… But it Probably Is

Speed of Light May Not Be Constant

Two papers, published in the European Physics Journal D in March, attempt to derive the speed of light from the quantum properties of space itself. Both propose somewhat different mechanisms, but the idea is that the speed of light might change as one alters assumptions about how elementary particles interact with radiation. Both treat space as something that isn’t empty, but a great big soup of virtual particles that wink in and out of existence in tiny fractions of a second.

The problem I find with articles like this is that they don’t place enough emphasis on the speculative nature of the work — something is being assumed about nature that hasn’t yet been observed, and the authors are investigating the consequences. From the perspective of science this is fine — that’s one way of going about it: think of some novel way nature might be structured, come up with a model, and test it. That’s valid science. But at this point that last part is missing, and as long as it is, one has to worry about over-selling the idea.

Because I Can, That's Why

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This is a chunk left over after I made some more jello treats (Han Solo and Easter Island, as before) this time with about 60% of the water called for in the regular recipe, so it’s much stiffer. (This was ~2 cups of boiling water and then 1/2 cup ice water aded in after dissolving the mix; normal recipe calls for 4 cups. It’s important to use as much ice as you can in that 1/2 cup to cool it down or you will lose quite a bit to evaporation, which matters a bit when you are using small molds)

Filmed at 240 fps. Lots of nice vibrational modes being demonstrated.

These Aren't the CP-Violating Meson Droids You're Looking For

CP Violation and the Information/Anti-Information Asymmetry

The logic is as irresistible as it is faulty: the process of baryogenesis, by which matter came to dominate over antimatter, requires that there be CP violation in the early universe; we are studying CP violation here in the late universe; obviously, what we’re doing helps us understand the matter/antimatter asymmetry. But that’s only true if the kind of CP violation we are studying is actually somehow related to baryogenesis. Which, most experts believe, it is not.

PSA: Hollywood is Not Real

A Public Service Announcement on Guns and Bullets

What I saw there, while interesting from a mildly voyeuristic point of view, disturbed me in two ways. The first, and obvious one, was that I was upset that this was happening in my country, again. The second was concern, because it was really evident from some of the footage, that my fellow Americans watch way too much television and thus have a false understanding about bullets. So this afternoon’s public service announcement is to try and prevent possible harm that might otherwise be avoided.

An excellent article, as far as I can tell, with one caveat:

Power, with guns, is dictated by physics. As my father the physicist taught me at way too early of an age, F = M x A. Force = Mass x Acceleration. The striking, or penetrating, power of the bullet is determined by how heavy (mass) it is, multiplied by how fast it is moving. Thus, a small bullet, moving at extreme speeds, can cause a lot of damage. A large bullet can move at much slower speeds, and cause the same damage. All other things being equal, however, the higher the speed, the greater the penetration. Now, that word “penetration” is one you should think about.

He’s not describing F = ma here. Mass*velocity gives the momentum, but one also needs to look at the kinetic energy. A small bullet moving at some speed has the same momentum as a bullet of twice the mass, moving at half the speed, but it also has twice the energy, and that has some effect on penetration. The salient point, I believe, is that you don’t want that energy deposited in your body, and that’s true regardless of which case you have.

Nothing New Under the Sun

Energy-Harvesting Street Tiles Generate Power from Pavement Pounder

The marathon runners generated 4.7 kilowatt-hours of energy

That’s a little more than fifty cents’ worth of electricity

I’ve already commented on this system, but I’ll sum up:

– It’s converting roughly a dollar’s worth of food into a penny’s worth of electricity. If they weren’t stealing the energy from people, this would never save anyone any money.

– The energy they steal is not green, so this energy is not, despite the effort to “launder” it.

– It’s still not clear how long it would take to save enough to pay for such a system

Powerful Things in Small Packages

New Microbatteries Are Tiny But Can Jump-Start A Car

With so much power, the batteries could enable sensors or radio signals that broadcast 30 times farther, or devices 30 times smaller. The batteries are rechargeable and can charge 1,000 times faster than competing technologies – imagine juicing up a credit-card-thin phone in less than a second. In addition to consumer electronics, medical devices, lasers, sensors and other applications could see leaps forward in technology with such power sources available.

No indication of when this might be commercially viable, or if it scales up to something that might power an electric car.

The Answer Guy

I was cleaning up my inbox the other day and accidentally opened up the box below Admin, which is Answerguy, and one I had forgotten about. Several years ago I was “The Answer Guy” (or at least I had his email address) for our web page, back in the days when I took care of my research group’s web page. The legacy site is still present but in some sense is no longer “official” and has not been maintained in some time (the cesium fountain page has been dormant even longer). The current official page for work is much more sterile and doesn’t even discuss the clock details at all.

I got a number of inquires over the three or four years that the email address was active. A few crackpotty ones, several good questions, and a few from people who couldn’t find contact info on the pages other departments were maintaining, so there were several moon phase and time-of-sunset inquiries I punted. But I like this one, in particular:

To whom it may concern, My name is Christopher I am a sophomore in highschool and conducting a science fair project on time travel. I am not sure if this is the appropriate email address for this, but i am trying to obtain an atomic clock that measures to the nanosecond. If you have any information please please email me as soon as possible.

Sincerely, Christopher

We Did a Science!

And by “we” I really mean the first author (Steve) who did all legwork of analyzing the copious clock data we generate, and had realized that our continuously-running clocks had an advantage over other groups who have been doing these measurements over longer intervals. I helped out a bit with the clock-building (and clock building-building) and thus data generation, and some feedback.

The arXiv version of “Tests of LPI Using Continuously Running Atomic Clocks” was posted (some time ago, sorry this is late) so you can follow along with the home version of the game, if you wish. Keep in mind that I am an atomic physicist, Jim, and not someone who really works with general relativity past the point of including gravitational time dilation in discussions about timekeeping.

One of the tests of general relativity, or specifically of the Einstein equivalence principle, is that of local position invariance. That is, local physics measurements not involving gravity must not depend on one’s location in space-time. Put another way, there shouldn’t be any effects other than gravitational ones if you do an experiment in multiple locations — the gravitational fractional frequency shift should only depend on the gravitational potential: \(frac{Delta f}{f} = frac{Phi^2}{c^2}\)

So you look for a variation in this. One possibility of investigation is to compare co-located clocks of different types as the move to a new location, that could behave differently if LPI were violated. This can arise if the electromagnetic coupling, i.e. the fine structure constant, weren’t the same everywhere. Then clocks using different atoms would deviate from the predicted behavior. Since we’re looking at transitions involving the hyperfine splitting, nuclear structure is involved, so the other possibilities that can be tested are variations in the electron/proton mass ratio and the the ratio of the light quark mass to the quantum chromodynamics length scale. One need not do any kind of (literal) heavy lifting of moving the clocks into different gravitational potentials because the earth does it for us by having an elliptical orbit — we sample different gravitational potentials of the sun over the course of the year.

In order to get the statistics necessary to put good limits on the deviation, other groups have done measurements over the span of several years, but this was because their devices were primary frequency standards, which (as I’ve pointed out before, probably ad nauseum) don’t run all the time, so you only get a handful of data points each year. Continuously running clocks, on the other hand, allow you to do a good measurement in significantly less time. You want to sample the entire orbit along with some overlap — about 1.5 years does it (as opposed to a few measurements per year, where you really need several years’ worth of data to try and detect a sinusoidal variation).

Another key is having a boatload of clocks. Having a selection is especially important for Hydrogen masers, since they have a nasty habit of drifting, and sometimes the drift changes. Having several from which to choose allows one to pick ones that were well-behaved over the course of the experiment. Having lots of Cesium clocks, which are individually not as good (but don’t misbehave as often), allows one to average them together to get good statistics. Finally, having four Rubidium fountains, which are better than masers in the long-term, adds in another precise measurement.

All of the clocks are continually measured against a common reference, so you can compare any pair of clocks by subtracting out the common reference, so we have relative frequency information about all the clocks. The basic analysis was to take the clock frequency measurements and remove any linear drift that was present in the frequency, and check the result for an annually-varying term. The result isn’t zero, because there’s always noise and some of that noise will have a period of a year, but the result is small with regard to the overall measurement error such that it’s consistent with zero (and certainly does not exclude zero in a statistically significant way).

We’ve pushed the limit of where any new physics might pop up just a little further down the experimental road — relativity continues to work well as a description of nature.