Hail to Thee, Blithe Neutron!

TS2 on Target – view from the LOQ cabin

A brief overview of some neutron history

Since it carries no charge, one could not “weigh” a neutron directly in a mass spectrometer, but had to estimate its mass from the difference between deuterium and hydrogen. However in 1935, more accurate measurements allowed Chadwick to derive a neutron mass of between 1.0084 and 1.0090 units; the modern estimate lies almost exactly in the middle of this range, and so the neutron is appreciably heavier than the proton. Was Uncle Albert wrong? Chadwick immediately suggested (following Einstein again) that neutrons should have an excess of energy and be beta radioactive in common with other nuclei under like circumstances. It was not so easy, however, to verify this experimentally. But, partly owing to World War II, it was not until 1948 that neutron decay was verified – indeed, 12 minutes after they’ve been kicked out of the nucleus half of them will have split apart as Chadwick had suggested. So if you want to use neutrons, you can’t keep ’em in a bucket.

That last bit is a tad misleading — it’s no doubt referring to the decay, not the ability to confine. Since neutrons have a magnetic moment, they can be trapped. It’s a weird, shallow bucket, and it leaks, but you can keep ’em there until they decay.

It's Not an Inalienable Right!

Jennifer’s enumeration of the PARTICLE BILL OF RIGHTS reminds me of a neat effect. I hope the second amendment

The right of unstable Particles to decay shall not be infringed.

only applies to militias fundamental particles, because people have been messing with that “right” for a while in atoms. These are demonstrated by some fascinating experiments in cavity QED I read about while I was in grad school. Probably the most familiar cavity QED phenomenon is the Casimir force, which arises from modifying the electromagnetic modes that are allowed to exist. In free space, waves of any and all frequencies and polarizations can exist, but when conducting surfaces are present, these alter the boundary conditions. Two flat conductors, closely spaced, will exclude many mode of electromagnetic oscillation, and because each mode carries 1/2 hf of energy even when there are no photons in that mode, this exclusion gives rise to the attractive force.

But there’s more fun to be had with this.

Imagine placing an atom inside a cavity under circumstances similar to where the Casimir force could be observed. You can prepare the atom in a state so that it can only decay by one mode — one transition, with a particular polarization of photon (either linear or circular), and you can also orient the atom so that the photon’s direction of emission (perpendicular pr parallel to the surface) will correspond to a photon mode that isn’t supported by the cavity configuration. When you do this, what is an atom to do? There is no vacuum fluctuation to induce it to decay, nor would a photon from that decay be able to exist. The atom is forced to sit there, grudgingly (or perhaps happily, I don’t think anyone’s asked) not decaying.

You can also choose your system so that there is a higher mode density, and get atoms to decay more quickly than they would in free space. (You can also repeatedly measure an atom’s state and keep it from decaying, in a phenomenon called the quantum Zeno effect, but I’m not going to go there. Or even halfway there)

So I must conclude that since this action is routinely taken on atoms and molecules, without writ or warrant, and we have declared that we do not torture inhibit decay, that this right does not apply to composite systems.

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Some references
Heinzen, et.al, Phys Rev Lett. 58 1320 (1987)
Jhe, et. al, Phys Rev. Lett. 58, 666 (1987)
Haroche and Kleppner, Physics Today Jan 1989 24-30

Hint: It's Not a Verb

Sat-nav for flappers

Sat-Nav wristwatches have been around since 1920.

OK, the idea of a small chart scrolling on one’s wrist is clever, but the “sat” part of “sat-nav” stands for satellite, as in artificial satellite. What artificial satellites are involved here?

Yes, I have a peeve about using acronyms and abbreviations where one obviously doesn’t know what the terms stand for. Like saying “Please RSVP,” “LCD display,” “ATM machine” or “PIN number,” though these are examples of pleonasms rather than the first example, which is merely incorrect. But I digress …

Original article has several pictures of interesting inventions.

In Case You're Homesick for the Keystone State

Last week I was vacationing in Bills’ country — it’s tough being a Dolphins fan these days, but especially so within an hour or so of Buffalo — getting my fix of hot wings (not hard to find pretty much anywhere these days) and Beef on ‘Weck (still a local phenomenon), which required me to travel through Pennsylvania.

Eleven freaking “work areas” on the way up. Similar on the way back, with some changes to the route, though I didn’t bother to count. Not one of them was “active” and no workers to be seen, though to be fair it was on the weekend, but I’ve seen this during the week on other trips. Ugh. Is “Under Construction” the new state motto?

Anyway, if anyone in the DC area is lonely for this, the stretch of Rt 50 just east of Glebe Rd. in northern Virginia has been a work area since early July, and Friday is just the second day I’ve seen workers there.

From The Wayback Machine

From our “Plan of the Week”
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August 12 & 17 1877 – Asaph Hall discovers the moons of Mars. From Halls’ notebooks: I repeated the examination in the early part of the night of [August] 11th, and again found nothing, but trying again some hours later I found a faint object on the following side and a little north of the planet. I had barely time to secure an observation of its position when fog from the River stopped the work. This was at half past two o’clock on the night of the 11th. Cloudy weather intervened for several days.

On 15 August the weather looking more promising, I slept at the Observatory. The sky cleared off with a thunderstorm at 11 o’clock and the search was resumed. The atmosphere however was in a very bad condition and Mars was so blazing and unsteady that nothing could be seen of the object, which we now know was at that time so near the planet as to be invisible.

On August 16 the object was found again on the following side of the planet, and the observations of that night showed that it was moving with the planet, and if a satellite, was near one of its elongations.

Until this time I had said nothing to anyone at the Observatory of my search for a satellite of Mars, but on leaving the observatory after these observations of the 16th, at about three o’clock in the morning, I told my assistant, George Anderson, to whom I had shown the object, that I thought I had discovered a satellite of Mars. I told him also to keep quiet as I did not wish anything said until the matter was beyond doubt.

He said nothing, but the thing was too good to keep and I let it out myself. On 17 August between one and two o’clock, while I was reducing my observations, Professor Newcomb came into my room to eat his lunch and I showed him my measures of the faint object near Mars which proved that it was moving with the planet. On August 17 while waiting and watching for the outer moon, the inner one was discovered. The observations of the 17th and 18th put beyond doubt the character of these objects and the discovery was publicly announced by Admiral Rodgers.
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This was from a time when the Observatory was located at Foggy Bottom — it was about 16 years later that it was moved to its current location. But the same telescope is still in use.

(And it’s probably a good thing Hall didn’t discover the moons as a university professor, because then the Astronomy building named after him would be Asaph Hall Hall)