie of hardship and misery. Of course, it is well known that 10 TeV squark masses are not an inevitable consequence of the MSSM and 125 GeV Higgs. Playing with another SUSY breaking parameter, the so-called A-term, the Higgs mass can be dialed to any desired value. When the A-term is judiciously chosen, the scalar top partners could even be at a few hundred GeV, well within the reach of last year's LHC run. See the violet band in the plot on the right. Thus a happy ending cannot be completely excluded at this point. However, more and more theorists are beginning to prepare an exit strategy, like ...nobody said SUSY had to show up at the LHC, maybe fine-tuning 1:1000 is not so bad, maybe SUSY is really at 10 TeV, etc... In a sense, this is right: from the theory point of view there is no fundamental difference between 1 in 100 and 1 in 1000 fine-tuning. Only a practical one, for LHC experimentalists :-)

To wrap up this inflammatory post: the point I was trying to make is that 125 GeV Higgs is not a successful prediction but rather a serious setback from the point of view of SUSY. In non-minimal SUSY any Higgs mass is possible. Minimal SUSY can accommodate any mass up to 160 GeV, depending on how much fine-tuning you're willing to accept; 125 GeV Higgs points to 10 TeV squarks, outside the LHC reach.

by Jester (noreply@blogger.com) at January 25, 2012 03:50 PM

Sabine Hossenfelder - Backreaction

The Planck length as a minimal length
The best scientific arguments are those that are surprising at first sight, yet at second sight they make perfect sense. The following argument, which goes back to Mead's 1964 paper "Possible Connection Between Gravitation and Fundamental Length," is of this type. Look at the abstract and note that it took more than 5 years from submission to publication of the paper. Clearely, Mead's argument seemed controversial at this time, even though all he did was to study the resolution of a microscope taking into account gravity.

For all practical purposes, the gravitational interaction is far too weak to be of relevance for microscopy. Normally, we can neglect gravity, in which case we can use Heisenberg's argument that I first want to remind you of before adding gravity. In the following, the speed of light c and Planck's constant ā„ are equal to one, unless they are not. If you don't know how natural units work, you should watch this video, or scroll down past the equations and just read the conclusion.

Consider a photon with frequency ω, moving in direction x, which scatters on a particle whose position on the x-axis we want to measure (see image below). The scattered photons that reach the lens (red) of the microscope have to lie within an angle ε to produces an image from which we want to infer the position of the particle.

According to classical optics, the wavelength of the photon sets a limit to the possible resolution Ī”x But the photon used to measure the position of the particle has a recoil when it scatters and transfers a momentum to the particle. Since one does not know the direction of the photon to better than ε, this results in an uncertainty for the momentum of the particle in direction xTaken together one obtains Heisenberg's uncertainty principle
We know today that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is more than a limit on the resolution of microscopes; up to a factor of order one, the above inequality is a fundamental principle of quantum mechanics.

Now we repeat this little exercise by taking into account gravity.

Since we know that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is a fundamental property of nature, it does not make sense, strictly speaking, to speak of the position and momentum of the particle at the same time. Consequently, instead of speaking about the photon scattering off the particle as if that would happen in one particular point, we should speak of the photon having a strong interaction with the particle in some region of size R (shown in the above image).

With gravity, the relevant question now will be what happens with the measured particle due to the gravitational attraction of the test particle.

For any interaction to take place and subsequent measurement to be possible, the time elapsed between the interaction and measurement has to be at least of the order of the time, Ļ„, the photon needs to travel the distance R, so that Ļ„ is larger than R. (The blogger editor has an issue with the "larger than" and "smaller than" signs, which is why I avoid using them.) The photon carries an energy that, though in general tiny, exerts a gravitational pull on the particle whose position we wish to measure. The gravitational acceleration acting on the particle is at least of the orderwhere G is Newton's constant which is, in natural units, the square of the Planck length lPl. Assuming that the particle is non-relativistic and much slower than the photon, the acceleration lasts about the duration the photon is in the region of strong interaction. From this, the particle acquires a velocity of v ā‰ˆ aRThus, in the time R, the aquired velocity allows the particle to travels a distance of L ā‰ˆ Gω.

Since the direction of the photon was unknown to within ε, the direction of the acceleration and the motion of the is also unknown. Projection on the x-axis then yields the additional uncertainty ofCombining this with the usual uncertainty (multiply both, then take the square root), one obtainsThus, we find that the distortion of the measured particle by the gravitational field of the particle used for measurement prevents the resolution of arbitrarily small structures. Resolution is bounded by the Planck length, which is about 10-33cm. The Planck length thus plays the role of a minimal length.

(You might criticize this argument because it makes use of Newtonian gravity rather than general relativity, so let me add that, in his paper, Mead goes on to show that the estimate remains valid also in general relativity.)

As anticipated, this minimal length is far too small to be of relevance for actual microscopes; its relevance is conceptual. Given that Heisenberg's uncertainty turned out to be a fundamental property of quantum mechanics, encoded in the commutation relations, we have to ask then if not this modified uncertainty too should be promoted to fundamental relevance. In fact, in the last 5 decades this simple argument has inspired a great many works that attempted exactly this. But that is a different story and shall be told another time.

To finish this story, let me instead quote from a letter that Mead, the author of the above argument, wrote to Physics Today in 2001. In it, he recalls how little attention his argument originally received:
"[In the 1960s], I read many referee reports on my papers and discussed the matter with every theoretical physicist who was willing to listen; nobody that I contacted recognized the connection with the Planck proposal, and few took seriously the idea of [the Planck length] as a possible fundamental length. The view was nearly unanimous, not just that I had failed to prove my result, but that the Planck length could never play a fundamental role in physics. A minority held that there could be no fundamental length at all, but most were then convinced that a [different] fundamental length..., of the order of the proton Compton wavelength, was the wave of the future. Moreover, the people I contacted seemed to treat this much longer fundamental length as established fact, not speculation, despite the lack of actual evidence for it."

by Bee (noreply@blogger.com) at January 25, 2012 02:07 PM

Phil Plait - Bad Astronomy

Spectacular site for Supernova 2012A

The first supernova of the year was spotted a couple of weeks ago: Supernova 2012A, in the galaxy NGC 3239 in the constellation of Leo. Adam Block of the Mount Lemmon SkyCenter took a phenomenal image of it:

[Click to corecollapsenate.]

Funny, the supernova isn’t what you’d expect; it’s not that really bright star (which is probably a star in our own galaxy that happens to be superposed on the galaxy) but instead the fainter one indicated. Images taken years ago show no sign of the new star.

The galaxy is called NGC 3239 (or Arp 263), and is a weird galaxy technically classified as irregular. Its distance isn’t well known, but it’s something like 25 million light years away or so. I imagine we’ll get a better distance determination very soon, since that’s important in understanding how much energy a supernova puts out.

The shape of the galaxy is probably the result of the collision of two separate galaxies which are still in the process of merging. The odd shape is a consequence of that. The pinkish glow is from gas clouds actively forming stars, and the overall blue tinge is from massive, hot, young stars, again probably triggered by the galaxy collisions. In fact, SN 2012A is the type of supernova formed when a massive star explodes, and these are short-lived stars.

The supernova is bright enough to be spotted in amateur-astronomy sized telescopes, so it’s getting some attention, like here and here and here. Adam Block has access to a telescope nearly a meter across which is equipped with an excellent camera, so his image is spectacular. I love all the background galaxies as well; we’re looking well away from the obscuring dust and junk floating around in our own galaxy, as well as toward a part of the Universe littered with distant galaxies.

It used to be that only a few dozen supernovae were discovered in a year, so the first one of a new year may not have been found for some time. Supernova 1987A — which I studied for my PhD — was the first one in 1987 and it was seen in the third week of February! Now, with robotic telescopes sweeping the skies with exquisite sensitivity, it’s rare to go a whole week in the new year without discovering one. And this is a numbers game: the more supernovae we find, the better we can understand them.

Image credit: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona, used with permission.


Related posts:

- New pic: SN2011fe in M101
- Betelgeuse’s sandy gift
- A supernova is reborn
- Blast site blastocyte

by Phil Plait at January 25, 2012 02:00 PM

ZapperZ - Physics and Physicists

The Physics of Wind-Blown Sand and Dust
This review article might be of some interest to some people, especially those who are curious about how we can know so much about the conditions on Mars based on what we can observe of the landscape.

Abstract: The transport of dust and sand by wind is a potent erosional force, creates sand dunes and ripples, and loads the atmosphere with suspended dust aerosols. This article presents an extensive review of the physics of wind-blown sand and dust on Earth and Mars. Specifically, we review the physics of aeolian saltation, the formation and development of sand dunes and ripples, the physics of dust aerosol emission, the weather phenomena that trigger dust storms, and the lifting of dust by dust devils and other small-scale vortices. We also discuss the physics of wind-blown sand and dune formation on Venus and Titan.

Zz.


by ZapperZ (noreply@blogger.com) at January 25, 2012 01:17 PM

Christian P. Robert - xi'an's og

Drunkard’s discourse

A particularly long and mostly if locally coherent discourse by a single drunkard in the Paris mƩtro this morning. Excerpts:

- Je prĆ©fĆ©re complet blanc, complet noir. Quand tu te regardes tout nu dans le miroir le matin, t’as pas de problĆØme!

…

- LĆ -bas, y mange avec les macaques, y mange avec les rats, y nage avec les morts, y vit,Ā  y tombe malade, c’est pas comme ici… Y peut pas tenir longtemps, y meurt au bout du compte, y peut pas fonder une famille, cĀ“est pour cela que j’ai laissĆ© tomber la mĆØre…, c’est pas possible!

…

- Ici, c’est la SibĆ©rie, essaie de dormir dehors, lĆ , dans la voiture, tu peux pas dormir, tu deviens dingue. Y faut s’habituer, quand tu as l’habitude…., c’est plus facile.


Filed under: Travel, Wines Tagged: drunkard, mƩtro, Paris

by xi'an at January 25, 2012 11:12 AM

Marco Frasca - The Gauge Connection

Quantum mechanics and the square root of Brownian motion

ResearchBlogging.org

There is a very good reason why I was silent in the past days. The reason is that I was involved in one of the most difficult article to write down since I do research (and are more than twenty years now!).  This paper arose during a very successful collaboration with two colleagues of mine: Alfonso Farina and Matteo Sedehi. Alfonso is a recognized worldwide authority in radar technology and last year has got a paper published here about the ubiquitous Tartaglia-Pascal triangle and its applications in several areas of mathematics and engineering. What was making Alfonso unsatisfied was the way the question of Tartaglia-Pascal triangle fits quantum mechanics. It appeared like this is somewhat an unsettled matter. Tartaglia-Pascal triangle gives, in the proper limit, the solution of the heat equation typical of Brownian motion, the most fundamental of all stochastic processes. But when one comes to the Schroedinger equation, notwithstanding the formal resemblance between these two equations, the presence of the imaginary term changes things dramatically. So, a wave packet of a free particle is seen to spread like the square of time rather than linearly. Then, Alfonso asked to me to try to clarify the situation and see what is the role of Tartaglia-Pascal triangle in quantum mechanics. This question is old almost as quantum mechanics itself. Several people tried to explain the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics through some kind of Brownian motion of space and the most famous of these attempts is due to Edward Nelson. Nelson was able to show that there exists a stochastic process producing hydrodynamic equations from which the Schroedinger equation can be derived. This idea turns out to be a description of quantum mechanics similar to the way David Bohm devised it. So, this approach was exposed to criticisms that can be summed up in a paper by Peter Hänggi, Hermann Grabert and Peter Talkner (see here) denying any possible representation of quantum mechanics as a classical stochastic process.

So, it is clear that the situation appears rather difficult to clarify with such notable works. With Alfonso and Matteo, we have had several discussions and the conclusion was striking: Tartaglia-Pascal triangle appears in quantum mechanics rather with its square root! It appeared like quantum mechanics is not itself a classical stochastic process but the square root of it. This could explain why several excellent people could have escaped the link.

At this point, it became quite difficult to clarify the question of what a square root of a stochastic process as Brownian motion should be. There is nothing in literature and so I tried to ask to trained mathematicians to see if something in advanced research was known (see here). MathOverflow is a forum of discussion for advanced research managed by the community of mathematicians. It met a very great success and this is testified by the fact that practically all the most famous mathematicians give regular contributions to it. Posting my question resulted in a couple of favorable comments that informed me that this question was not known to have an answer. So, I spent a lot of time trying to clarify this idea using a lot of very good books that are available about stochastic processes. So, last few days I was able to get a finite answer: The square of Brownian motion is computable in a standard way with Itō integral reducing to a Brownian motion multiplied by a Bernoulli process. The striking fact is that the Bernoulli process is that of tossing a coin! The imaginary factor emerges naturally out of this mathematical procedure and now the diffusion equation is the Schroedinger equation. The identification of the Bernoulli process came out thanks to the help of Oleksandr Pavlyk after I asking this question at MathStackexchange. This forum is also for well-trained mathematicians but the kind of questions one can put there can also be at a student level. Oleksandr’s answer was instrumental for a complete understanding of what I was doing.

Finally, I decided to verify with the community of mathematicians if all this was nonsense or not and I posted again on MathStackexchange a derivation of the square root of a stochastic process (see here).Ā  But, with my great surprise, I discovered that some concepts I used for the Itō calculus were not understandable at all. I gave them for granted but these were not defined in literature! So, after some discussions, I added important clarifications there and in my paper making clear what I was doing from a mathematical standpoint. Now, you can find all this in my article. Itō calculus must be extended to include all the ideas I was exploiting.

The link between quantum mechanics and stochastic processes is a fundamental one. The reason is that, if one get such a link, an understanding of the fundamental behavior of space-time is obtained. This appears a fluctuating entity but in an unexpected way. This entails a new reformulation of quantum mechanics with the language of stochastic processes. Given this link, any future theory of quantum gravity should recover it.

I take this chance to give publicly a great thank to all these people that helped me to reach this important understanding and that I have cited here. Also mathematicians that appeared anonymously were extremely useful to improve my work. Thank you very much, folks!

Update: After an interesting discussion here with Didier Piau and George Lowther, we reached the conclusion that the definitions I give in my paper to extend the definition of the Ito integral are not mathematically consistent. Rather, when one performs the corresponding Riemann sums one gets diverging results for the interesting values of the exponent 0<\alpha<1 and the absolute value. Presently, I cannot see any way to get a sensible definition for this and so this paper should be considered mathematically not consistent. Of course, the idea of quantum mechanics as the square root of a stochastic process is there to stay and to be eventually verified, possibly with different approaches and better mathematics.

Marco Frasca (2012). Quantum mechanics is the square root of a stochastic process arXiv arXiv: 1201.5091v1

Farina, A., Giompapa, S., Graziano, A., Liburdi, A., Ravanelli, M., & Zirilli, F. (2011). Tartaglia-Pascal’s triangle: a historical perspective with applications Signal, Image and Video Processing DOI: 10.1007/s11760-011-0228-6

Grabert, H., HƤnggi, P., & Talkner, P. (1979). Is quantum mechanics equivalent to a classical stochastic process? Physical Review A, 19 (6), 2440-2445 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.19.2440


Filed under: Applied Mathematics, Mathematical Physics, Physics, Quantum gravity Tagged: Itō calculus, Quantum mechanics, Stochastic processes, Tartaglia-Pascal triangle

by mfrasca at January 25, 2012 10:22 AM

Peter Coles - In the Dark

Planck Exclusive!

I forgot to mention on this blog some important news about the Planck mission which many people here in the School of Physics & Astronomy at Cardiff University are heavily involved in.

Here is the official announcement from The Planck Science Team home page:

The High Frequency Instrument (HFI) on ESA’s Planck mission has completed its survey of the remnant light from the Big Bang. The sensor ran out of coolant on January 14 2012 as expected, ending its ability to detect this faint energy. Planck was launched in May 2009, and the minimum requirement for success was for the spacecraft to complete two whole surveys of the sky. In the end, Planck worked perfectly for 30 months, about twice the span originally required, and completed five full-sky surveys with both instruments. Able to work at slightly higher temperatures than HFI, the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) will continue surveying the sky for a large part of 2012, providing even more data to improve the Planck final results.

For more details, see here. Basically, the HFI instrument consists of bolometers contained in a cryogenic system to keep them cool and thus suppress thermal noise in order to enable them to detect the very weak signals coming from the cosmic microwave background radiation. The helium required to maintain the low temperature is gradually lost as Planck operates, and has now run out. The HFI bolometers consequently warmed up, which makes them useless for cosmological work, so the instrument has been switched off. I’m sure you all understand how uncomfortable it is when your bolometers get too hot…

You can find a host of public information about Planck here but the scientific work is under strict embargo until early next year. However, as a Telescoper exclusive I am able to offer you a sneak preview of the top secret Planck data well in advance of official release. If you want to see what Planck scientists have been looking at for the last couple of years, just click here.


by telescoper at January 25, 2012 08:23 AM

Cosmic Variance

Unsolicited Advice XIII: How to Craft a Well-Argued Proposal

In almost any project, the path between ā€œa good ideaā€ and the ā€œfinal exciting resultā€ contained a proposal. It may have been a proposal to obtain access to scarce resources (like telescopes or accelerator beams), or it may be have been a proposal to obtain other more prosaic resources (i.e., money, to pay for the needed personnel and supplies). Whatever the nature of the proposal, however, I guarantee that the competition was ridiculously stiff, and that the odds of having any given proposal accepted were quite low (for reference, in most astronomy contexts, over-subscription rates tend to be factors of 5-10). These unfavorable odds can be incredibly demoralizing. They also can have profoundly negative impacts on a talented scientist’s career, if the odds never manage to tip in their favor.

Given the inspiration of the looming Hubble Space Telescope deadline, I thought I would share some of my ā€œbig pictureā€ views on crafting successful proposals, expanding significantly on the more succinct advice given in an earlier post. While I’ve developed these opinions based on my experience in astronomy, I suspect they’d apply to many other fields, both within and beyond science. So here goes…

A Proposal is a Highly Structured Rigorous Argument

In its most abstract form, a proposal is a piece of persuasive writing that lays out a convincing case that the proposed research is:

  1. important
  2. feasible
  3. efficient

By ā€œimportantā€, I mean that the project must rise above the level of ā€œgood to doā€, and instead be seen as ā€œmust be doneā€, even by people who don’t work in the field. By ā€œfeasibleā€, I mean that there must be a clear path to a definitive scientific result. By ā€œefficientā€, I mean that the particular approach you’ve taken is the optimal one for reaching the important goals you’re targeting (i.e. aim for ā€œStudying X provides the cleanest test of Important Science Yā€ and avoid building a proposal to study X when studying Z is clearly a more direct approach to Important Science Y — even if you worked on X for your thesis.)

You should lay out your arguments for Every. Single. One. of these cases before you write a single word of latex. Why? Because proposals live or die not on the beauty of your prose, but on the structure of your argument. If the reviewer does not believe that you’ve made the case for importance, feasibility, and efficiency, you’re done.

Here’s how I do this. Although I’m sure it will seem remedial to many of you, and reveal me as the anal geek that I am, I start a stupid ASCII file with two sections:

  1. Selling Points
  2. Potential Weaknesses to Shore Up

I then start filling out each with short bullet points listing every possible argument for or against what I’m proposing.

The selling points should be fairly easy, since you’re likely to write proposals for things you are inclined to think are awesome. Do, however, avoid the pitfall of conflating ā€œimportant to meā€ with ā€œimportant to Scienceā€. Just because you would really like to know more about some property of something you’re interested in, doesn’t mean that other people will naturally share your enthusiasm. Keep your eye on the big picture.

The ā€œPotential Weaknessesā€ section can be a bit trickier, since you need to channel your inner crabby reviewer. Think of every nit-picky, outside the box criticism one could throw at your idea, and every area where a reviewer could get confused. (As an example, here’s a list of some of the self-criticisms I came up with for an HST proposal for NIR observations of nearby galaxies a few years back: ā€œWhat about AO from the ground?ā€ ā€œWhy this many targets — how many do you actually need?ā€ ā€œWhat about dust (i.e. is 1 NIR filter OK)?ā€ ā€œAre the modelsĀ reallyĀ in need of improvement?ā€ ā€œHow can we claim to do galaxy science while simultaneously arguing that the models aren’t yet up to it?ā€ ā€œAre the results confused depending on fraction of O-rich vs C-rich AGB?ā€ etc).

In short, the ā€œSelling Pointsā€ section is about demonstrating ā€œimportanceā€, and the ā€œPotential Weaknessesā€ section is about assessing ā€œfeasibilityā€ and ā€œefficiencyā€.

After you’ve got an initial list, you have to step back, evaluate, and edit.

  • Go through the selling points and prioritize. Decide what the ā€œmain messageā€ of your proposal is, based on which bullet points speak most effectively to the larger importance of what you’re proposing. If your ideas are strong, you’ll usually find that several of the most compelling bullet points will group together and can be ordered to tell a single story. You’ll also find that some of the bullet points will not naturally fit within that narrative. Identify this subset of arguments that are ā€œnice, but not compellingā€. You’ll want to be sure to minimize these in the proposal, to avoid their distracting from a more central idea. I speak from experience when I say that you reallyĀ do not want to confuse the reviewers about what your proposal is about (i.e. It’s better to have something like ā€œDark Matter! Dark Matter! Dark Matter! and by the way it also tells you something about planets, frogs, and quark starsā€ rather than ā€œDark Matter! Planets! Frogs! Quark Stars!ā€, since the latter leads to complaints from the reviewers that while they believed your dark matter ideas, you had not fully fleshed out a compelling case for the frog science.)Ā 
  • For each entry in the ā€œPotential Weaknessā€ section, write down any brief ideas about addressing those concerns (something like ā€œMake figure showing evolution of models with timeā€ ā€œCheck number of stars expected and compare to sizes of Galactic samplesā€, etc). You don’t have to come up with definitive answers, but you should lay out a road map for what you need to do to make your experiment look feasible and efficient.

At this point, I sometimes make a third section and list a few figures that seem like they support the key scientific ideas, or that shore up some of the obvious weaknesses.

Now that you have this silly little ASCII file (which you shouldn’t spend more than a day on, if that), send it to your collaborators. Get their feedback about what they think the strongest selling points are, what their additional concerns are, and what arguments they would use to shore up weaknesses. Expand the file accordingly, so you have a record of everything that you think needs to go into the proposal. You’ll probably find that it’s a huge time savings to get this to your collaborators in this form, before you have a 10 page latex file with embedded figures. If you do the latter, your collaborator will likely come back and say ā€œYou know, I think the reviewers are going to be way more interested in frogsā€, at which point you have to chuck out weeks of work. With this method, you get feedback quickly (since they have to skim a very short list of bullet points), and you don’t have a lot of sunk costs if you decide to overhaul the arguement.

At this point you’ll have a document that summarizes your rhetorical argument. Your case will be laid out so that you can easily evaluate it on its scientific merits. So, before you dive into writing, you need to step back and decide if you’ve actually constructed a strong case. Sometimes, it will become obvious that there are too many weaknesses to address, and that it’s going to be an uphill battle to convince anyone that this needs to be done. If that’s the case DON’T WRITE THE PROPOSAL! I have probably a half dozen of these ASCII files where I spent half a day deciding that I didn’t, in fact, have a compelling project, and I’d be better off investing my time elsewhere. That’s OK! The exercise of structuring your argument first is designed to be fast, so you don’t sink much time in before you decide whether to continue or not.

Once you (and your collaborators) are convinced that you do in fact have a strong case, you need to start building the actual text. I frequently will estimate the number of paragraphs I expect to have for my scientific justification (usually 2.5-3 per page), and then make an enumerated list showing how the argument will flow through the paragraphs. This exercise helps to keep the text following the structure of the argument, so that it builds to make the main points. It also helps me to figure out when I’m trying to cram too much information in.

If you’ve gone through all of the above, you’ll find that the proposal will almost write itself. You will have cleanly separated ā€œgenerating textā€ from ā€œgenerating a compelling projectā€, such that you know exactly what you want to convey, and what the text needs to accomplish. Generating lovely English sentences at this point is much easier.

by Julianne Dalcanton at January 25, 2012 07:55 AM

arXiv blog

Serious Flaw Emerges In Quantum Cryptography

The perfect secrecy offered by quantum mechanics appears to have been scuppered by a previously unknown practical problem, say physicists.


The problem of sending messages securely has troubled humankind since the dawn of civilisation and probably before.Ā 

In recent years, however, physicists have raised expectations that this problem has been solved by the invention of quantum key distribution. This exploits the strange quantum property of entanglement to guarantee the secrecy of a message.

Entanglement is so fragile that any eavesdropper cannot help but break it, revealing the ruse. So cryptographers can use it to send a secure key called a one time pad that can then be used to encrypt a message. If the key is intercepted, the sender simply sends another and repeats this until one gets through.

So-called quantum key distribution is unconditionally secure--it offers perfect secrecy guaranteed by the laws of physics.

Or at least that's what everyone thought. More recently, various groups have begun to focus on a fly in the ointment: the practical implementation of this process. While quantum key distribution offers perfect security in practice, the devices used to send quantum messages are inevitably imperfect.

For example, lasers that are supposed to send one photon at a time can sometimes send several and this allows information to leak to an eavesdropper.Ā 

Last year, we discussed another trick used by a group of quantum hackers to eavesdrop on a commercial quantum cryptography system. This system, although theoretically secure, turned out to be embarrassingly vulnerable in practice.Ā 

That led quantum theorists to begin the search for a device-independent protocol that would be free of the practical imperfections of everyday equipment. Such a system would offer guaranteed security regardless of any weaknesses in the equipment it relies on. Ā 

Today, however, Jonathan Barrett at the Royal Holloway, University of London, and a few pals reveal a problem that looks to scupper this work. The worrying implication of their discovery is that there is no known way to guarantee the security of data sent on any quantum cryptographic system including those that are commercially available today.Ā 

Here's the problem. Some groups claim to have made progress in developing Ā device-independent protocols but Barrett and co have found an issue that all others appear to have overlooked. These protocols all treat quantum cryptography as a single-shot process, as if the equipment is used only once.Ā 

The question that Barrett and co consider is what tricks could a malicious manufacturer exploit in a device that is likely to be used more than ince. The answer is obvious: such a manufacturer could build in a memory that stores information before it is transmitted. This information would then be released when the device is reused. Ā 

"In short, the problem is that an adversary can program devices to store data in one protocol and leak it in subsequent protocols, in ways that are hard or impossible to counter if the devices are reused," say Barrett and co. Ā Ā 

This is a particular worry, they say, because there is no general technique for identifying security loopholes in standard cryptography devices.

Of course, there are a couple of simple ways round this new problem. The most obvious is to discard a quantum cryptography device after it has been used; to actually make the equipment single-use like a disposable camera.Ā 

But Barrett and friends think this impractical: "While these attacks can be countered by not reusing devices, this solution is so costly that we query whether it is generally practical."

Another is based on the fact that the security of message is guaranteed until the device is re-used. So quantum cryptography could still be used only for secrets that need to be kept only for a short period of time, until the equipment is re-used.

Neither of these is going to stop blood pressures rising at the various government and military organisations that have bet the farm on the guarantees that quantum cryptography was thought to provide. That's not to mention the commercial organisations offering quantum cryptography such as ID Quantique.

There may be other ways round this problem that have yet to emerge. Indeed, Barrett and co's ideas will be an important driver of future work.Ā 

In the meantime, they conclude: "In our view, the attacks are generic and problematic enough to merit a serious reappraisal of the scope for device-independent quantum cryptography as a practical technology."

That'll mean more than few a few sleepless nights over this.

Ref:Ā arxiv.org/abs/1201.4407: Prisoners Of Their Own Device: Trojan Attacks On Device-Independent Quantum Cryptography



January 25, 2012 05:10 AM

January 24, 2012

ZapperZ - Physics and Physicists

Intro to QM - "... For Those Who Dwell In The Macroscopic World"
I came across this yesterday, but didn't get a chance to post it here.

This appears to be a lecture note/text for a QM class designed for engineers (i.e. the people who "dwell in the macroscopic world"). It covers the fundamental aspect of QM that one would see in the first few chapters of a QM text. A layperson will probably get 10% (or less) of what is being covered due to the level of mathematics required. But if you have sufficient mathematics background and haven't had a course in QM, this will be just right for you without having to weed through a thick QM text.

Zz.


by ZapperZ (noreply@blogger.com) at January 24, 2012 08:17 PM

Teilchen blog

Alice adds calorimeter

The Alice experiment completes during shutdown the electromagnetic calorimeter on the outer arc: Alice researcher Peter Jacobs explains the installation on youtube.

EMCal supermodule is guided into ALICE
CERN: EMCal supermodule is guided into ALICE.

You might also be interested in the Alice 2011-2012 shutdown summary report detailing the various ongoing work.

January 24, 2012 03:54 PM

Matt Strassler - Of Particular Significance

Reviewing the Search for the Higgs

Since we’re now approaching the time when the preliminary results from December on the search for the Higgs particle at the Large Hadron ColliderĀ (LHC) will be presented in final form, possibly with small but important adjustments, and since there will be additional results based on the fall’s data in the next few weeks, it would be good to do a little review of where things stand and where they’re going. Ā I won’t do this all in one post but let’s get started.

Of course there is a lot of material on this website already and I’ll point you to it. Ā Perhaps my most concise and least technical discussion of the search for the Higgs appeared as a guest post on Cosmic Variance (thank you to Sean Carroll for the invitation.) Ā In that post I emphasized that the LHC’s Higgs program has two phases (broadly speaking.) Ā The first phase is to search for and either find or exclude the simplest possible form of Higgs particle, known as the Standard Model Higgs particleĀ (or SM Higgs for short). Ā This is a finite task, so at a certain point (presumably this year) this phase comes to an end. Ā The second phase, which will take a better part of a decade, and (as I’ll describe over time) begins this year, depends on whether a particle that resembles an SM Higgs is discovered or not. Ā To explain the basic logic, I presented a figure in the Cosmic Variance post, which I am reproducing here:

Fig. 1: From my guest post in Cosmic Variance: The basic logic of the Higgs search, showing Phase 1 in which the simplest form of Higgs particle (the Standard Model Higgs) is found or excluded, and the logical questions that will follow in Phase 2. See Figure 3 for a more complete version.

If you’ve been noticing how slowly the discovery of the Higgs takes place — first there are hints, and only months later can one know whether those hints are real or not — then it will not surprise you to learn that the line between Phase 1 and Phase 2 isn’t sharp. The scientists at the LHC experiments ATLAS and CMS will be doing both of them this year, because they can, and because they should.

  • The search for the SM Higgs in 2011 was so successful that only a few possibilities remain (see Figure 2): a Higgs between about 115 and 128Ā GeV/c2Ā or above 600Ā GeV/c2Ā (though the latter is disfavored by precision measurements.)
  • We’ve got clear-enough hints for a Higgs particle with a mass of about 125 GeV/c2 (where c is the speed of light and GeV is defined here)Ā to take seriously the possibility that it’s been found.
  • If it’s been found, it resembles (only roughly so far, but that’s perhaps because there’s not enough data yet) an SM Higgs particle.
  • All that remains to be done in Phase 1 is to close the window between 115 and 127Ā GeV/c2Ā , to confirm or refute the hints around 125, and push up the limits at 600 up as far as they can go, perhaps 800 and beyond.

Fig. 2: Phase 1 of the Higgs search now leaves only a tiny window at small masses and a window at large masses that is disfavored by two decades of precision measurements. Notice how much progress was made in 2011 alone!

So we can start looking ahead to Phase 2 — indeed we must. Ā Ā Ā In particular, if there is indeed a new particle with a mass of 125Ā GeV/c2Ā that resembles an SM Higgs, then (from Figure 1) we now have to verify whether it is or isn’t exactly what the Standard Model predicts. Ā Any deviation whatsoever from the precise predictions of the Standard Model would be a historic, game-changing, and Nobel Prize-deserving discovery! Ā So the stakes are very high.

Now, Figure 1 was actually a simplified version of the game plan for the Higgs search. Ā A more complete version, which was too elaborate for the short and sweet Cosmic Variance article, is shown in Figure 3. Ā I’ll go through this figure carefully (which itself isn’t entirely complete) over the coming days and weeks. Ā But suffice it to say that 2012 will involve a lot of work on the three research programs located at the far right of the figure:

Fig. 3: As Phase 1 of the Higgs search comes to a close, Phase 2 begins, with a series of logical questions and corresponding measurements. Even while the hints of a Higgs particle at 125 GeV are being checked with more data, studies of whether this might or might not be a Standard Model Higgs particle will be underway.

As you can see from the figure, these very large research programs needs to be carried out whether or not the current hints of a Higgs turn out to be ephemeral. Ā In other words, the experimenters can be working already on Phase 2 no matter what the outcome of Phase 1 turns out to be! Ā Very convenient, of course… Ā but it means we need to do some planning for Phase 2 now! Ā [And not of all of the most urgent issues have been addressed yet, which is why I've been very busy... more on that later...]


Filed under: Higgs, LHC Background Info, Particle Physics Tagged: atlas, cms, Higgs, hints, LHC, particle physics, searches

by Matt Strassler at January 24, 2012 03:41 PM

Chad Orzel - Uncertain Principles

Simple Video Editing Software?

So, back when How to Teach Physics to Your Dog was coming out, I did a few "dramatic readings" of bits of the book, such as this one on the Quantum Zeno Effect:

This was made with Windows Movie Maker, because it was free (came with the computer) and dead simple. However, Movie Maker on my new computers is hopelessly broken-- I've made a couple of attempts to do the same sort of thing with my laptop, but I've never managed to get more than a couple of steps in before it crashes. (To be fair, this is one of only two things that are worse under Windows 7 than Vista, and the only one that's Microsoft's fault...)

For that reason, I'm looking for an alternative: I need some non-Movie Maker software package that will let me do the same sort of thing I did in that video: record an audio track of me reading a bit of the book, and put together video to go with it out of still photos and maybe short video clips. I could, of course, simply Google this, but I value the opinions of my wise and worldly readers more than random reviewers on some other site, so if you know of a good (and preferably cheap) program that will let me do this, leave a recommendation in the comments.

Read the comments on this post...

January 24, 2012 03:24 PM

Symmetrybreaking - Fermilab/SLAC

Scientists finish installation of 80-ton ā€˜particle thermometer’ at ALICE detector
Scientists on the ALICE experiment at the Large Hadron Collider just completed the installation of a crucial component for tracking high-energy particle jets. Without it, physicists would be lacking crucial tools to select which events out of billions to store and analyze.

by Amy Dusto at January 24, 2012 02:50 PM

Axel Maas - Looking Inside the Standard Model

The tools of the trade
By now, I have collected and presented you quite a number of the basic ingredients of the standard model (and beyond). You should be now well equipped to get a good understanding of what I am doing. Therefore, I can come back to the original idea of this blog, and can discuss some aspects of my own research. At times, and when need be, I will add further more general entries.

Before I can enter the subjects of my research, I have to present another important part of the work of a theoretical physicist: The methods she or he is using. Each methods has its distinct advantages and drawbacks. As a result, a given problem can often be addressed by multiple methods. If this is the case, it is also possible to combine the different methods.

The latter is of particular importance because of an insight of singular importance in physics: Any problem of fundamental interest in particle physics so far is so complicated that we were not (yet) able to find an exact solution. At first, this appears like a very depressing insight. It is usually a cultural shock for students when they enter research, as up to then one is usually only exposed to simple problems which an be solved exactly, for reasons of a pedagogical and manageable presentation. At times, one acquires the insight that this horrible complexity of real problems is just a natural consequence of the richness of physics, even of the very elementary particles which lie at the heart of our current understanding of the universe. Nonetheless, physicists strive for getting better and better and ultimately exact solutions, and perhaps this holy grail of a theoretician can be reached someday. For now, however, this is not the case, and we have to live with the fact that despite our methods working often exceptionally well, they can never give you the full answer. But for some questions they can provide answers, which are ten or more digits precise. And this is quite encouraging.

For the topics I am interested in such enormously good results have not been achieved. The reason for this is that problems become simpler the weaker the interactions are. The method perfectly suited for this is perturbation theory, the first method I will be introducing shortly.

However, if the interaction is weak not so much interesting is happening. Particles ignore each other most of the time, and if they meet, they, well interact weakly, and just scatter a bit off each other. If the interactions become stronger, interesting things start to happen. Bound states form, particles condense, and much more. That is where my interest lies.

The downside of this is that if the interactions between particles become strong, it becomes very hard to find a mathematical handle to treat them. That is the challenge, and the reason why rather few exact results are available. One solution is then to use brute force and just simulate the physics using a sufficiently large computer. That has provided us with very deep insights, and has become an invaluable tool in modern theoretical physics. For the type of problems I am most interested in such simulation methods are called lattice gauge theory, for reason I will explain later.

There are two major alternatives to such brute force simulations. One is the use of models and the other are so-called functional methods. In both cases the idea is to simplify the problem while capturing everything of interest.

Models, a term which I use here in a very broad sense, underlies the idea to find a simplified version of the theory at hand, sufficiently simplified to be easier to handle. Such theories than have often a very narrow range of applicability (for very similar reasons as the standard model itself ). However, if they are constructed very carefully such models very often help to understand not only broad features but often even quantitatively what is going on.

Functional methods are a different approach. The basic feature of theses methods are a set of equations which are in principle exact. Unfortunately, this set is often infinite, and in general approximations are needed to find solutions to them. If the approximations are good, it is possible to describe very much successfully with these equations and at the same time get deeper insight. Also, the approximations can be improved step-by-step, and thus permit eventually a full solution to the theory. I.e., at least in principle.

There are, of course, many other methods available, but these are the most important ones for my own research, and, except for models, I use them essentially on a day-by-day basis. The important methodological aspect in this is the combination of all the methods, and this results in something which is much more than just the sum of its parts.

by Axel Maas (noreply@blogger.com) at January 24, 2012 09:15 AM

John Baez - Azimuth

I, Robot

On 13 February 2012, I will give a talk at Google in the form of a robot. I will look like this:

My talk will be about ā€œEnergy, the Environment and What We Can Do.ā€ Since I think we should cut unnecessary travel, I decided to stay here in Singapore and use a telepresence robot instead of flying to California.

I thank Mike Stay for arranging this at Google, and I especially thank Trevor Blackwell and everyone else at Anybots for letting me use one of their robots!

I believe Google will film this event and make a video available. But I hope reporters attend, because it should be fun, and I plan to describe some ways we can slash carbon emissions.

More detail: I will give this talk at 4 pm Monday, February 13, 2012 in the Paramaribo Room on the Google campus (Building 42, Floor 2). Visitors and reporters are invited, but they need to check in at the main visitor’s lounge in Building 43, and they’ll need to be escorted to and from the talk, so someone will pick them up 10 or 15 minutes before the talk starts.

Energy, the Environment and What We Can Do

Abstract: Our heavy reliance on fossil fuels is causing two serious problems: global warming, and the decline of cheaply available oil reserves. Unfortunately the second problem will not cancel out the first. Each one individually seems extremely hard to solve, and taken
together they demand a major worldwide effort starting now. After an overview of these problems, we turn to the question: what can we do about them?

I also need help from all of you reading this! I want to talk about solutions, not just problems—and given my audience, and the political deadlock in the US, I especially want to talk about innovative solutions that come from individuals and companies, not governments.

Can changing whole systems produce massive cuts in carbon emissions, in a way that spreads virally rather than being imposed through top-down directives? It’s possible. Curtis Faith has some inspiring thoughts on this:

I’ve been looking on various transportation and energy and environment issues for more than 5 years, and almost no one gets the idea that we can radically reduce consumption if we look at the complete systems. In economic terms, we currently have a suboptimal Nash Equilibrium with a diminishing pie when an optimal expanding pie equilibrium is possible. Just tossing around ideas a a very high level with back of the envelope estimates we can get orders of magnitude improvements with systemic changes that will make people’s lives better if we can loosen up the grip of the big corporations and government.

To borrow a physics analogy, the Nash Equilibrium is a bit like a multi-dimensional metastable state where the system is locked into a high energy configuration and any local attempts to make the change revert to the higher energy configuration locally, so it would require sufficient energy or energy in exactly the right form to move all the different metastable states off their equilibrium either simultaneously or in a cascade.

Ideally, we find the right set of systemic economic changes that can have a cascade effect, so that they are locally systemically optimal and can compete more effectively within the larger system where the Nash Equilibrium dominates. I hope I haven’t mixed up too many terms from too many fields and confused things. These terms all have overlapping and sometimes very different meaning in the different contexts as I’m sure is true even within math and science.

One great example is transportation. We assume we need electric cars or biofuel or some such thing. But the very assumption that a car is necessary is flawed. Why do people want cars? Give them a better alternative and they’ll stop wanting cars. Now, what that might be? Public transportation? No. All the money spent building a 2,000 kg vehicle to accelerate and decelerate a few hundred kg and then to replace that vehicle on a regular basis can be saved if we eliminate the need for cars.

The best alternative to cars is walking, or walking on inclined pathways up and down so we get exercise. Why don’t people walk? Not because they don’t want to but because our cities and towns have optimized for cars. Create walkable neighborhoods and give people jobs near their home and you eliminate the need for cars. I live in Savannah, GA in a very tiny place. I never use the car. Perhaps 5 miles a week. And even that wouldn’t be necessary with the right supplemental business structures to provide services more efficiently.

Or electricity for A/C. Everyone lives isolated in structures that are very inefficient to heat. Large community structures could be air conditioned naturally using various techniques and that could cut electricity demand by 50% for neighborhoods. Shade trees are better than insulation.

Or how about moving virtually entire cities to cooler climates during the hot months? That is what people used to do. Take a train North for the summer. If the destinations are low-resource destinations, this can be a huge reduction for the city. Again, getting to this state is hard without changing a lot of parts together.

These problems are not technical, or political, they are economic. We need the economic systems that support these alternatives. People want them. We’ll all be happier and use far less resources (and money). The economic system needs to be changed, and that isn’t going to happen with politics, it will happen with economic innovation. We tend to think of our current models as the way things are, but they aren’t. Most of the status quo is comprised of human inventions, money, fractional reserve banking, corporations, etc. They all brought specific improvements that made them more effective at the time they were introduce because of the conditions during those times. Our times too are different. Some new models will work much better for solving our current problems.

Your idea really starts to address the reason why people fly unnecessarily. This change in perspective is important. What if we went back to sailing ships? And instead of flying we took long leisurely educational seminar cruises on modern versions of sail yachts? What if we improved our trains? But we need to start from scratch and design new systems so they work together effectively. Why are we stuck with models of cities based on the 19th-century norms?

We aren’t, but too many people think we are because the scope of their job or academic career is just the piece of a system, not the system itself.

System level design thinking is the key to making the difference we need. Changes to the complete systems can have order of magnitude improvements. Changes to the parts will have us fighting for tens of percentages.

Do you know good references on ideas like this—preferably with actual numbers? I’ve done some research, but I feel I must be missing a lot of things.

This book, for example, is interesting:

• Michael Peters, Shane Fudge and Tim Jackson, editors, Low Carbon Communities: Imaginative Approaches to Combating Climate Change Locally, Edward Elgar Publishing Group, Cheltenham, UK, 2010.

but I wish it had more numbers on how much carbon emissions were cut by some of the projects they describe: Energy Conscious Households in Action, the HadLOW CARBON Community, the Transition Network, and so on.


by John Baez at January 24, 2012 06:19 AM

arXiv blog

Electron Holography Produces First Image of a Single Protein

A non-destructive method for imaging single proteins could help solve one of the biggest challenges in biology


The behaviour and function of proteins is largely determined by their shape. Ā So one of the great ongoing quests in biology is to understand and model the structure of proteins.Ā 

That's a tricky task. Biologists currently do it using techniques such as X-ray crystallography, which requires millions of protein chains to form into a crystal. Ā The trouble is that most proteins don't form crystals. And even when they do, not all the molecules will be in the same conformation and so the diffraction pattern can end up being a kind of average of several different shapes.

That's why biologists know the shape of less than 2 per cent of the proteins in humans.

What's needed, of course, is a way of imaging individual proteins. One idea is to us x-rays or electron beams to do the trick and indeed some groups have had some success with this technique. But the disadvantage is that beams with an energy of a few KeV tend to destroy biomolecules so it's not clear how accurate these images can be. Nether is it possible to view the molecules over time.

Today,Ā Jean Nicholas Longchamp and pals at the University of Zurich in Switzerland have found a way round this. These guys make the entirely sensible suggestion of imaging proteins using low energy electron beams that don't destroy biomolecules.Ā 

At this energy, electron beams have a wavelength of a nanometre or so, making them perfect not just for imaging with atomic resolution, but for holography.Ā 

And that's exactly what these guys have done. They've created an electron hologram of a protein molecule called ferritin--that's the football-shaped protein that stores and releases iron and is found in almost all living things.

The technique is fairly straightforward. They mix ferritin and carbon nanotubes in water which they then allow to evaporate. This leaves carbon nanotubes with single ferritin proteins bonded to them.

The evaporation takes place in a sieve-like container and leaves some of the ferritin-carrying nanotubes suspended across the holes in the sieve. That allows Longchamp and co to send the low energy electron beam from one side of the hole and then record the interference pattern on the other.Ā 

The result is the first atomic resolution electron hologram of ferritin ever made in a non-destructive way. "We have reported the very first non-destructive investigation of an individual protein by means of Ā low-energy electron holography," they say.

They've even compared their images to ones of ferritin imaged with high energy electrons and are able to show the damage that the high energy bombardment causes.

That's exciting news. The problem of accurately determining the structure, and therefore the function, of proteins is a major headache for biologists and one that low energy electron holography could help to solve quickly. "The sample preparation method can be applied to a broad class of molecules," say Longchamp and friends.

They now want to improve the resolution of their technique and have a number of tricks up their sleeves that they are no doubt investigating.

Given that the techniques is relatively straightforward and inexpensive, expect to see an explosion of interest in single molecule structural biology at atomic resolution.

Ref:Ā arxiv.org/abs/1201.4300: Non-Destructive Imaging Of An Individual Protein



January 24, 2012 05:10 AM

January 23, 2012

Clifford V. Johnson - Asymptotia

Crunch Time
I'm on the bus on the way to campus, it is pouring with rain, the heat is too high on aboard the bus, and I am late. And a bit tired. I was up until 1:00am crunching numbers. The main stage of the judging for the science film competition ended last night and I went into the system to do the data analysis. I'd designed a spreadsheet on which each of the ten judges give a score for each film in eight different categories which I tried to make roughly orthogonal. I set it up so that they could go to an online form (having viewed the films on a private channel on YouTube) and enter the scores, an action which in turn populates the spreadsheet for me. (Google docs rocks!) They could also enter optional comments about each film that could be useful for any discussion that needs to be had. So what I was doing was slicing the database of scores to see if I could get a ranking of the films to take into a face to face meeting with some of my fellow local judges today. Then I wanted to find ways of laying it all out in a way that was easy to read for everyone and in the end this morning I printed out a giant version of the entire spreadsheet on several sheets of 11x17 and glued them together to make a big colour coded foldout for us all to sit around. The films? I'm delighted with the turnout as it shows the kind of variety of film I'd hoped would be produced. There are eight films, with films that are illustrated explainers on the one hand (with with animation or live action or sometimes both), through drama and narrative, to reflective overviews of a topic on the other, sometimes venturing into art inspired by science ideas. (Above is a graphic made by Laurie Moore In Dornsife communications from stills of the films.) This variety makes for a hard task in coming up with the prize winners, since [...]

by Clifford at January 23, 2012 11:51 PM

Chad Orzel - Uncertain Principles

Notes Toward a Toy Model of the Arrow of Time

I'm fairly certain somebody has already done this, because it's such an obvious idea. It's a little beyond my cargo-cult VPython skills right at the moment, though (I can probably learn to do it, but not right now), and I none of the applets I Googled up seemed to be doing this, so I'm posting this sketchy description because I've spent some time thinking about it, and might as well get a blog post out of the deal.

So, as we said back in the holiday season, one of the most fundamental concepts in the modern understanding of thermodynamics and statistical physics is the notion of entropy. You can also argue that entropy is in some sense responsible for our perception of time-- that is, the reason we see time marching forward into the future, not backwards into the past is that entropy increases as we move forward, and it's the increase in entropy that determines the arrow of time.

We can define entropy using Boltzmann's formula:

dec18_entropy.png

which says that the entropy of a given arrangement of microscopic objects (atoms or molecules in a gas, say) is related to the number of possible ways that you can arrange those objects to produce states that are macroscopically indistinguishable. The more states that look the same on a coarse scale, the higher the entropy. This makes the arrow of time a sort of statistical property: entropy tends to increase because it's easy for a collection of stuff to randomly move toward a high-entropy state (which you can do lots of ways) but unlikely that a random motion will take you to a low-entropy state (which can only be made a few ways).

Boltzmann's idea is simple and powerful, but it can be a little hard to do anything more than qualitative hand-waving with it at the intro level. It's kind of hard to explain how you "count" microstates of things that are (classically) continuous variables, like the velocities of atoms in a gas, without getting infinite results.

So, here's my rough idea, that I might still try to code into a model for my timekeeping class this term: Rather than thinking about continuous variables, let's think about a lattice of points that may or may not contain an atom. It's easiest to picture in 1-d, where a low-entropy starting state might look something like this:

1Ā 1Ā 1Ā 1Ā 1Ā 0Ā 0Ā 0Ā 0Ā 0

This represents all of the "atoms" being on one side of the lattice representing space.. Then you just allow each "atom" some probability of moving either left or right to an unoccupied space. So, for example, a few time steps later, the state might look like this:

Read the rest of this post... | Read the comments on this post...

January 23, 2012 05:25 PM

Teilchen blog

Royal society maximizes access

After last year decision that the Royal society opens journal archive. It has now been decided: Royal Society journal archive made permanently free to access.

Philosophical Transactions

Professor Uta Frith FRS, Chair of the Royal Society library committee, said: 'I'm delighted that the Royal Society is continuing to increase access to its wonderful resources by opening up its publishing archives.'

January 23, 2012 03:31 PM

The n-Category Cafe

Multiple M5-branes, String 2-connections, and 7d nonabelian Chern-Simons theory

We are in the process of finalizing a little article:

Domenico Fiorenza, Hisham Sati, Urs Schreiber,
Multiple M5-branes, String 2-connections, and 7d nonabelian Chern-Simons theory

Below is the abstract, and, below the fold, the beginning of the introduction. A pdf with the current version is behind the above link.

We would be grateful for comments.

The article is written in a non-formal style with an audience of certain physicists in mind, but ample pointers are given to places where all the ingredients are spelled out in detail and precisely.

Abstract

The worldvolume theory of coincident M5-branes is expected to contain a nonabelian 2-form/nonabelian gerbe gauge theory that is a higher analog of self-dual Yang-Mills theory. But the precise details – in particular the global moduli / instanton / magnetic charge structure – have remained elusive.

Here we argue that the holographic dual of this nonabelian 2-form field, under AdS 7/CFT 6 duality, can be deduced from anomaly cancellation.

We find this way a 7-dimensional nonabelian Chern-Simons theory of twisted String 2-connection fields, which, in a certain higher gauge, are given locally by non-abelian 2-forms with values in a Kac-Moody loop Lie algebra. We construct the corresponding action functional on the entire smooth moduli 2-stack of field configurations, thereby defining the theory globally, at all levels and with the full instanton structure, which is nontrivial due to the twists imposed by the quantum corrections. Along the way we explain some general phenomena of higher nonabelian gauge theory that we need.

Introduction

The quantum field theory (QFT) on the worldvolume of M5-branes is known to be a 6-dimensional (2,0)-superconformal theory that contains a 2-form potential field B 2, whose 3-form field strength H 3 is self-dual. Whatever it is precisely and in generality, this QFT has been argued to be the source of deep physical and mathematical phenomena, such as Montonen-Olive S-duality, geometric Langlands duality, and Khovanov homology. Yet, and despite this interest, a complete description of the precise details of this QFT is still lacking.

In particular, as soon as one considers the worldvolume theory of several coincident M5-branes, the 2-form appearing locally in this 6d QFT is expected to be nonabelian (to take values in a nonabelian Lie algebra). But a description of this nonabelian gerbe theory has been elusive. Here we present a consistent formulation of nonabelian 2-form fields and propose dynamics for them under holography.

On the other hand, for a single M5-brane the Lagrangian of the theory has been formulated. Furthermore, in this abelian case there is a holographic dual description of the 6d theory by 7-dimensional abelian Chern-Simons theory, as part of AdS 7/CFT 6-duality.

We give here an argument, following Witten96, Witten98 but taking the quantum anomaly cancellation of the M5-brane in 11-dimensional supergravity into account, that in the general case the AdS 7/CFT 6-duality involves a 7-dimensional nonabelian Chern-Simons action that is evaluated on higher nonabelian gauge fields which we identify as _twisted 2-connections over the String-2-group.

Then we give a precise description of a certain canonically existing 7-dimensional nonabelian gerbe-theory on boundary values of quantum-corrected supergravity field configurations in terms of nonabelian differential cohomology. We show that this has the properties expected from the quantum anomaly structure of 11-dimensional supergravity. In particular, we discuss that there is a higher gauge in which these field configurations locally involve non-abelian 2-forms with values in the Kac-Moody central extension of the loop Lie algebra of the special orthogonal Lie algebra š”°š”¬ and of the exceptional Lie algebra of E8. We also describe the global structure of the smooth moduli 2-stack of field configurations, which is more subtle.

by urs (urs.schreiber@math.uni-hamburg.de) at January 23, 2012 03:07 PM

CERN Bulletin

CERN Bulletin Issue No. 04-05/2012
Link to e-Bulletin Issue No. 04-05/2012Link to all articles in this issue No.

January 23, 2012 01:58 PM

John Baez - Azimuth

Classical Mechanics versus Thermodynamics (Part 2)

I showed you last time that in many branches of physics—including classical mechanics and thermodynamics—we can see our task as minimizing or maximizing some function. Today I want to show how we get from that task to symplectic geometry.

So, suppose we have a smooth function

S: Q \to \mathbb{R}

where Q is some manifold. A minimum or maximum of S can only occur at a point where

d S = 0

Here the differential d S which is a 1-form on Q. If we pick local coordinates q^i in some open set of Q, then we have

\displaystyle {d S = \frac{\partial S}{\partial q^i} dq^i }

and these derivatives \displaystyle{ \frac{\partial S}{\partial q^i} } are very interesting. Let’s see why:

Example 1. In classical mechanics, consider a particle on a manifold X. Suppose the particle starts at some fixed position at some fixed time. Suppose that it ends up at the position x at time t. Then the particle will seek to follow a path that minimizes the action given these conditions. Assume this path exists and is unique. The action of this path is then called Hamilton’s principal function, S(x,t). Let

Q = X \times \mathbb{R}

and assume Hamilton’s principal function is a smooth function

S : Q \to \mathbb{R}

We then have

d S = p_i dq^i - H d t

where q^i are local coordinates on X,

\displaystyle{ p_i = \frac{\partial S}{\partial q^i} }

is called the momentum in the ith direction, and

\displaystyle{ H = - \frac{\partial S}{\partial t} }

is called the energy. The minus signs here are basically just a mild nuisance. Time is different from space, and in special relativity the difference comes from a minus sign, but I don’t think that’s the explanation here. We could get rid of the minus signs by working with negative energy, but it’s not such a big deal.

Example 2. In thermodynamics, consider a system with the internal energy U and volume V. Then the system will choose a state that maximizes the entropy given these constraints. Assume this state exists and is unique. Call the entropy of this state S(U,V). Let

Q = \mathbb{R}^2

and assume the entropy is a smooth function

S : Q \to \mathbb{R}

We then have

d S = \displaystyle{\frac{1}{T} d U - \frac{P}{T} d V }

where T is the temperature of the system, and P is the pressure. The slight awkwardness of this formula makes people favor other setups.

Example 3. In thermodynamics there are many setups for studying the same system using different minimum or maximum principles. One of the most popular is called the energy scheme. If internal energy increases with increasing entropy, as usually the case, this scheme is equivalent to the one we just saw.

In the energy scheme we fix the entropy S and volume V. Then the system will choose a state that minimizes the internal energy given these constraints. Assume this state exists and is unique. Call the internal energy of this state U(S,V). Let

Q = \mathbb{R}^2

and assume the entropy is a smooth function

S : Q \to \mathbb{R}

We then have

d U = T d S - P d V

where

\displaystyle{ T = \frac{\partial U}{\partial S} }

is the temperature, and

\displaystyle{ P = - \frac{\partial U}{\partial V} }

is the pressure. You’ll note the formulas here closely resemble those in Example 1!

Example 4. Here are the four most popular schemes for thermodynamics:

• If we fix the entropy S and volume V, the system will choose a state that minimizes the internal energy U(S,V).

• If we fix the entropy S and pressure P, the system will choose a state that minimizes the enthalpy H(S,P).

• If we fix the temperature T and volume V, the system will choose a state that minimizes the Helmholtz free energy A(T,V).

• If we fix the temperature T and pressure P, the system will choose a state that minimizes the Gibbs free energy G(T,P).

These quantities are related by a pack of similar-looking formulas, from which we may derive a mind-numbing little labyrinth of Maxwell relations. But for now, all we need to know is that all these approaches to thermodynamics are equivalent given some reasonable assumptions, and all the formulas and relations can be derived using the Legendre transformation trick I explained last time. So, I won’t repeat what we did in Example 3 for all these other cases!

Example 5. In classical statics, consider a particle on a manifold Q. This particle will seek to minimize its potential energy V(q), which we’ll assume is some smooth function of its position q \in Q. We then have

d V = -F_i dq^i

where q^i are local coordinates on Q and

\displaystyle{ F_i = -\frac{\partial F}{\partial q^i} }

is called the force in the ith direction.

Conjugate variables

So, the partial derivatives of the quantity we’re trying
to minimize or maximize are very important! As a result, we often want to give them more of an equal status as independent quantities in their own right. Then we call them ā€˜conjugate variables’.

To make this precise, consider the cotangent bundle T^* Q, which has local coordinates q^i (coming from the coordinates on Q) and p_i (the corresponding coordinates on each cotangent space). We then call p_i the conjugate variable of the coordinate q^i.

Given a smooth function

S : Q \to \mathbb{R}

the 1-form d S can be seen as a section of the cotangent bundle. The graph of this section is defined by the equation

\displaystyle{ p_i = \frac{\partial S}{\partial q^i} }

and this equation ties together two intuitions about ā€˜conjugate variables’: as coordinates on the cotangent bundle, and as partial derivatives of the quantity we’re trying to minimize or maximize.

The tautological 1-form

There is a lot to say here, especially about Legendre transformations, but I want to hasten on to a bit of symplectic geometry. And for this we need the ā€˜tautological 1-form’ on T^* Q.

We can think of d S as a map

d S : Q \to T^* Q

sending each point q \in Q to the point (q,p) \in T^* Q where p is defined by the equation we just saw:

\displaystyle{ p_i = \frac{\partial S}{\partial q^i} }

Using this map, we can pull back any 1-form on T^* Q to get a 1-form on Q.

What 1-form on Q might we like to get? Why, d S of course!

Amazingly, there’s a 1-form \alpha on T^* Q such that when we pull it back using the map d S, we get the 1-form d S—no matter what smooth function d S we started with!

Thanks to this wonderfully tautological property, \alpha is called the tautological 1-form on T^* Q. You should check that it’s given by the formula

\alpha = p_i dq^i

If you get stuck, try this.

So, if we want to see how much S changes as we move along a path in Q, we can do this in three equivalent ways:

• Evaluate S at the endpoint of the path and subtract off S at the starting-point.

• Integrate the 1-form d S along the path.

• Use d S : Q \to T^* Q to map the path over to T^* Q, and then integrate \alpha over this path in T^* Q.

The last method is equivalent thanks to the ā€˜tautological’ property of \alpha. It may seem overly convoluted, but it shows that if we work in T^* Q, where the conjugate variables are accorded equal status, everything we want to know about the change in S is contained in the 1-form \alpha, no matter which function S we decide to use!

So, in this sense, \alpha knows everything there is to know about the change in Hamilton’s principal function in classical mechanics, or the change in entropy in thermodynamics… and so on!

But this means it must know about things like Hamilton’s equations, and the Maxwell relations.

The symplectic structure

We saw last time that the fundamental equations of classical mechanics and thermodynamics—Hamilton’s equations and the Maxwell relations—are mathematically just the same. They both say simply that partial derivatives commute:

\displaystyle { \frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial q^i \partial q^j} = \frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial q^j \partial q^i} }

where S: Q \to \mathbb{R} is the function we’re trying to minimize or maximize.

I also mentioned that this fact—the commuting of partial derivatives—can be stated in an elegant coordinate-free way:

d^2 S = 0

Perhaps I should remind you of the proof:

d^2 S =   d \left( \displaystyle{ \frac{\partial S}{\partial q^i} dq^i } \right) = \displaystyle{ \frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial q^j \partial q^i} dq^j \wedge dq^i }

but

dq^j \wedge dq^i

changes sign when we switch i and j, while

\displaystyle{ \frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial q^j \partial q^i}}

does not, so d^2 S = 0. It’s just a wee bit more work to show that conversely, starting from d^2 S = 0, it follows that the mixed partials must commute.

How can we state this fact using the tautological 1-form \alpha? I said that using the map

d S : Q \to T^* Q

we can pull back \alpha to Q and get d S. But pulling back commutes with the d operator! So, if we pull back d \alpha, we get d^2 S. But d^2 S = 0. So, d \alpha has the magical property that when we pull it back to Q, we always get zero, no matter what S we choose!

This magical property captures Hamilton’s equations, the Maxwell relations and so on—for all choices of S at once. So it shouldn’t be surprising that the 2-form

\theta = d \alpha

is colossally important: it’s the famous symplectic structure on the so-called phase space T^* Q.

Well, actually, most people prefer to work with

\omega = - d \alpha

It seems this whole subject is a monument of austere beauty… covered with minus signs, like bird droppings.

Example 6. In classical mechanics, let

Q = X \times \mathbb{R}

as in Example 1. If Q has local coordinates q^i, t, then T^* Q has these along with the conjugate variables as coordinates. As we explained, it causes little trouble to call these conjugate variables by the same names we used for the partial derivatives of S: namely, p_i and -H. So, we have

\alpha = p_i dq^i - H d t

and thus

\omega = dq^i \wedge dp_i - dt \wedge dH

Example 7. In thermodynamics, let

Q = \mathbb{R}^2

as in Example 3. If Q has coordinates S, V then the conjugate variables deserve to be called T, -P. So, we have

\alpha = T d S - P d V

and

\omega = d S \wedge d T - d V \wedge d P

You’ll see that in these formulas for \omega, variables get paired with their conjugate variables. That’s nice.

But let me expand on what we just saw, since it’s important. And let me talk about \theta =  d\alpha, without tossing in that extra sign.

What we saw is that the 2-form \theta is a ā€˜measure of noncommutativity’. When we pull \theta back to Q we get zero. This says that partial derivatives commute—and this gives Hamilton’s equations, the Maxwell relations, and all that. But up in T^* Q, \theta is not zero. And this suggests that there’s some built-in noncommutativity hiding in phase space!

Indeed, we can make this very precise. Consider a little parallelogram up in T^* Q:

Suppose we integrate the 1-form \alpha up the left edge and across the top. Do we get the same answer if integrate it across the bottom edge and then up the right?

No, not necessarily! The difference is the same as the integral of \alpha all the way around the parallelogram. By Stokes’ theorem, this is the same as integrating \theta over the parallelogram. And there’s no reason that should give zero.

However, suppose we got our parallelogram in T^* Q by taking a parallelogram in Q and applying the map

d S : Q \to T^* Q

Then the integral of \alpha around our parallelogram would be zero, since it would equal the integral of d S around a parallelogram in Q… and that’s the change in S as we go around a loop from some point to… itself!

And indeed, the fact that a function S doesn’t change when we go around a parallelogram is precisely what makes

\displaystyle { \frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial q^i \partial q^j} = \frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial q^j \partial q^i} }

So the story all fits together quite nicely.

The big picture

I’ve tried to show you that the symplectic structure on the phase spaces of classical mechanics, and the lesser-known but utterly analogous one on the phase spaces of thermodynamics, is a natural outgrowth of utterly trivial reflections on the process of minimizing or maximizing a function S on a manifold Q.

The first derivative test tells us to look for points with

d S = 0

while the commutativity of partial derivatives says that

d^2 S = 0

everywhere—and this gives Hamilton’s equations and the Maxwell relations. The 1-form d S is the pullback of the tautologous 1-form \alpha on T^* Q, and similarly d^2 S is the pullback of the symplectic structure d\alpha. The fact that

d \alpha \ne 0

says that T^* Q holds noncommutative delights, almost like a world where partial derivatives no longer commute! But of course we still have

d^2 \alpha = 0

everywhere, and this becomes part of the official definition of a symplectic structure.

All very simple. I hope, however, the experts note that to see this unified picture, we had to avoid the most common approaches to classical mechanics, which start with either a ā€˜Hamiltonian’

H : T^* Q \to \mathbb{R}

or a ā€˜Lagrangian’

L : T Q \to \mathbb{R}

Instead, we started with Hamilton’s principal function

S : Q \to \mathbb{R}

where Q is not the usual configuration space describing possible positions for a particle, but the ā€˜extended’ configuration space, which also includes time. Only this way do Hamilton’s equations, like the Maxwell relations, become a trivial consequence of the fact that partial derivatives commute.

But what about those ā€˜noncommutative delights’? First, there’s a noncommutative Poisson bracket operation on functions on T^* Q. This makes the functions into a so-called Poisson algebra. In classical mechanics of a point particle on the line, for example, it’s well-known that we have

\begin{array}{ccr}  \{ p, q \} &=& 1 \\  \{ H, t \} &=& -1 \end{array}

In thermodynamics, the analogous relations

\begin{array}{ccr}  \{ T, S \} &=& 1 \\  \{ P, V \} &=& -1 \end{array}

seem sadly little-known. But you can see them here, for example:

• M. J. Peterson, Analogy between thermodynamics and mechanics, American Journal of Physics 47 (1979), 488–490.

at least up to one of those pesky minus signs! We can use these Poisson brackets to study how one thermodynamic variable changes as we slowly change another, staying close to equilibrium all along.

Second, we can go further and ā€˜quantize’ the functions on T^* Q. This means coming up with an associative but noncommutative product of these function that mimics the Poisson bracket to some extent. In the case of a particle on a line, we’d get commutation relations like

\begin{array}{lcr}  p q - q p &=& - i \hbar \\  H t - t H &=& i \hbar \end{array}

where \hbar is Planck’s constant. Now we can represent these quantities as operators on a Hilbert space, the uncertainty principle kicks in, and life gets really interesting.

In thermodynamics, the analogous relations would be

\begin{array}{ccr}  T S - S T &=& - i \hbar \\  P V - V P &=& i \hbar \end{array}

The math works just the same, but what does it mean physically? Are we now thinking of temperature, entropy and the like as ā€˜quantum observables’—for example, operators on a Hilbert space? Are we just quantizing thermodynamics?

That’s one possible interpretation, but I’ve never heard anyone discuss it. Here’s one good reason: as Blake Stacey pointed out below, these equations don’t pass the test of dimensional analysis! The quantities at left have units of energy, while Plank’s constant has units of action. So maybe we need to introduce a quantity with units of time at right, or maybe there’s some other interpretation, where we don’t interpret the parameter \hbar as the good old-fashioned Planck’s constant, but something else instead.

And if you’ve really been paying attention, you may wonder how quantropy fits into this game! I showed that at least in a toy model, the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics arises, not exactly from maximizing or minimizing something, but from finding its critical points: that is, points where its first derivative vanishes. This something is a complex-valued quantity analogous to entropy, which I called ā€˜quantropy’.

Now, while I keep throwing around words like ā€˜minimize’ and ā€˜maximize’, most everything I’m doing works just fine for critical points. So, it seems that the apparatus of symplectic geometry may apply to the path-integral formulation of quantum mechanics.

But that would be weirdly interesting! In particular, what would happen when we go ahead and quantize the path-integral formulation of quantum mechanics?

If you’re a physicist, there’s a guess that will come tripping off your tongue at this point, without you even needing to think. Me too. But I don’t know if that guess is right.

Less mind-blowingly, there is also the question of how symplectic geometry enters into classical statics via the idea of Example 4.

But there’s a lot of fun to be had in this game already with thermodynamics.

Appendix

I should admit, just so you don’t think I failed to notice, that only rather esoteric physicists study the approach to quantum mechanics where time is an operator that doesn’t commute with the Hamiltonian H. In this approach H commutes with the momentum and position operators. I didn’t write down those commutation equations, for fear you’d think I was a crackpot and stop reading! It is however a perfectly respectable approach, which can be reconciled with the usual one. And this issue is not only quantum-mechanical: it’s also important in classical mechanics.

Namely, there’s a way to start with the so-called extended phase space for a point particle on a manifold X:

T^* (X \times \mathbb{R})

with coordinates q^i, t, p_i and H, and get back to the usual phase space:

T^* X

with just q^i and p_i as coordinates. The idea is to impose a constraint of the form

H = f(q,p)

to knock off one degree of freedom, and use a standard trick called ā€˜symplectic reduction’ to knock off another.

Similarly, in quantum mechanics we can start with a big Hilbert space

L^2(X \times \mathbb{R})

on which q^i, t, p_i, and H are all operators, then impose a constraint expressing H in terms of p and q, and then use that constraint to pick out states lying in a smaller Hilbert space. This smaller Hilbert space is naturally identified with the usual Hilbert space for a point particle:

L^2(X)

Here X is called the configuration space for our particle; its cotangent bundle is the usual phase space. We call X \times \mathbb{R} the extended configuration space for a particle on the line; its cotangent bundle is the extended phase space.

I’m having some trouble remembering where I first learned about these ideas, but here are some good places to start:

• Toby Bartels, Abstract Hamiltonian mechanics.

• Nikola Buric and Slobodan Prvanovic, Space of events and the time observable.

• Piret Kuusk and Madis Koiv, Measurement of time in nonrelativistic quantum and classical mechanics, Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences, Physics and Mathematics 50 (2001), 195–213.


by John Baez at January 23, 2012 01:09 PM

arXiv blog

How Neutrons Might Escape Into Another Universe

The leap from our universe to another is theoretically possible, say physicists. And the technology to test the idea is available today


The idea that our universe is embedded in a broader multidimensional space has captured the imagination of scientists and the general population alike.Ā 

This notion is not entirely science fiction. According to some theories, our cosmos may exist in parallel with other universes in other sets of dimensions. Cosmologists call these universes braneworlds. And among that many prospects that this raises is the idea that things from our Universe might somehow end up in another.

A couple of years ago, Michael Sarrazin at the University of Namur in Belgium and a few others showed how matter might make the leap in the presence of large magnetic potentials. That provided a theoretical basis for real matter swapping.Ā 

Today, Sarrazin and a few pals say that our galaxy might produce a magnetic potential large enough to make this happen for real. If so, we ought to be able to observe matter leaping back and forth between universes in the lab. In fact, such observations might already have been made in certain experiments.

The experiments in question involve trapping ultracold neutrons in bottles at places like the Institut Laue Langevin in Grenoble, France, and the Saint Petersburg Institute of Nuclear Physics. Ultracold neutrons move so slowly that it is possible to trap them using 'bottles' made of magnetic fields, ordinary matter and even gravity.

One reason to do this is Ā to measure how quickly the neutrons decay by beta emission. So physicists measure the rate at which the neutrons hit the bottle walls and how quickly this drops. Ā Ā 

There are two processes at work here: the rate of neutron decay and the rate at which neutrons escape from the bottle. So in the case of an ideal bottle, the rate of decay should be equal to the beta decay rate. But the bottles are not ideal so the rate of decay is always faster.Ā 

That leaves open the possibility that there might be a third process at work: that some of the extra decay might be the result of neutrons jumping from our universe to another.Ā 

So Sarrazin and co have used the measured decay rates to place an upper limit on how often this can happen.Ā 

Their conclusion is that the probability of a neutron jumping ship is smaller than about one in a million.

That doesn't really say anything about whether matter swapping actually takes place. Only that if it does, it doesn't happen very often. Ā 

However, Sarrazzin and co also say it should be straightforward to take better data that places stricter limits.

According to their theoretical work, a change in the gravitational potential should also influence the rate of matter swapping. So one idea is to carry out a neutron trapping experiment that lasts for a year or more, allowing the Earth to complete at least one orbit of the Sun.

In that time, the gravitational potential changes in a way that should influence the rate of matter swapping. Indeed, there ought to be an annual cycle. ā€œIf one can detect such a modulation it would be a strong indication that matter swapping really occurs,ā€ they say.

That would be one of the biggest and most controversial discoveries in modern physics and one that is possible with technologies available today.Ā 

Anyone got an old neutron bottle lying around and a bit of spare time on their hands?

Ref:Ā arxiv.org/abs/1201.3949: Experimental Limits On Neutron Disappearance Into Another Braneworld




January 23, 2012 05:10 AM

January 22, 2012

Geraint Lewis - Cosmic Horizons

My Gyroscope won't fall down - I
I love this video
and used to do this very demo when teaching classical mechanics. But here's a question for you - why doesn't the wheel fall over?

If you trawl the text books, even the wonderful Feynman Lectures on Physics (a must read for any serious student of physics), the answer given is that the wheel doesn't fall down because of the conservation of angular momentum.

Alas, I think this answer is a bit of a cop out, and doesn't answer the question. Why? Let's consider the collision between two cars. We know from Newtonian mechanics that momentum is conserved, so the momentum before the collision is exactly the same as after the collision (let's ignore external forces for now, imagine the collision is on a frictionless sheet of ice).

The conservation of momentum is a consequence of Newton's third law, and in the collision all of the forces acting have equal and opposite reaction forces, with the total momentum unchanged. Basically, considering the conservation of momentum lets you ignore all of the forces going on in the collision.

But if you are one of the car drivers, you care implicitly about the forces acting, as you would very much prefer a gentle force acting on you over a long period (as provided by an air bag) as opposed to a larger force over a short period (as provided when your head hits the dashboard).Ā 

The situation with the wheel is similar, as the action of the internal forces (well, torques) act so that the total angular moment is conserved. But really, to understand what's going on here, the question you should be asking is "what force is holding the wheel up?".

I know the answer, but would like to demonstrate it with a simplified model. Alas, the simplified model is not that simple, and it's going to take a few posts to get through, but basically I'm going to make a computer model of a wheel, spin it, let it go and look at where the forces are.

But firstly, a truth about the universe, namely that it is made from particles and springs
(taken from the excellent webpage of Paul Bourke, a place with excellent graphics advice). Now, this might sound weird, but you can represent physical material, and how they move etc, as a system of masses connected by springs. Check this out
and read the tutorial here. I wish I had realised this when I did my course on vibrations and waves as an undergraduate :)

So, my simplified version of a wheel will be four masses connected to an axle, and to each other, by springs. The forces in the springs will effectively represent tensions in the wheel. I'll add a force due to gravity (pointing downwards) and the force on each spring will be represented by Hooke's law. This simplified model already has 24 variables! Three position and three velocities (in 3-d) for each mass.

You can derive the equations of motion either using standard Newtonian forces, or a little more neatly using a Lagrangian approach, but I won't write the equations here, but will save them for another post.

So here's my basic wheel. All I've done here is stretch the springs and let the thing oscillate a little Don't forget that gravity is acting downwards, which is why it is asymmetric.
OK, we can remove the stretch. But how is this a wheel. Well, let's give one of the masses a tangential push. Let's take the black mass and push it upwards.
The net effect is that the entire distribution of masses starts to move, and the wheel is rotating. Of course, it looks a little springy and bouncy, but it's how a real wheel works; all the internal masses of the wheel are talking to one another through internal forces. If we tighten up the springs a little, we can get it to be less bouncy.
Excellent. Well, at the start! But then things go pear-shaped! What's happening? Integration errors, that's what! Basically, I am using a Michael-Mouse integration scheme for these initial tests (and Euler scheme for those in the know) and small errors build up rapidly. What we end up with is energy not being conserved and madness ensuing.

But we can fix this up with a better integration scheme. I'm going to leave that to next time :)

by Cusp (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2012 09:07 PM

Sabine Hossenfelder - Backreaction

A real thought experiment that shows virtually nothing
Two weeks ago, we discussed Hannah and Eppley's thought experiment. Hannah and Eppley argued that a fundamental theory that is only partly quantized leads to contradictions either with quantum mechanics or special relativity; in particular we cannot leave gravity unquantized.

However, we also discussed that this thought experiment might be impossible to perform in our universe, since it requires a basically noiseless system and detectors more massive than we have mass available. Unless you believe in a multiverse that offers such an environment - somewhere -, this leaves us in a philosophical conundrum, since we conclude that any contradiction in Hannah and Eppley's thought experiment is unobservable, at least for us. And if you do believe in a multiverse, maybe gravity is only quantized in parts of it.

So you might not be convinced and insist that gravity may remain classical. Here I want to examine this option in more detail and explain why it is not a fruitful approach. If you know a thing or two about semi-classical gravity, you can skip the preliminaries.



Preliminaries

If gravity remained classical, we would have a theory that couples a quantum field to classical general relativity (GR). GR describes the curvature of space-time (denoted R with indices) that is caused by distributions of matter and energy, encoded in the so-called "stress-energy-tensor" (denoted T with indices). The coupling constant is Newton's constant G.

In a quantum field theory, the stress-energy-tensor becomes an operator that acts on elements of the Hilbert-space. But in the equations of GR, one can't just replace the classical stress-energy-tensor with a quantum operator, since the latter has non-vanishing commutators that the former doesn't have. Since both would have to be equal to a tensor-valued function of the classical background, this will not work. Instead, we have to take the classical part of the operator that is it's expectation value, in some quantum state, denoted as usual by the bra-kets

This is called semi-classical gravity; quantum fields coupled to a classical background. Why, you might ask, don't we just settle for this?

To begin with, semi-classical gravity doesn't actually solve the problems that we were expecting quantum gravity would solve. In particular, semi-classical gravity is the origin rather than the solution of the black-hole information loss problem. It also doesn't prevent singularities (though in some cases it might help). But, you might argue, maybe we were just expecting too much. Maybe the answers to these problems lie entirely elsewhere. That semi-classical gravity doesn't help us here doesn't mean the theory isn't viable, it just means it doesn't do what we wanted it to do. This explains a certain lack of motivation for studying this option, but isn't a good scientific reason to exclude it.

Okay, you have a point here. But semi-classical gravity doesn't only not solve any problems, it brings with it a bunch of new problems. To begin with, the expectation value of the stress-energy-tensor is divergent and has to be regularized, a problem that becomes considerably more difficult in curved space. This is a technical problem which has been studied for some decades now, and that actually with great success. While some problems remain, you might take the point of view that they will be addressed sooner or later.

But a much more severe problem with the semi-classical equations is the measurement process. If you recall, the expectation value of a field that is in a superposition of states that are with probability 1/2 here, and with probability 1/2 there, has to be updated upon measurement. Suddenly then, the particle and its expectation value are with probability 1 here or there. This process violates local conservation of the expectation value of the stress-energy-tensor. But this local conservation is built into GR: It is necessarily always identically fulfilled. This means that semi-classical gravity can't be valid during the measurement. But still, you might insist, we haven't understood the measurement in quantum mechanics anyway, and maybe the theory has to be modified suitably during measurement, so that in fact the conservation law can be temporarily violated.

You are really stubborn, aren't you?

So you insist, but I hope the latter problem illuminated just how absurd semi-classical gravity is if you think about a quantum state in a superposition of different positions, eg a photon that went through a beam splitter. Quantum mechanically, it had 50% chance to go this or that way. But according to semi-classical gravity, its gravitational field went half both ways! If the photon went left, its gravitational field went half with the photon, and half to the right. Surely, you'd think there must be some way to experimentally exclude this absurdity?



Page and Geilker's experiment

Page and Geilker set out in 1981 to show exactly that, the absurdity of semi-classical gravity with a suitably designed experiment. The most amazing thing about their study is that it got published in PRL, for the experiment is absurd in itself.

Their reasoning was as follows. Consider you have a Cavendish-like setup, consisting of two pairs of massive balls connected by rods, see image below (you are looking at the setup from above)

The one rod (grey) hangs on a wire that has a mirror attached to it, so you can measure its motion by tracking the position of a laser light shining onto the mirror. The other rod (not shown) connecting the two other balls (blue) will be turned to bring the balls into one of two positions A or B. The gravitational attraction between the balls will cause the wire to twist into one of two directions, as indicated by the arrows.

Or so you think if you know classical gravity. But if the blue balls are in a quantum superposition of A and B, then the gravitational attraction of the expectation value of their mass distribution on the grey balls cancels, the wire doesn't twist, and the laser light doesn't move.

To bring the grey balls into a superposition, Page and Geilker used a radioactive sample that decayed with some probability within 30 seconds, and about with equal probability within a longer time-span after this. Depending on the outcome of the decay, the blue balls remain in position A or assume B. The mirror moved, they concluded the gravitational field of the balls can't have been the expectation value of the superpositions A and B, thus semi-classical gravity is wrong.

Well, I hope you saw Schrƶdinger's cat laughing. While the decay of a radioactive sample is a purely quantum mechanical process, the wavefunction is long decohered by the time the rod has been adjusted. The blue balls have no more been in a quantum superposition than Schrƶdinger's cat ever was in a superposition of dead and alive.

This begs the question then if not Page and Geilker's experiment can be realized de facto. The problem is, as always with quantum gravity, that the gravitational interaction is very weak. The heaviest masses that can be brought into a superposition of different locations, presently molecules with some thousand GeV, still have gravitational fields far too weak to be measurable. More can be said about this, but that deserves another post another time.


Bottomline

Semi-classical gravity is not considered a fundamentally meaningful description of Nature for theoretical reasons. These are good and convincing reasons, yet semi-classical gravity has stubbornly refused experimental falsification. This tells you just how frustrating the search for quantum gravity phenomenology can be.

by Bee (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2012 05:20 PM

Sabine Hossenfelder - Backreaction

Eppley and Hannah's thought experiment
We have many reasons to believe that our present knowledge of the fundamental laws of nature is incomplete. Not only because it is unaesthetic that classical general relativity and the quantum field theories of the standard model stand conceptually apart. More pressing is that general relativity, under very general circumstances, brings with it the formation of singularities, and without quantizing gravity black hole evaporation seems incompatible with quantum mechanics. More trivial and, in my opinion, also more pressing is that we don't know what is the gravitational field of a superposition of quantum states, think double slit: Quantum mechanics tells us we know that the particle is neither here nor there, and yet both at once, completely described by its wave-function. In general relativity however its gravitational field is classical and has to have distinct properties. It has to be either here or there, and cannot be both at once.

Eric Hannah and Kenneth Eppley in 1977 presented a thought experiment that illuminated nicely why coupling a quantized to an unquantized field inevitably spells trouble, published in their article "The necessity of quantizing the gravitational field." The experiment is deceptively simple. You prepare a quantum particle in a state with a well-known momentum (in some direction). It doesn't necessarily have to be a momentum eigenstate, but something with a small momentum uncertainty. From Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, we know then that its position uncertainty will be large. Now you measure the position of the particle with a classical gravitational wave.

If gravity wasn't quantized, gravitational waves wouldn't have to fulfill the relation p = ā„k, which was famously shown to hold for photons by Einstein, using the photoelectric effect. It would then be possible to prepare a gravitational wave with a small wavelength (high frequency) but small momentum. If you use this gravitational wave to measure the position of the quantum particle, there are, so argue Hannah and Eppley, three different possible outcomes:

  1. You collapse the wavefunction of the quantum particle and measure its position to a precision determined by the short wavelength of the gravitational wave yet without transferring a large momentum. It is then possible to violate Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, thus the quantum part of the theory doesn't survive.
  2. You collapse the wavefunction of the quantum particle without violating Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, then you will violate energy conservation because your wave can't provide the necessary spread in momentum.
  3. You don't collapse the wavefunction, in which case you can use your measurement for superluminal communication. You then had two types of measurements, one that does and one that doesn't collapse the wavefunction. By spatially separating an entangled state and monitoring one part of it without collapsing it, you can find out, instantaneously, when a collapse was induced in the other part.

Since gravity is an extremely weak interaction, this experiment is far beyond experimental possibility; the detector's mass for example would have to exceed that of our galaxy. Hannah and Eppley claimed that their experiment would at least in principle be possible to construct with the matter content of our universe. It was however later shown by James Mattingly, in his paper Why Eppley and Hannah's Experiment Isn't (the title evidently did not make it through peer review), that Hannah and Eppley underestimated the experimental challenges. Mattingly crunched the numbers and showed that the cosmic background radiation spoils the sensitivity of the detectors and, worse, that the detector would have to be so massive it would sit inside a black hole.

Thus, Hannah and Eppley's experiment isn't even in principle possible. While their reasoning is physically plausible, this puts one into a philosophically difficult spot. There clearly is a theoretical problem with coupling a classical to a quantum field, but if we can show there are no practical consequences in our universe, is it a problem we should worry about?

I like Hannah and Eppley's thought experiment. It is not the best motivation one can have for quantizing gravity, but it is a lean way to illuminate the problem.

by Bee (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2012 03:27 PM

Sabine Hossenfelder - Backreaction

The Academic Dollar
I didn't know whether to laugh or to cry when I read this article:

The authors are two economists and the above article proposes an improvement to the current publication system in academia. They propose to introduce a virtual currency, the "Academic Dollar" (A$), that would be traded among editors, authors, and reviewers and create incentives for each involved party to improve the quality of articles.

The idea to measure scientific quality by one single parameter, currency in a market economy, is not new. It has been proposed before, in various forms, to rate scientific papers or ideas by monetary value. The problem with this is twofold. First, the scientific community is global and incomes differ greatly from one institution to the next. If money would influence the rating of scientific quality, the largest influence would rest in the wealthy nations' most wealthy institutions. Second, market economies deal very poorly with intangible, long-term, public benefits, which is exactly why most of basic research is tax-funded. It is thus questionable that a neo-liberal reformation of academic culture would be beneficial.

The introduction of an Academic Dollar that could be exchanged according to its own rules circumvents these problems, so it is an interesting idea. Prufer and Zetland motivate their study as follows
"The [auction market for journal articles] quantifies academic output through A$ income, and academics need an accurate measure now more than ever. Long ago, decisions on professional advancement depended on subjective factors. These were replaced over time by "objective" factors such a publication or citation counts. As publication has grown more important, the number of submitted papers has increased... [T]he multiplication of titles has made measurement (and professional decisions) more difficult. Neither tenure candidates nor committees are happy with current evaluation methods; they need a simple indicator."

In more detail, what the authors suggest is the following: The scientist writes a paper and submits it to a journal auction market where editors bid for the papers. The winning bid gets the permission to send the paper to peer review. If it passes peer review satisfactorily, and the editor decides to publish it, the bid in A$ goes to the authors, editors, and referees of the articles that are cited in the auctioned paper.

Let me repeat this so you don't miss the relevant part: the A$ does not go to the author, it goes to the authors, editors and referees of the cited articles. Authors and referees are obliged to reassign their A$ to any editor they chose within one year to close the circle.

The vision is that
"It is a simple step to sum an individual's A$ income... to get an accurate signal of academic productivity. This signal could facilitate decisions on tenure, promotion, grants, and so on."
Five questions that sprang to my mind immediately:

First, I know plenty of researchers who have strong dislikes of certain journals and refuse to work with them. This point the authors address, if I understood correctly, with a "handicap" that the scientist can put on certain journals that would disable or make it more difficult for an editor of these journals to make a bid.

Second, what about self-citations? They write they just wouldn't count them.

Third, where does the A$ come from and who decides who gets what? This is addressed in the article with one bracketed sentence "The initial allocation of A$ may be in proportion to subscribers, citations, impact factor, or some other variable." I am not sure that will be sufficient. There will be a loss of A$ from people who don't care to 'reassign them' for example because they are leaving academia, and a further decrease of the available A$ per person just because the number of scientists is increasing.

Fourth, if the A$ is worth real money because it is relevant for tenure decisions and grants, somebody who has no need for the virtual money will go and trade it for real money. In other words, there'll be a black market for A$, not to mention the problem of smart people hacking the software. The authors write that "The fixed supply of A$, reallocation norm and trading costs are likely to limit the importance of cash in an A$ black market." I think they'd be surprised.

Five, what about editors who are also authors? Are they supposed to have two different accounts of A$ and not mingle them? I couldn't find anything in the paper about this, but suppose this can be addressed somehow.

Prufer and Zetland have added to their paper a calculation of Pareto efficiency, to show that their proposal is beneficial for everybody involved. For this, they have assumed that the quality of a scientific article is a single-valued universal parameter whose optimization is equally well-defined as the optimization of the most cost efficient way to run a factory.

But my biggest problem with the authors proposal is one that we have discussed previously at this blog (for example here). Any measure that is universal streamlines the way research is pursued. Since your measure is in the best case a rough estimate for long-term success, this amplifies behavior that optimizes currently fashionable measures rather than contributes to scientific knowledge in the first line. It might be saving hiring committees time in the short run, but it will cost the community much more time in the long run.

I have preached it many times, and here it is once again: There is no substitute for scientists' judgement. There is no shortcut and there is no universal measure that could improve or replace this individual and, yes, fallible judgement. The individual assessment of quality and potential impact, possibly centuries into the future, if you'd really want to parameterize it, would lie in a very high dimensional space whose dimensions represent very many continuous parameters. If one attempts to project these opinions onto a one-dimensional axis, the universal measure, one inevitably loses information, and optimization becomes dependent on the choice of measure and thus, ultimately ambigious and questionable in its use. At the very least, we should make sure there are several projections and several criteria for what constitutes an "optimal" scientist.

The trend towards use of simple measures is nothing but a way to delegate responsibility for decisions, till they are diluted enough so that one can just go an blame an anonymous "system."

It is far from my intention to make fun of serious and well worked-out proposals to improve the shortcomings of the current academic system, and I find this is a good try. This proposal however has serious shortcomings itself, and it would make a good example for Verschlimmbesserung ;op

by Bee (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2012 02:01 PM