Blue, Blue, My Water is Blue

Water is blue … because water is blue

Actually, water is quite a transparent liquid, but not perfectly transparent. All substances to a certain degree absorb light, and as a consequence, the intensity of a beam of light spreading through matter drops exponentially with distance, as described by the so-called Beer-Lambert law. Pure water appears transparent because it takes a distance of the order of metres to reduce by half the intensity of light passing through it. And, what is most important for the apparent colour of water, the absorption depends on the wavelength of light, hence colour.

And, as it turns out, heavy water isn’t blue.

Marco!

Fermi’s paradox solved?

The so-called Fermi Paradox has haunted SETI researchers ever since. Not least because the famous Drake equation, which attempts put a figure on the number intelligent civilisations out there now, implies that if the number of intelligent civilisations capable of communication in our galaxy is greater than 1, then we should eventually hear from them.

That overlooks one small factor, says Reginald Smith from the Bouchet-Franklin Institute in Rochester, New York state. He says that there is a limit to how far a signal from ET can travel before it becomes too faint to hear. And when you factor that in, everything changes.

Going Into Overtime

Entangled Particles Face Sudden Death

[I]n a paper published today in the journal Science, two physicists show that entangled particles can suddenly and irrevocably lose their connection, a phenomenon called Entanglement Sudden Death, or ESD.

“The degree of information entangled can disappear faster than the information itself,” said Joseph Eberly, a physicist at the University of Rochester, who, along with Ting Yu, co-authored the paper. “It’s completely non-classical physics.”

I don’t do experiments with entangled particles and I haven’t read the paper yet, but I was a little surprised to read that the model up to this point had been that entanglement was lost slowly. I had always gotten the impression that entanglement was much more a binary condition, so you wouldn’t describe particles as being a little bit entangled, any more than you would say someone was a little pregnant. I suspect this has to be tied to the question of how fast a wave function collapses.

Science 30 January 2009:
Vol. 323. no. 5914, pp. 598 – 601
DOI: 10.1126/science.1167343

I'm Leaving, On a Jetpack

Real Water Rocket Guy – Analysis to come

[S]eems like something that would be on Swans on Tea

Well, now it is

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Rhett now has a detailed analysis posted in which he explains how the thrust is generated, and estimates the power the pump must have to do this.

One thing to note about this is that it works because much of the propellant is not being carried onboard. The rocket is lifting the water in the feeder hose, but that’s all — after a few seconds, that water has been expelled. But the jetpack continues to fly, because additional water is being supplied. This is one of the big problems for rockets. They need to carry enough propellant to lift the payload, and all of the propellant and fuel (for some systems, e.g. ion drives, the propellant and the energy source aren’t the same thing). This is why rockets are really inefficient, and have such a small ratio of payload/rocket mass.

Magic Mirror

Making magnetic monopoles, and other exotica, in the lab

Physicist Shou-Cheng Zhang has proposed a way to physically realize the magnetic monopole. In a paper published online in the January 29 issue of Science Express, Zhang and post-doctoral collaborator Xiao-Liang Qi predict the existence of a real-world material that acts as a magic mirror, in which the never-before-observed monopole appears as the image of an ordinary electron. If his prediction is confirmed by experiments, this could mean the opening of condensed matter as a new venue for observing the exotica of high-energy physics.

Measuring Bilbo

How do you measure the properties of something that’s really hard to detect? It turns out that because of the wonderful usefulness of conservation laws, you can infer what you can’t easily see by finding as much as you can from what you can detect, and then figuring out what’s left over. Somewhat like detecting the invisible Bilbo Baggins by spotting his shadow. The original discovery of the neutrino, in fact, was due to the beta energy spectrum being continuous, which only makes sense if there is a third particle being emitted, and conservation of charge dictated that the neutrino be neutral.

Ultra-Cold Atoms and Neutrino Masses

The proposed experiment is to trap a large amount of tritium at very low temperatures (meaning that the atoms are very nearly stationary), and look at the recoil of the helium that’s produced. When the tritium decays into helium, one of two things happens: either the helium captures the electron on the way out, becoming neutral helium, in which case the atom recoils in a direction opposite the direction of the neutrino; or the electron and neutrino both escape, in which case the helium ion recoils in a direction that depends on the exit direction of both the electron and the neutrino. In either case, the helium is moving, and if everything is done right, it’s moving considerably faster than the trapped tritium atoms.

To measure the neutrino mass, then, all you need to do is detect the helium and measure both the magnitude and direction of its velocity. If the electron was captured, that alone is enough to let you find the momentum (and thus mass) of the neutrino; if the electron escaped, you need to determine its velocity as well, but again, you can calculate the momentum of the neutrino.

Unfortunately the link to the Physics World article doesn’t work work for me, since it’s subscription-only. Fortunately Chad also provides a link to the ArXiv proposal

This sounds very familiar to me, since measuring the recoil from beta decay is the experiment I worked on as postdoc at TRIUMF. The idea in that experiment (for a metastable K-38 atom decaying to Ar-38, both with zero-spin nuclei) is that the parent decays and the daughter is no longer held in the trap, so the escaping beta and daughter can be detected. If the beta and Ar have traveled in opposite directions, it means the neutrino must be either counter-propagating or co-propagating with the beta, since there has been no change in the spin of the nucleus; this has implications for the type of weak interaction that has taken place (scalar or vector, i.e. does the W-boson have any spin) but each case has a different implication for the amount of recoil the Ar atom will have, and this shows up in the time-of-flight. The standard model predicts that, in this case, the beta and the neutrino will be emitted in the same direction. Here’s a PRL and ArXiv for that experiment.

In one approach of the Tritium experiment they’re banking on the electron being captured, so you remove the three-body complication, and having a metastable helium recoil to detect (rather than neutral Helium, which is a lot harder), but adding the complication of photons to detect as the He decays into that metastable state. The other approach involves the three-body momentum, in which the emitted beta is not captured. This allows them to detect a Helium ion, which is much easier to do.